27,628 research outputs found
Letter, Joseph Thompson to Jacob Thompson
April 9, 1884. Leasburg, NC. Letter from eldest brother Joseph Thompson to Jacob Thompson, regarding family reminiscences.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/wml_corr/1008/thumbnail.jp
Land Grant Application- Thompson, Joseph (Lisbon)
Land grant application submitted to the Maine Land Office on behalf of Joseph Thompson for service in the Revolutionary War, by their widow Happy.https://digitalmaine.com/revolutionary_war_me_land_office/1890/thumbnail.jp
Land Grant Application- Thompson, Joseph (York)
Land grant application submitted to the Maine Land Office for Joseph Thompson for service in the Revolutionary War.https://digitalmaine.com/revolutionary_war_me_land_office/1896/thumbnail.jp
Albert Thompson and Joseph Murray
Photo of Albert Thompson and Joseph Murray, n.d..https://digitalcommons.buffalostate.edu/thompson_photos/1015/thumbnail.jp
Letter from Joe R. Trigg, St. Louis, Missouri, to Haydn Thompson, Miami, Florida, March 24, 1930
This letter is from the Haydn Neal Thompson Letter Collection. Contents of the collection include correspondence, primarily handwritten and of a personal nature. The bulk of materials are from Thompson's family members, including his mother, Marie Thompson, and sister, Janet Thompson, with a few letters from aunts and cousins. The remaining majority consists of letters from friends, primarily girlfriends. The conversation across letters emphasizes school and social happenings. Politics and the economy (Great Depression) do not receive much notice, though a change in the tone of letters is noticeable from the 1920's to the 1930's, becoming more sober and fatalistic
Thompson, Joseph
currentEducation and Credentials
Ph.D., Simon Fraser University
M.A., Simon Fraser University
B.A., Simon Fraser University, honours
Academic and Professional Profile
Joe’s graduate career began in analytic philosophy where he hoped to demonstrate the relevance of empirical research to philosophical problems. At some point, Joe’s growing interest in empirical research outpaced his interest in the philosophy of language, science, and mind. Joe subsequently began a PhD in psychology at Simon Fraser University, where he hoped to demonstrate the relevance of philosophy to empirical research. This project initially took the form of theoretical papers on research methods in developmental psychology. Reflections on research methods, and the fortune of living in an era with excellent video games, eventually lead Joe to conduct research on expert performance using large datasets of gamer behaviour.
At some point in his intellectual development, Joe attempted to apply his peculiar background to teaching, and this has since become Joe’s primary interest. His background in philosophy helps him teach scientific logic, his background in child developmental has shaped his larger teaching philosophy, and his research on skill learning affords him a unique vantage from which to advise students on how to become really really good at stuff.NW N342
Banks, Sir Joseph
A letter to Sir Joseph Banks from John Thompson, midshipman, enclosing the Lord's Prayer and the Hail Mary written by the 'native Indians of Newfoundland'
Thompson, Joseph Wallace
Transcription of a speech by Joseph Wallace Thompson during a church service in Circleville, Utah on his eighth birthday
Thompson, Joseph Wallace
Life sketch of Joseph Wallace Thompson taken by the Federal Writer's Project by Layton J. Ott of Henrieville, Utah
Joseph H. Smith
Typescript of answers by Joseph Heathman Smith of Ogden, Utah for a questionnaire filled out for Utah Works Progress Administration\u27s "Pioneer personal history" survey. He was born in England in 1854, and his family immigrated in 1860. They lived at Ogden, Utah, before settling at Huntsville in 1865. Typed by Ralph S. Thompson of Ogden on April 30, 194
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