902 research outputs found
Final.Appendix – Supplemental material for Explaining the Diversity Deficit
Supplemental material, Final.Appendix for Explaining the Diversity Deficit by Dam Hee Kim and Josh Pasek in Communication Research</p
Many Americans’ racially and partisan motivated dislike forObama means they doubt his legitimacy as president
For much of Barack Obama’s presidential run and his subsequent two terms as president he has been dogged by accusations that he was not born in the US, and is therefore ineligible to be president. In order to explain the continuing prevalence of this view, despite the evidence to the contrary, Josh Pasek looks at whether or not such ‘birthers’ are motivated by partisanship of racial prejudice. They find that while on the surface the ‘birther’ view is motivated by party ideology and racism, such views actually lead people to dislike President Obama, and thus leaves them more open to accepting claims that he was not born in the US
Envision Film Festival: Josh Larsen
Josh Larsen, Radio Host, Author, Editor and Film Critic, Think Christian, Chicago, IL, speaks about the purpose and function of movies, and the possibility of seeing them as prayers.
This chapel preceded the Envision Film Festival
Pasek_Online_Supplement - Who’s Tweeting About the President? What Big Survey Data Can Tell Us About Digital Traces?
Pasek_Online_Supplement for Who’s Tweeting About the President? What Big Survey Data Can Tell Us About Digital Traces? by Josh Pasek, Colleen A. McClain, Frank Newport, and Stephanie Marken in Social Science Computer Review</p
Josh Weil, 38th Annual ODU Literary Festival
Josh Weil is the author of the novel The Great Glass Sea, a New York Times Editor\u27s Choice and finalist for the Center for Fiction\u27s Flaherty-Dunnan First Novel Award, and the novella collection The New Valley, awarded the Sue Kaufman Prize from the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the New Writers Award from the GLCA. A Fulbright Fellow and National Book Award 5-under-35 honoree, he has written for The New York Times, Granta, Tin House, One Story and Esquire, among others. He lives with his family in the foothills of the Sierra Nevadas
Supplemental Material, Conrad_Online_Supplement_B - Social Media as an Alternative to Surveys of Opinions About the Economy
Supplemental Material, Conrad_Online_Supplement_B for Social Media as an Alternative to Surveys of Opinions About the Economy by Frederick G. Conrad, Johann A. Gagnon-Bartsch, Robyn A. Ferg, Michael F. Schober, Josh Pasek and Elizabeth Hou in Social Science Computer Review</p
Supplemental Material, Conrad_Online_Supplement_A - Social Media as an Alternative to Surveys of Opinions About the Economy
Supplemental Material, Conrad_Online_Supplement_A for Social Media as an Alternative to Surveys of Opinions About the Economy by Frederick G. Conrad, Johann A. Gagnon-Bartsch, Robyn A. Ferg, Michael F. Schober, Josh Pasek and Elizabeth Hou in Social Science Computer Review</p
Do U.S. Parents’ Playful Learning Beliefs and Behaviors Differ According to Their Agency Beliefs and Behaviors?
The current project will examine U.S. parent’s beliefs and behaviors related to agency, the play spectrum (see Zosh et al., 2017, 2018), playful learning principles (see Zosh et al., 2017, 2018), playful learning parenting approaches (see Wright, Hirsh-Pasek, & Thomsen, 2023) and 21st Century Skills (“the 6 Cs”; see Golinkoff & Hirsh-Pasek, 2016; Hirsh Pasek et al., 2020). We hypothesize parent beliefs and behaviors related to child agency will be associated with their behaviors and beliefs related to playful learning and 21st Century Skills
Supplemental Material, Conrad_Online_Supplement_C - Social Media as an Alternative to Surveys of Opinions About the Economy
Supplemental Material, Conrad_Online_Supplement_C for Social Media as an Alternative to Surveys of Opinions About the Economy by Frederick G. Conrad, Johann A. Gagnon-Bartsch, Robyn A. Ferg, Michael F. Schober, Josh Pasek and Elizabeth Hou in Social Science Computer Review</p
Supplemental Material, Conrad_Online_Supplement_D - Social Media as an Alternative to Surveys of Opinions About the Economy
Supplemental Material, Conrad_Online_Supplement_D for Social Media as an Alternative to Surveys of Opinions About the Economy by Frederick G. Conrad, Johann A. Gagnon-Bartsch, Robyn A. Ferg, Michael F. Schober, Josh Pasek and Elizabeth Hou in Social Science Computer Review</p
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