3,244 research outputs found
A study to determine if in-house training staff in organizations possess the key skills necessary to author web-based and computer-based training programs
Includes bibliographical references
Shakespeare and child's play : performing lost boys on stage and screen
'Childness' - the essential nature of being a child - remains a vital critical issue for us today. In this text, Carol Rutter shows how recent performances on stage and film have used the range of Shakespeare's insights in order to re-examine and re-think these issues in terms of today's society and culture.
Shakespeare wrote more than fifty parts for children, amounting to the first comprehensive portrait of childhood in the English theatre. Focusing mostly on boys, he put sons against fathers, servants against masters, innocence against experience, testing the notion of masculinity, manners, morals, and the limits of patriarchal power. He explored the nature of relationships and ideas about parenting in terms of nature and nurture, permissiveness and discipline, innocence and evil. He wrote about education, adolescent rebellion, delinquency, fostering, and child-killing, as well as the idea of the redemptive child who 'cures' diseased adult imaginations. 'Childness' - the essential nature of being a child - remains a vital critical issue for us today. In Shakespeare and Child's-Play Carol Rutter shows how recent performances on stage and film have used the range of Shakespeare's insights in order to re-examine and re-think these issues in terms of today's society and culture
First person - Ariadna Carol Illa
First Person is a series of interviews with the first authors of a selection of papers published in Biology Open, helping researchers promote themselves alongside their papers. Ariadna Carol Illa is first author on 'From early development to maturity: a phenotypic analysis of the Townes sickle cell disease mice', published in BiO. Ariadna is a PhD student in the lab of Soren Skov (first affiliation), Carsten Dan Ley (second affiliation) at the investigating in vivo models and blood diseases, such as sickle cell disease
Other Voices piece by Carol Isaacson Barash, Ph.D., of Hartford, a genetics an
Other Voices piece by Carol Isaacson Barash, Ph.D., of Hartford, a genetics and ethics consultant, essayist and children\u27s book author. Barash, a trained philosopher, kept copious notes on roadside litter, and during the summers of 1995 and 1996 recorded weekly averages of 65 returnable bottles and cans
Passport Books
See the Oxford edition of 1981, a smaller pamphlet with poorer runs of the illustrations. See my comments there.This is a hardbound book (hard cover)This book has a dust jacket (book cover)Carol Barnet
The Tutor's Role
This chapter addresses three questions about being an effective online tutor: 1. Why do we still think that online tutoring can principally draw its basis from face-to-face group processes and dynamics or traditional pedagogy? 2. Does the literature tell us anything more than we would make as an intelligent guess? 3. Do we really know what an ‘effective’ online tutor would be doing? The OTiS participants have gone some way to answering these questions, through the presentation and discussion of their own online tutoring experiences. Literature in this area is still limited, and suffers from the need for timeliness of publication to be useful. Intelligent guesses are all very well, but much better as a source of information for online tutors are the reflections and documented experiences of practitioners. These experiences reveal that face-to-face pedagogy has some elements to offer the online tutor, but that there are key differences and there is a need to examine the processes and dynamics of online learning to inform online tutoring
UCE of FIT Presents: Now or Never: The Fight to Pass the Equal Rights Amendment with Carol Jenkins
The United College Employees of FIT presents this interview with Carol Jenkins, moderated by Elena Romero, a professor in the Advertising and Marketing Communications Department.Carol Jenkins is an advocate for human, civil and women’s rights, an award-winning author and Emmy-winning TV anchor and television journalist. A board member since its inception in 2014, she joined the leadership team of the ERA Coalition and the Fund for Women’s Equality in December 2018. Jenkins is also the host of the multi-award winning show Black America, on CUNY TV
Chapter 2: The Tutor's Role
The OTiS (Online Teaching in Scotland) programme, run by the now defunct Scotcit programme, ran an International e-Workshop on Developing Online Tutoring Skills which was held between 8–12 May 2000. It was organised by Heriot–Watt University, Edinburgh and The Robert Gordon University, Aberdeen, UK. Out of this workshop came the seminal Online Tutoring E-Book, a generic primer on e-learning pedagogy and methodology, full of practical implementation guidelines. Although the Scotcit programme ended some years ago, the E-Book has been copied to the SONET site as a series of PDF files, which are now available via the ALT Open Access Repository. The editor, Carol Higgison, is currently working in e-learning at the University of Bradford (see her staff profile) and is the Chair of the Association for Learning Technology (ALT)
Posture and intimacy in the author-narrator’s voice: a comparison between Dickens’s A Christmas Carol and Gaiman’s Neverwhere
My research seeks to bridge the divide between Victorian and contemporary literary research by studying two readings, a public performance of A Christmas Carol by Dickens and the 1996 spoken word version of Neverwhere, written and narrated by Gaiman, in order to study authorship and performativity in a diachronic way. By close ‘listening’ to and close reading passages from both readings and putting the authors’ narrating techniques and styles into their own literary and cultural context, I aim to find out in what way the author-narrator’s voice in Dickens’s A Christmas Carol and Gaiman’s Neverwhere constructs an authorial posture and contributes to a feeling of intimacy and companionship between author and listener
Safety management in repair, maintenance, minor alteration and addition works : a knowledge management perspective
Author name used in this manuscript: Carol. K. H. Hon2013-2014 > Academic research: refereed > Publication in refereed journalAccepted ManuscriptPublishedGreen (AAM
- …
