2,529 research outputs found
Episode 21: Matt Eicheldinger: Educator Turned Author
Matt Eicheldinger, B.A. \u2709, M.A. \u2712 is an educator who used stories from his life to motivate his middle school students. When he found that not only were these stories effective, when written down, they inspired even the most reluctant of readers. This put Matt down a path of becoming a published author. In 2021, he launched a Kickstarter campaign to self-publish Matt Sprouts and The Curse of Ten Broken Toes. When the book became a hit, he was able to sign with an agent who quickly sold Matt Sprouts to a publisher. Matt shares how he became interested in being an educator, how he navigated the process of becoming a published author, and his future plans for more books
Matt Shaw, Percussion
Raghaven / Russell Hartenberger; Komm süsser Tod / J. S. Bach; New-Than / Bob Becker; Tryptich / Dorian Stewar
Fathers 4 Justice [Hardcover] Matt O'Connor (Author)
5 Photographs published within the first book from Matt O'Connor, a freelance marketing consultant and family law campaigner. This is Matt O'Connor's personal account of the most controversial protest movement of recent times, FATHERS 4 JUSTICE. Fearlessly honest and utterly irreverent Matt's own story will appeal to anyone whose family relationships have been torn to pieces by divorce and the family courts system
<strong>Bryophytes:The closest living relatives of early land plants Title page</strong>
Konrat, Matt Von, Shaw, A. Jonathan, Renzaglia, Karen Sue, Konrat, Matt Von, Shaw, A. Jonathan, Renzaglia, Karen Sue (2010): <strong>Bryophytes:The closest living relatives of early land plants Title page</strong>. Phytotaxa 9 (1): 3-4, DOI: 10.11646/PHYTOTAXA.9.1.1, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.9.1.
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Book of the Month: Matt Haig’s The Midnight Library
Author: Nick Kelson-Packer Weber State University Our book of the month recommendation is Matt Haig’s novel The Midnight Library. Imagine slipping into a parallel world where instead of getting that chocolate sundae at your local ice cream parlor, you instead opted for a parfait somewhere else. This choice then led you to meet someone new, someone who invites you to join them in exotic, overseas adventures. That is the premise of Matt Haig’s new book, The Midnight Library. Matt Haig is a reno..
Sy Montgomery and Matt Patterson: 2024 Cook Prize Gold Medal Winners
Author Sy Montgomery and illustrator Matt Patterson\u27s video for The Book of Turtles (Clarion)https://educate.bankstreet.edu/cook/1012/thumbnail.jp
Blind injustice : Jesus' prophetic warning against unjust judging (Matt 7:1-5)
This dissertation seeks to provide a plausible alternative to the consensus interpretation of Jesus' "do not judge" teaching in Matt 7:1-5. While the overwhelming majority of recent interpreters understand "do not judge" (7:1) and its concurrent sayings such as "take the log out of your own eye" (7:5) to promote a non-judgmental attitude, this monograph seeks to situate this block of teaching within a Jewish second-Temple judicial setting. To this end, an overview of the judicial system during the second Temple era is provided, after which it is argued that Matt 7:1-5 is the Matthean Jesus' halakhic, midrashic comment upon the laws for just legal judging in Lev 19:15-18, 35-36 by which he prophetically criticizes unjust legal judging. Jesus' brother James takes up this teaching in Jas 2:1-13, using it to exhort Jewish Christian leaders who judge cases within Diaspora synagogues/churches. Such an alternative interpretation of Jesus' "do not judge" teaching in Matt 7:1-5 matches well other passages in Matthew which likewise speak of judicial, brotherly conflict such as 5:21-26 and 18:15-35. Some early Christian writers who quote or allude to Matt 7:1-5 reflect a judicial understanding of these verses as well, often relating Matt 7:1-5 to Lev 19:15-18, 35-36 and/or drawing parallels between Matt 7:1-5 and one or more of the NT judicial texts which, this thesis argues, is related to it (Matt 5:21-26, 18:15-35; Jas 2:1-13)
Matt de la Peña Josette Frank Award 2022 Acceptance Speech
Author Matt de la Peña wins the Josette Frank Award (for young readers) 2022 for Milo Imagines the World from Bank Street College Children\u27s Book Committee.
The Josette Frank Award
This award for fiction honors a book or books of outstanding literary merit in which children or young people deal in a positive and realistic way with difficulties in their world and grow emotionally and morally. The award has been given annually since 1943. Josette Frank, the editor of anthologies for children, served for many years as the Executive Director of the Child Study Association of America of which this committee was a part.https://educate.bankstreet.edu/cbc_awards/1001/thumbnail.jp
FIGURE 3 in A special issue of Phytotaxa dedicated to Bryophytes: The closest living relatives of early land plants
FIGURE 3. Sphagnum pulchrum (Lindberg 1880: 25) Warnstorf (1900: 42), Alaska (Photo: Blanka Shaw). Sphagnum comprises a speciose clade of mosses that dominates many wetland ecosystems, especially in the boreal zone of the Northern Hemisphere (Shaw et al. 2003). In particular, Sphagnum is an important and conspicuous component in peatlands, which perform a significant global function in regulating the Earth's atmospheric chemistry as well as providing valuable economic commodities (Rochefort 2000). Sphagnum holds an interesting position amongst mosses, with Cox et al. (2004) indicating that Sphagnum and Takakia form a clade sister to all remaining mosses.Published as part of <i>Konrat, Matt Von, Shaw, A. Jonathan & Renzaglia, Karen Sue, 2010, A special issue of Phytotaxa dedicated to Bryophytes: The closest living relatives of early land plants, pp. 5-10 in Phytotaxa 9 (1)</i> on page 8, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.9.1.3, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/10087086">http://zenodo.org/record/10087086</a>
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