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The Modern Farrier; Or, the Art of Preserving the Health and Curing the Diseases of Horses, Dogs, Oxen, Cows, Sheep & Swine - Comprehending a Great Variety of Original and Approved Recipes; Instructions in Hunting, Shooting, Coursing, Racing, & Fishing, an (Paperback)
A. Lawson
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R740
Discovery Miles 7 400
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The Modern Farrier; Or, the Art of Preserving the Health and Curing the Diseases of Horses, Dogs, Oxen, Cows, Sheep, & Swine - Comprehending a Great Variety of Original and Approved Recipes; Instructions in Hunting, Shooting, Coursing, Racing, and Fishing, (Paperback)
A. Lawson
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R740
Discovery Miles 7 400
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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How has the U.S. dealt, throughout its long history, with one of
the world's oldest problems? Although poverty has always been part
of the human experience, societal reactions and responses to it
have been as varied as the condition has been static. Poverty in
America has its own turbulent history of causes, effects, and
remedies, from debtor's prison to the War on Poverty, from Social
Darwinism to Food Stamps. This in-depth encyclopedia covers the
entire history of American poverty from all angles--historical,
social, cultural, political, spiritual, and literary. How has
poverty been defined in America? What has been done to prevent it?
How have minority groups been affected? How has the church reacted?
And what, if anything, can be done to eliminate it? Poverty in
America covers these issues in vivid detail, from the colonial
period to the Industrial Revolution to the global economy of the
21st century. Entries include: Affirmative Action American Indians
and Poverty Drugs, Alcohol, and the Poor Equal Employment
Opportunity The Grapes of Wrath Head Start No Child Left Behind
Protest Movements Welfare State Impactful primary document excerpts
from key periods throughout American history are also included,
providing firsthand accounts from all sides of the issue. A
chronology of events and an extensive bibliography round out this
fascinating work.
This book focuses on special organizational configurations for
schools in diverse parts of the world. Some of these new
organizational and institutional designs are called multi-service
schools, others are called extended service schools and still
others are called community learning centers. While these schools
have different names and notable different characteristics, they
belong in the same category because of a common feature in their
design: they connect schools with once-separate community programs
and services.Chief among the prototypes for these new
organizational and institutional designs are the ones featured in
the book's title. Some are called multi-service schools to indicate
that they selectively provide some new programs and services.
Others are called extended service schools to indicate that they
serve young people beyond the regular school day, seeking influence
and control over out-of-school time while enabling alternative
teaching-learning strategies, and providing services other than
typical "pupil support services." Still others are called community
learning centers, a name that showcases the educational functions
and priorities of schools and announcing priorities for adult
learning and development. Community schools, still called in some
places full-service community schools, serves as a prototype that
increasingly positions schools as multi-purpose, multi-component,
anchor institutions serving identifiable neighborhoods and entire
rural communities. The book is structured to enhance understanding
of these organizational prototypes and provides comparative social
analysis. It also identifies knowledge needs and gaps as well as
developmental territory for the future.
This volume details protocols on prion disease from multiple
disciplines and highlights the contribution each discipline has
made to the understanding of prion disease. Written in the highly
successful Methods in Molecular Biology series format, chapters
include introductions to their respective topics, lists of the
necessary materials and reagents, step-by-step, readily
reproducible laboratory protocols, and tips on troubleshooting and
avoiding known pitfalls. Authoritative and practical, Prions:
Methods and Protocols aims to ensure successful results in the
further study of this vital field.
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Uncle Otis (Hardcover)
Shawn A. Lawson
bundle available
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R830
Discovery Miles 8 300
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Three policy innovations at the heart of this book - the Common
Core State Standards (CCSS), new Annual Professional Performance
Review (APPR), and data driven instruction (DDI) provide a timely
opportunity to join school and district improvement and policy
implementation research with improvement science. This book is not
just a collection of findings about odds-beating schools (those
with higher than predicted student performance trends and higher
than average poverty and diversity) and their journeys to implement
these innovations. It also provides timely perspectives regarding
policy innovations and how they might disrupt practice in desirable
or undesirable ways. This book offers readers insight into how
educators at every boundary-classroom, school, and district
interact to make meaning of innovations, both individually and
collectively; and also how their meanings and values influence
innovation implementation outcomes. The story includes details how
policy innovations were tailored to school and district office
priorities; the features of these schools' structures, climates,
and routines that were conducive to implementation; and how these
innovations were able to penetrate the classroom boundaries.
Three policy innovations at the heart of this book - the Common
Core State Standards (CCSS), new Annual Professional Performance
Review (APPR), and data driven instruction (DDI) provide a timely
opportunity to join school and district improvement and policy
implementation research with improvement science. This book is not
just a collection of findings about odds-beating schools (those
with higher than predicted student performance trends and higher
than average poverty and diversity) and their journeys to implement
these innovations. It also provides timely perspectives regarding
policy innovations and how they might disrupt practice in desirable
or undesirable ways. This book offers readers insight into how
educators at every boundary-classroom, school, and district
interact to make meaning of innovations, both individually and
collectively; and also how their meanings and values influence
innovation implementation outcomes. The story includes details how
policy innovations were tailored to school and district office
priorities; the features of these schools' structures, climates,
and routines that were conducive to implementation; and how these
innovations were able to penetrate the classroom boundaries.
This book reveals the life of R. Clay Crawford, his dreams, his
schemes, his successes and his failures, as he launched himself
into many of the most turbulent episodes of nineteenth-century
United States history. Like everyone else, he was born with a
family history, not just genetic, but also cultural, determinants;
this book therefore reveals the influences on his behavior
inherited from his father and his grandfathers. And, again like
everyone else, he passed on to his children a model, not just
genetic, but cultural. Even so, Clay's story is not just a family
affair. Clay was a ""self-made man,"" living in an age when that
figure was thought to be a national asset-he thus stands out as a
warning that the worship of the ""self-made man"" produces more
rogues than Rockefellers.
Offers an in-depth report on advanced statistical tools for public health disease surveillance, which is the result of a prestigious World Health Organisation (WHO) and EU Biomed programme initiative. Traditionally, the role of public health disease surveillance has been to identify and evaluate morbidity and mortality but increasingly, more sophisticated methods are being applied as the authorities extend their studies to include control and prevention of disease. This book brings together leading experts to discuss complex methodologies for the statistical evaluation of disease mapping and risk assessment. It includes a broad variety of statistical techniques and where appropriate, examples are included on topical issues such as the analysis of putative health hazards. For easy reference the text is presented in five distinct sections, each with an introductory review: * Disease Mapping * Clustering of Disesase * Ecological Analysis * Risk Assessment for Putative Sources of Hazard * Public Health Applications and Case Studies Representative of the most pertinent issues within disease surveillance and mapping, this book will provide an accessible overview for statisticians and epidemiologists.
This book focuses on special organizational configurations for
schools in diverse parts of the world. Some of these new
organizational and institutional designs are called multi-service
schools, others are called extended service schools and still
others are called community learning centers. While these schools
have different names and notable different characteristics, they
belong in the same category because of a common feature in their
design: they connect schools with once-separate community programs
and services.Chief among the prototypes for these new
organizational and institutional designs are the ones featured in
the book's title. Some are called multi-service schools to indicate
that they selectively provide some new programs and services.
Others are called extended service schools to indicate that they
serve young people beyond the regular school day, seeking influence
and control over out-of-school time while enabling alternative
teaching-learning strategies, and providing services other than
typical "pupil support services." Still others are called community
learning centers, a name that showcases the educational functions
and priorities of schools and announcing priorities for adult
learning and development. Community schools, still called in some
places full-service community schools, serves as a prototype that
increasingly positions schools as multi-purpose, multi-component,
anchor institutions serving identifiable neighborhoods and entire
rural communities. The book is structured to enhance understanding
of these organizational prototypes and provides comparative social
analysis. It also identifies knowledge needs and gaps as well as
developmental territory for the future.
Redesigning Physical Education is a bold and innovative manifesto
for the fundamental redesign of physical education for the
twenty-first-century world. Aiming at better outcomes for children,
better working conditions for teachers, and innovative solutions to
the decline of school PE, it calls for a transnational collective
action project based on new research frameworks, stressing the
fundamental importance of health-enhancing, life-enriching active
participation for all children and young people. Action-oriented
and evidence-based, the book examines the key challenges driving
change, including the equity agenda, institutionalization, outcome
and accountability based teaching, and physical activity
requirements in schools. With a truly international scope, the text
explores perspectives from the USA, Canada, Scotland, England,
Wales, Ireland, New Zealand, Australia, and Italy. This is
important reading for students and academics studying and working
in physical education, kinesiology, public health, and children's
physical activity. It is also a valuable resource for pediatric
exercise specialists, especially sport and exercise psychologists.
Redesigning Physical Education is a bold and innovative manifesto
for the fundamental redesign of physical education for the
twenty-first-century world. Aiming at better outcomes for children,
better working conditions for teachers, and innovative solutions to
the decline of school PE, it calls for a transnational collective
action project based on new research frameworks, stressing the
fundamental importance of health-enhancing, life-enriching active
participation for all children and young people. Action-oriented
and evidence-based, the book examines the key challenges driving
change, including the equity agenda, institutionalization, outcome
and accountability based teaching, and physical activity
requirements in schools. With a truly international scope, the text
explores perspectives from the USA, Canada, Scotland, England,
Wales, Ireland, New Zealand, Australia, and Italy. This is
important reading for students and academics studying and working
in physical education, kinesiology, public health, and children's
physical activity. It is also a valuable resource for pediatric
exercise specialists, especially sport and exercise psychologists.
As novel, complex social problems increase, especially those
involving vulnerable people who reside in challenging places, the
limitations of conventional research methods implemented by just
one or two investigators become apparent. Research and development
alternatives are needed, particularly methods that engage teams of
researchers in real world problem solving while simultaneously
generating practice- and policy-relevant knowledge. Research
methods that effectively tap the expertise of everyday people,
especially those impacted by these targeted social problems, are a
special priority because academic researchers often lack
experiential knowledge that stems from direct, everyday encounters
with these vexing problems. Participatory action research (PAR)
responds to these manifest needs. It provides a methodological
structure and operational guidelines for preparing and deploying
people from various walks of life as co-researchers, and it
provides a proven strategy for generating practice- and
policy-relevant knowledge as problem-solving in real world contexts
proceeds.
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone!
When critics first began to respond to the fiction of Walker Percy,
they frequently refarded it as a fiction of ideas. The most
significant themes were Percy's religious, philosophical, and
cultural beliefs. Such conceptions of the man were grounded in his
own essays, a genre which in his hands tended toward the impersonal
and the abstract. In time Percy critics like William Rodney Allen
began to prove into Percy's biography for resources that verified
their intense critical speculations about the background of Percy's
fiction. In his childhood was his father's suicide and its
significant emergence in his fiction. Percy's biographers have
continued this investigation of the father's influence. Jay Tolson
deftly represent the theme of the paternal death as a vacuum Percy
felt throughout his life, while Bertram Wyatt-Brown studied the
Percy family ethos, which he showed to be shadowed for two hundred
years by high expectations, depression, and self-destruction. Now,
in Still Following Percy, a collection of interrelated essays,
Lewis Lawson studies the Percy canon to speculate that an earlier
and more fundamental shaping of Walker Percy's character and
fictional imagination was his sense of the in adequacy of the
relationship with he as an infant had with his mother and of her
early death. Lawson argues that the sense of loss led to Percy's
tendency to regression, to his need to create his own life
narrative in fiction after psychoanalysis had been insufficient as
a means of reconstruction, and to his conversion to Roman
Catholicism. Lawson interprets Percy's conversion as a statement of
the possibility of reconciliation through the transcendent truth.
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