338,402 research outputs found

    Entrevista com Graham Welch por Silvia Sobreira

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    Graham Welch é muito respeitado e conhecido em todo o mundo. Seu interesse pelo desenvolvimento da voz nas crianças tem lançado luz sobre a área do canto na Educação Musical. Ele tem atuado como consultor especialista para departamentos e agências governamentais em Reino Unido, Itália, Suécia, Estados Unidos, Ucrânia, Emirados Árabes Unidos, África do Sul e Argentina, com foco em aspectos da educação musical e educação de professores. O número de suas publicações se aproxima dos trezentos e cinquenta, e elas abarcam o desenvolvimento musical e a educação musical, a educação de professores, a psicologia da música, o canto e a ciência da voz, bem como a música na educação especial. Mas as pessoas não conhecem muito sua experiência como professor de música nas escolas inglesas no início de sua carreira, um “detalhe” que realmente faz diferença e marca sua peculiaridade na área. Nesta entrevista, realizada no dia primeiro de fevereiro de 2016, Welch fala sobre suas experiências e problemas relacionados à Educação Musical. // Graham Welch is very respected and known all over the world. His interest in the development of voice in children has shed light on the singing area in Music Education. He has acted as a consultant for government departments and agencies in the United Kingdom, Italy, Sweden, the United States, Ukraine, the United Arab Emirates, South Africa and Argentina, focusing on aspects of music education and teacher education. The number of publications approaches the three hundred and fifty, and they include musical development and music education, teacher education, music psychology, singing and voice science, as well as music in special education. But people do not know much about his experience as a music teacher in English schools at the beginning of his career, a "detail" that really makes a difference and marks his background in the area. In this interview, held on February 1, 2016, Welch talks about his experiences and problems related to Music Education

    Welch, S, 313059

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/424788Surname: WELCH. Given Name(s) or Initials: S. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: 313059. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: SEA-5301.250447 Item: [2016.0049.57049] "Welch, S, 313059

    Chancellor Robert S. K. Welch

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    Robert S. K. Welch, Chancellor from 1985 to 2000. He was the fifth Chancellor of Brock

    Interview with Reverend C.C. Welch

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    In this interview, Reverend C. C. Welch discusses his life's work as a pastor and his views on the Civil Rights movement. Welch compares city and country churches, saying the people in the country are more sincere and real and have quieter services, while in the city the services are more emotional. He discusses conducting revivals and talks about the joy and satisfaction he gets out of preaching. He discusses several well-known local pastors. He explains the work of the church. He says they didn't believe in interfering with labor disputes. He discusses burial societies: a person paid a little money each month, and they received money if they went into the hospital and upon their death, for their burial expenses. He also describes how they kept a benevolent fund to aid victims of floods. However, he says the church couldn't do much to help during the Depression. Welch discusses Jim Crow laws and trying to register to vote. He was asked questions about the government. It took him a long time to finally get registered. He thinks finally got tired of dealing with him. He explains that he never participated in any marches, but his church held prayer meetings and institutes about how to act under pressure; they followed Martin Luther King, Jr.'s practice of nonviolence. He says he knew King and once gave a revival for King's father when the man was too sick to do it himself. He also mentions Fred Shuttlesworth; he says he had a lot of iron in him, so whites were too intimidated to bother him too much. When speaking about the unfair laws of the time, Welch says, It was miserable if you thought it would last always. But he always preached that they wouldn't last. He says he didn't try to break any unfair laws, just tried to get around them through boycotts. For example, many gas stations would refuse to check oil for black patrons, so the blacks learned who would and wouldn't, passed on that information to others, and succeeded in changing those gas stations' policies through not giving them their business

    Austin S. Welch

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    Edith S. Welch

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    Result of the Welch`s T test for numeric attributes.

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    Result of the Welch`s T test for numeric attributes.</p

    Life of occam-Pi

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    This paper considers some questions prompted by a brief review of the history of computing. Why is programming so hard? Why is concurrency considered an “advanced” subject? What’s the matter with Objects? Where did all the Maths go? In searching for answers, the paper looks at some concerns over fundamental ideas within object orientation (as represented by modern programming languages), before focussing on the concurrency model of communicating processes and its particular expression in the occam family of languages. In that focus, it looks at the history of occam, its underlying philosophy (Ockham’s Razor), its semantic foundation on Hoare’s CSP, its principles of process oriented design and its development over almost three decades into occam-? (which blends in the concurrency dynamics of Milner’s ?-calculus). Also presented will be an urgent need for rationalisation – occam-? is an experiment that has demonstrated significant results, but now needs time to be spent on careful review and implementing the conclusions of that review. Finally, the future is considered. In particular, is there a future

    John J. Welch (634b26)

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    A close up of S/Sgt. John J. Welch. One black and white photograph
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