1,727,819 research outputs found
Mariah Haffield Honors Portfolio
Mariah Haffield\u27s honors portfolio captured in December 2015
Thinking Matters Lightning Talk: Mariah Reed
Lightning Talk by Mariah Reed for the Thinking Matters Symposium at the University of Southern Maine titled: Maine’s Abortion History: A 19th and 20th Century Perspective
Interview with Mariah Godar, WMU \u2722
Occupational Therapist and recent graduate Mariah Godar speaks about Dr. Carla Chase and the positive impact Dr. Chase has on her students.https://scholarworks.wmich.edu/wmu-ot-100years/1006/thumbnail.jp
Dahlia quilt, by Hannah Mariah Child Russell
Image of Dahlia quilt created in 1929 by Hannah Mariah Child Russell. Also includes questionnaires describing the quilt completed by Ardell De Hart as part of the Utah Quilt Guild\u27s documentation days held from 1988-1994. This quilt was made in Taber, Alberta, Canad
Interview with Mariah Snyder
Mariah Snyder was born in Austin, MN, grew up in Grand Meadow, MN, and attended the College of Saint Teresa in Winona, MN where she obtained her BSN in 1960. After working at Saint Mary’s hospital in Rochester, MN as a surgical and orthopedic staff nurse, she pursued her master’s degree in nursing with a specialty in adult health at the University of Pennsylvania in 1972. She taught at Vanderbilt University and the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire before arriving at the University of Minnesota in 1975, where she taught and also earned her Ph.D. in education in 1978. Her doctoral research involved observational research of nursing student collaboration. Later, she did research in stress inventory, intracranial pressure, and gerontology. She was helped establish the doctoral program in nursing in 1982 at the University, furthering an emphasis on nursing research. She was also involved in establishing the gerontology nurse practitioner program. She retired from the faculty in the 2000s.Snyder begins by briefly describing her early life, education, and entrance into nursing. She describes her years as a staff nurse in surgery and orthopedics at Saint Mary’s Hospital in Rochester, MN. Within this topic, she discusses new technology in the hospital, doctor/nurse relationships, nurse training, and international nurse exchanges. She then describes her return to graduate school, for her masters at the University of Pennsylvania. She explores her reasons for going out of state, compares nursing programs, and discusses her training. Snyder describes her teaching positions at Vanderbilt University, the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, and then her eventual arrival at the University of Minnesota where she taught and pursued a PhD in education. Framed within her time in the Nursing School at Minnesota, she explores: the Nursing School at Powell Hall, the changing culture of nursing, grants, regional coordination of nursing, the relationship between diploma and baccalaureate programs, the building of Unit F, the push for a doctoral program in nursing the differences between the DNP and the DNS, the Ph.D. program’s reception within the school of nursing, full membership appointments, Nursing School leadership, and long range planning in the nursing school. She describes her research and then discusses the relationship of the Nursing School with other segments of the University. She goes on to discuss different nursing organizations, minority recruitment, and the Nursing School’s relationship with the state legislature. Finally, she discusses her role in athletics at the University, and it’s relationship to women and status in nursing.Tobbell, Dominique A.; Snyder, Mariah. (2012). Interview with Mariah Snyder. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/155025
Recommended from our members
Mariah Epps
Mariah Epps recounts her life story, including her marriage to Johnnie Epps, the first African-American police officer in San Bernardino, California. She describes how they met, their early years together, and the tragic incident in 1950 where Johnnie was involved in a shooting at a local auditorium while working off-duty. Shortly after he was found justified in the shooting, Johnnie was drafted into the Korean War and died in December 1950, leaving Mariah a young widow with four young children. Mariah credits her parents for helping her raise her family after Johnnie\u27s death. She also discusses the challenges faced by African-Americans in San Bernardino at the time, including segregation and limited opportunities. Mariah reflects on the civil rights leaders and activists in the local community who worked to bring about change. Overall, Mariah\u27s story provides a personal perspective on the experiences of an African-American family in mid-20th century San Bernardino
Mariah Bredal
Color photograph of Mariah Bredal, a member of the University of Utah ski team
Mariah Bredal
Color photograph of Mariah Bredal, a member of the University of Utah Ski Team
- …
