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Books > Social sciences > Education > Higher & further education > General
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The Banyan; 1922
(Hardcover)
Brigham Young University, Associated Students of Brigham Young
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R855
Discovery Miles 8 550
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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The importance that practitioners are placing on longitudinal
designs and analyses signals a critical shift toward methods that
enable a better understanding of developmental processes thought to
underlie many human attributes and behaviors. A simple scan of
one's own applied literature reveals evidence of this trend through
the increasing number of articles adopting longitudinal methods as
their primary analytic tools. Advances in Longitudinal Methods in
the Social and Behavioral Sciences is a resource intended for
advanced graduate students, faculty, and applied researchers
interested in longitudinal data analysis, especially in the social
and behavioral sciences. The chapters are written by established
methodological researchers from diverse research domains such as
psychology, biostatistics, educational statistics, psychometrics,
and family sciences. Each chapter exposes the reader to some of the
latest methodological developments and perspectives in the analysis
of longitudinal data, and is written in a didactic tone that makes
the content accessible to the broader research community. This
volume will be particularly appealing to researchers in domains
including, but not limited to: human development, clinical
psychology, educational psychology, school psychology, special
education, epidemiology, family science, kinesiology, communication
disorders, and education policy and administration. The book will
also be attractive to members of several professional organizations
such as the American Educational Research Association (AERA), the
American Psychological Association (APA), the Association for
Psychological Science (APS), the Society for Research on
Adolescence (SRA), the Society for Research in Child Development
(SRCD), Society for Research in Adult Development (SRAD), British
Psychological Society (BPS), Canadian Psychological Association
(CPA), and other related organizations.
Violence is rampant in America. It is ingrained in our history and
our psychology, but what cultural similarities do high-violence
areas share? It has been a question tackled by academics and
members of the law community since the foundation of our country;
and yet, are we any closer to an answer now than we were a hundred
years ago? If we are closer, why has the crime rate steadily
increased? Reason would conclude that in recognizing the cultural
similarities of high-violence areas, we would be able to alter
these similarities and deter criminal behaviors. Even so, the
behaviors are not deterred. Crime has not lessened. Studies
continue, but nothing changes. Should we therefore give up? Or
should our hypotheses and conclusions merely change? Author Hassan
Dibich says yes to the latter. "The Subculture of Violence" takes a
close look at the psychological and cultural hypotheses of old.
Dibich delves deeply into the science of homicide and how
socioeconomic and even climactic conditions affect statistics. He
looks closely at communities with a high number of newcomers and
single parents. He goes so far as to disprove previous logic and
call for fresh research. America is being swallowed by violence. It
is time for new answers, as the old brought us no closer to peace.
Higher education has seen better days. Harsh budget cuts, the
precarious nature of employment in colleague teaching, and
political hostility to the entire enterprise of education have made
for an increasingly fraught landscape. Radical Hope is an ambitious
response to this state of affairs, at once political and practice -
the work of an activist, teacher, and public intellectual grappling
with some of the most pressing topics at the intersection of higher
education and social justice. Kevin Gannon asks that the
contemporary university's manifold problems be approached as
opportunities for critical engagement, arguing that, when done
effectively, teaching is by definition emancipatory and hopeful.
Considering individual pedagogical practice, the students who are
the primary audience and beneficiaries of teaching, and the
institutions and systems within which teaching occurs, Radical Hope
surveys the field, tackling everything from impostor syndrome to
cell phones in class to allegations of a campus 'free speech
crisis'. Throughout, Gannon translates ideals into tangible
strategies and practices (including key takeaways at the conclusion
of each chapter), with the goal of reclaiming teachers' essential
role in the discourse of higher education.
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Index; 1941
(Hardcover)
University of Massachusetts at Amherst
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R866
Discovery Miles 8 660
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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Web 2.0-Based E-Learning: Applying Social Informatics for Tertiary
Teaching provides a useful and valuable reference to the latest
advances in the area of educational technology and e-learning. This
innovative book offers an excellent resource for any practitioner,
researcher, or academician with an interest in the use of the Web
for providing meaningful learning experiences.
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Index; 1987
(Hardcover)
University of Massachusetts at Amherst
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R888
Discovery Miles 8 880
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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