3,427 research outputs found
Portrait of Kate ("Ma") Seal, Kimba, South Australia [picture].
Title from label on back of print.; This photograph was taken as part of John Meredith's "Real Folk" Australian folklore recording project.; P1/109; Also available in an electronic version via the Internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-an7497136-124; P1/109
Big Talk, 3/27/2008
Suzanne Murphy and Kate O’Halloran talk writing with Maine Writers and Publishers Alliance nonfiction award winners Meredith Hall and Jaed Coffin.https://digitalcommons.usm.maine.edu/wmpg_bigtalk/1055/thumbnail.jp
Guidelines for Data Annotation
Included here are a coding manual and supplementary examples of gesture forms (in still images and video recordings) that informed the coding of the first author (Kate Mesh) and four project reliability coders
Declining Unionization, Rising Inequality: an Interview with Kate Bronfenbrenner
Kate Bronfenbrenner is director of labor education research at the New York State School of Industrial and Labor Relations at Cornell University. She worked for many years as an organizer with the United Woodcutters Association in Mississippi and the Service Employees International Union in Boston. She is the author, co-author and editor of numerous books and articles on union strategies
Kate Richards: madness
Kate Richards’ bleakly beautiful, confronting and important book, Madness: A Memoir, describes her 15 years coping with psychosis and depression, and her long, hard-won journey back to sanity, with the help of a wise and compassionate psychologist.
In this video, she speaks with Ranjana Srivastava, an oncologist and fellow author, about her experience – and about being able to write from deep within it, with expertise as both a medical researcher and writer.
 
Joint letters written by Kate and Mabyle to Mary Meredith
Correspondence from the scrapbook of Sarah E.E. Mitchell of Lisdillon on the East Coast of Tasmania 1866.
Letters, composed in 1866, by Mabyle Gore Browne and Catherine Mitchell.
Copy of letter taken 2.4.1928
2.4.1928
Nov 6h 1866
Copy of joint letter by Kate P. Mitchell and Miss Mabyle Gore Browne, to Miss Mary Meredith, Cambria, Swansea, Tasmania.
Lisdillon, Nov 6h 1866
The correspondence and sketches by Catherine Penwarne (Kate), eldest daughter of John and Catherine Mitchell (of Cornwall, England, who settled at Lisdillon, East Coast Tasmania in 1852) were made between 1860 and 1876, and portray aspects of 19th Century social and domestic life. Catherine’s sketches were compiled by her sister Sarah. E.E.Mitchell. Derived from her own collection, from those of friends and relations, and from John Ball, Kate's husband, they were compiled sometime between 1928 and 1933. The sketches are mounted in an album, together with: locks of Kate's hair on red silk; a pressed fern arrangement; a coloured photograph of John and Catherine Ball; and coloured views of Buckland Churchyard in 1850, showing the grave of Paul Thomas Mitchell, aged 3 days, and in 1879 showing the grave of Catherine Penwarne Ball. The scrapbook was bequeathed to The Royal Society of Tasmania in 1946.
RS 32/
Book signing by SC author and illustrator Kate Salley Palmer
Photograph of Book signing by SC author and illustrator Kate Salley Palme
SC author and illustrator Kate Salley Palmer signing book
Photograph of SC author and illustrator Kate Salley Palmer signing boo
Passing Malunnah, built by Charles Meredith at Orford
Sketch from the scrapbook of Sarah E.E. Mitchell of Lisdillon on the East Coast of Tasmania 1874.
Sketch 98 - Taken 10.8.1869 - by Catherine Mitchell.
Kate P.M, was going on a visit, to Woodsden if not Hobart, Bishopscourt. Edwin H.J.M took her portmanteau on his horse. Passing Malunna, Orford, lately built by Mr & Mrs Charles Meredith. She was the author of many books, “Friends & Foes” etcetra. He was Honorable Charles Meredith, half brother of John Meredith of Cambria, Swansea. The Charles M. built Riversdale, and Plas Newydd, also in Glamorgan. I (S.E.E.M) sold Plas Newydd to the Church Wardens of Swansea March 1922 and sent the money to F.W.D.Mitchell.
The sketches by Catherine Penwarne (Kate), eldest daughter of John and Catherine Mitchell (of Cornwall, England, who settled at Lisdillon, East Coast Tasmania in 1852) were made between 1860 and 1876, and portray aspects of 19th Century social and domestic life. Catherine’s sketches were compiled by her sister Sarah. E.E.Mitchell. Derived from her own collection, from those of friends and relations, and from John Ball, Kate's husband, they were compiled sometime between 1928 and 1933. The sketches are mounted in an album, together with: locks of Kate's hair on red silk; a pressed fern arrangement; a coloured photograph of John and Catherine Ball; and coloured views of Buckland Churchyard in 1850, showing the grave of Paul Thomas Mitchell, aged 3 days, and in 1879 showing the grave of Catherine Penwarne Ball. The scrapbook was bequeathed to The Royal Society of Tasmania in 1946.
RS 32/
Replication Data for Statistical Analysis
Included here is a dataset with gesture form coding from the study author (Kate Mesh). Statistical analysis of the dataset was performed using R version 3.6.1 (R Core Team, 2019), with the package, lmer (Bates, Maechler, Bolcher & Walker, 2015). An R script is attached for the purposes of replication.
R Core Team (2019). R: A language and environment for statistical computing. R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria. URL https://www.R-project.org/.
Douglas Bates, Martin Maechler, Ben Bolker, Steve Walker (2015). Fitting Linear Mixed-Effects Models Using lme4. Journal of Statistical Software, 67(1), 1-48. doi:10.18637/jss.v067.i01
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