520 research outputs found
Reframing Assessment of Grantee Perceptions: Reconsidering Effectiveness With Broader International Stakeholder Engagement
· Stakeholder engagement is important in philanthropy because it allows grantmakers and grantees to pool their respective resources more effectively to address their shared target issues.
· As more and more foundations and other grantmaking entities venture into the expansive world of self-evaluation, it is prudent that these methods be examined in light of international funding relationships.
· In order to better understand how these tools and methods can be used internationally, we outline the opportunities presented when using frames as one basis for decision-making in complex situations.
· Using the hypothetical case of a U.S. funder seeking to understand grantee perception in East Africa, we present a matrix of considerations and questions that allow grantmakers to account for the local reality of grantee perceptions.
· By actively engaging all stakeholders involved in the process, international grantmakers can begin to adapt these tools to meet their cross-cultural needs, while limiting bias and unexamined counterproductive assumptions
Laurel FULKERSON, The Ovidian Heroine as Author. Reading, Writing, and Community in the Heroides.
Tordeur Pol. Laurel FULKERSON, The Ovidian Heroine as Author. Reading, Writing, and Community in the Heroides. . In: L'antiquité classique, Tome 76, 2007. p. 332
Laurel FULKERSON, The Ovidian Heroine as Author. Reading, Writing, and Community in the Heroides.
Tordeur Pol. Laurel FULKERSON, The Ovidian Heroine as Author. Reading, Writing, and Community in the Heroides. . In: L'antiquité classique, Tome 76, 2007. p. 332
Laurel near mine
The back of the photograph has a handwritten caption that is very light and difficult to read, "Kep in winter leaning against mt. laurel a foot thick." The Album caption identifies this photograph as "Laurel near mine." This picture is similar to one in "Our Southern Highlanders" (1922 revised ed., p. 72) entitled "Scouting in the Laurel. (The Author.)" This photograph is on Album page 19 with the heading "Great Smoky Mts.
Vardis Fisher Folder
7 pages of family history documents containing and related to Vardis Fisher; Opal Laurel Holmes; - including: News articles; author; obit
Syd Freedman's financial notes on Laurel and Hardy's Laughing 20's
Syd Freedman's financial notes on the Studio Theatre's showing of the film Laurel and Hardy's Laughing 20's (1965)
Laurel Falls
The popular 80-foot high Laurel Falls is named for mountain laurel, an evergreen shrub which blooms along the trail and near the falls in May. The waterfall consists of an upper and a lower section, today, divided by a walkway that crosses the stream at the base of the upper falls. This picture was made by Carlos C. Campbell (1892-1978), a founding member of the Great Smoky Mountains Conservation Association and author of “Birth of a National Park,” published in 1960. This photograph, with others in this series, are included in the records of the Smoky Mountains Hiking Club, formed after a group of outdoor enthusiasts hiked up to Mount LeConte in October 1924
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MISAME
Recording of Bruce Pennycook's Speeches for Dr. Frankenstein performed by Laurel Miller. The piece is for soprano and computer-generated tape. it was commissioned through the Canada Council for the Arts by Nera Pilgrim (soprano) and Dexter Morrill of Colgate University. It is a setting of four of the ten stanzas of the poem by Margaret Atwood, Canada's leading female author. This work has recieved numerous performances by Ms. Pilgrim and other in Canada and the U.S. This recording is a live performance of Laural Miller at the 1981 International Computer Music Conference in Denton, Texas
Interview: Brenda Laurel
This interview with Brenda Laurel, Virtual Reality (VR) author and thinker, discusses the applications and challenges of VR. Creating an emphatic experience using VR technology is possible, but the challenge lies in designing an environment that models the senses to stimulate emotions. VR enables experiences of different genders, but physiological differences between the sexes exist and are important to understand. However, technology used to create the environment and simulation of physical objects in VR is only in the developmental stage. Laurel believes in the importance of keeping the mind grounded in the physical body, in order to strengthen the appreciation of life and nature, rather than letting the mind be disembodied and be everywhere in the virtual world. The mind and body are one
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