7,559 research outputs found

    Ian Watkins, 1993

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    Ian Watkins, member of the ASCOL Conversion Team. The student records, enrolments, courses system - ASCOL was put in the place on 15 October 1993. Photograph originally appeared in the 'Swinburne Staff News', 11th November 1993

    Ian Watkins, Ian McCormick and David Murray, Proclamation of Swinburne University, 1992

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    Proclamation of Swinburne University of Technology. Left to right: Ian Watkins ; Ian McCormick ; David Murray. Pictured at staff celebrations for the Proclamation of Swinburne as a University. Refer to Staff News' 9th July 1992. Photograph originally appeared in the 'Swinburne Staff News',

    Lynch, Forster, Watkins, Ziaei, 1990

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    Photograph originally appeared in the 'Staff News', 22nd February 1990. Left to Right: Peter Lynch, Richard Forster, Ian Watkins, Turaj Ziaei. Seated: Kien Tran, Applications Development Group, Computer Centre

    Author interview: Q and A with Dr Ian Sanjay Patel on we’re here because you were there: immigration and the end of empire

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    In this author interview, we speak to Dr Ian Sanjay Patel about his new book, We’re Here Because You Were There: Immigration and the End of Empire, which explores post-war immigration laws, the afterlives of British imperial citizenship and related attempts to reimagine and rejuvenate British imperialism after 1945. Contributing to transnational histories of decolonisation, the book also explores the interconnections between human rights, post-war migration and international diplomacy. Author Interview with Dr Ian Sanjay Patel, author of We’re Here Because You Were There: Immigration and the End of Empire. Verso. 2021

    Providence College Faculty Author Series 2017-2018: Ian Levy

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    In this installment of the Faculty Authors Series, Ian Levy (Theology, Providence College) discusses his newest book, Introducing Medieval Biblical Interpretation: The Senses of Scripture in Premodern Exegesis

    Providence College Faculty Author Series 2017-2018: Ian Levy

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    In this installment of the Faculty Authors Series, Ian Levy (Theology, Providence College) discusses his newest book, Introducing Medieval Biblical Interpretation: The Senses of Scripture in Premodern Exegesis

    Author interview: Q and A with Dr Paul Ian Campbell, author of education, retirement and career transitions for ‘black’ ex-professional footballers

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    In this author interview, we speak to Dr Paul Ian Campbell about his new book, Education, Retirement and Career Transitions for ‘Black’ Ex-Professional Footballers: ‘From Being Idolised to Stacking Shelves’, which explores black British male ex-professional footballers’ experiences of, and preparations for, retirement and career transition

    Ian Bogost at X-Media Lab: serious gaming

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    Video games are usually viewed as a form of escapism: pure entertainment and shoot-em-up fantasy. But increasingly, games are being recognised as educational tools, or as deliverers of social or political messages. This evolving medium is taking on complex environments and issues, and providing a platform for people to explore a world or situation in an interactive way. In this talk at the X Media Lab in Sydney, video game theorist and designer Ian Bogost gives an overview of how video games can benefit human existence. Ian Bogost is author of "Unit Operations: An Approach to Videogame Criticism", recently listed among "50 books for everyone in the game industry". He also wrote "Persuasive Games: The Expressive Power of Videogames", and was co-author of "Racing the Beam: The Atari Video Computer System". He is widely considered an influential thinker and doer in the videogame industry and research community. &nbsp

    Democracy Sausage with Mark Kenny: How to be a liberal with Ian Dunt

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    On this Democracy Sausage Extra, Ian Dunt - host of the Oh God, What Now? podcast and author of How to be a liberal - joins Mark Kenny to discuss the history of liberal thought, how it has shaped present day politics, and the origins of the ‘culture wars’. Have the culture wars emerged out of the failures of liberalism? Why haven’t contemporary political actors done more to protect people from prejudice and the tyranny of the majority? And is liberalism a natural corollary to democracy? On this Democracy Sausage Extra, author, political journalist and broadcaster Ian Dunt joins Professor Mark Kenny to discuss the history of political thought, present day politics, and liberalism’s trajectory

    Reliability and validity of the child version of the Eating Disorder Examination: a preliminary investigation

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    Objective: The Eating Disorder Examination (EDE) is a reliable and valid semistructured interview that measures the specific psychopathology of anorexia nervosa (AN) and bulimia nervosa. The current study aims to investigate the psychometric properties of the child adaptation of the EDE (ChEDE 12.0).Method: The ChEDE was administered to 15 children with AN, 15 children with other clinical eating disturbances, and two groups of 15 age-matched controls. The groups were compared using a two-sample matched groups design.Results: Alpha coefficients for each of the ChEDE subscales indicated a high degree of internal consistency, and interrater reliability was found to be high (r = .91 to r = 1.00). The subscale scores of the AN group were significantly higher than those of the other groups, whereas the other eating disturbance group did not differ from its control group.Discussion: The ChEDE differentiates children with AN from children with other forms of clinical eating disturbance and control children
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