|
Showing 1 - 25 of
156 matches in All Departments
The metrics presently being used to gauge student success have
become outdated and irrelevant. Enrollment, persistence, and degree
attainment are secondary measures, missing entirely the question of
whether students are truly achieving an effective life skillset
while attempting to complete degree or graduation fulfillment.
Student success, and the success of the education system, will be
based on collaborative and cooperative efforts by all stakeholders
as well as those with vested interests in the future economic
development of local communities as well as national development.
Participatory Pedagogy: Emerging Research and Opportunities is an
academic research publication that explores educational change and
methodologies for the promotion of lifelong learning. Highlighting
a wide range of topics such as educational achievement, learning
experience, and public education, this book is ideal for teachers,
administrators, curriculum developers, education professionals,
practitioners, researchers, and students.
Does God still speak to us? Can God's voice still be heard
today? Do miracles really happen? Is there a difference in praise
and prayer? Is God able to make something beautiful out of the
worst situations?
To these questions, Ann Melton gives a resounding "Yes " She has
experienced God in success and failure, illness and heartache, work
and play. In this book you can see that through all her encounters
with God, she has discovered that any form of sincere believing
prayer directs God's power into our lives and this is especially
true of prayer blended with praise. It is possible for anyone to
have a close walk with the Lord. Simply by calling his name and
pouring out your heart to him, miracles can happen.
During the first several months of U.S. participation in World War
II, our East Coast was menaced by German's u-boats. The submarines
were sinking an average of a ship-a-day and they had suffered no
loses. But at midnight on April 13, 1942, the U.S.S. Roper
discovered the U-85 recharging its batteries off the coast of North
Carolina. The U-85 was the first U-boat sunk in American waters.
The Roper would have been the most celebrated destroyer in the U.S.
Navy had it not been for the captain's next order. In Time Will
Tell, Ann Davis reveals the truth about the burial of twenty-nine
German sailor's in Hampton, Virginia's National Cemetery. Why were
they buried at night though with "military honors?"
This book takes a radical approach to ecological economics,
proposing a new paradigm based on earth systems science. This book
questions the foundation of economics on individual private
property, and proposes new forms of relationship to land and to the
state. It questions the foundation of economics on the individual,
and proposes new forms of regional ecological collectives,
integrated at the global level. It critically examines the
assumptions of economics and re-envisions it as more integrally
related to society and ecology. The volume integrates insights from
a variety of fields, including humanities, natural, and social
science, placing human life in the setting of ecology. The chapters
invoke a historical institutional methodology to examine the link
between economic theories and economic institutions, understanding
performativity and applying reflexivity, and the potential for the
emergence of new visions and methods. The method draws upon
literary studies, linguistic philosophy, as well as long term
economic history. Providing an alternative view of the relationship
of humans to the earth, this book is appropriate for students and
researchers across a variety of disciplines including economics,
history, ecology, and philosophy.
Individualism has been one of the driving forces in the rise of
modern capitalism, and methodological individualism has been
dominant in social science for many years. In this paradigm the
economy is seen as a machine to routinize production and improve
efficiency, and the discipline of economics has come to focus on
control and automation. Recent innovations in natural and social
sciences, however, indicate a shift in thinking away from
individualism and towards interconnectedness. The End of
Individualism and the Economy: Emerging Paradigms of Connection and
Community traces the origins of "the individual" in history,
philosophy, economics, and social science. Drawing from linguistic
philosophy, there is increasing attention to language as a social
substrate for all institutions, including money and the market. One
irony is that the "individual" is a key term, related to distinct
institutions and associated expertise; that is, "the individual" is
social. The book explores the influence of individualism in the
subversion of class consciousness, the view of impersonality as a
virtue, and the rise of financialization. The founding assumption
of economics, the rational autonomous individual with exogenous
tastes, undercuts social solidarity and blocks awareness of
interconnections and interdependencies. The text looks forward and
embraces the new paradigms and alternative forms of governance,
economics, and science which can be developed based on collectives
and communities, with new values, frameworks, and world views. This
work is suitable for academics, students, scholars, and researchers
with an interest in economic and social collectives and
methodological individualism, as well as those studying the
connections between economics and other disciplines in the social
and natural sciences.
Money is usually understood as a valuable object, the value of
which is attributed to it by its users and which other users
recognize. It serves to link disparate institutions, providing a
disguised whole and prime tool for the "invisible hand" of the
market. This book offers an interpretation of money as a social
institution. Money provides the link between the household and the
firm, the worker and his product, making that very division seem
natural and money as imminently practical. Money as a Social
Institution begins in the medieval period and traces the evolution
of money alongside consequent implications for the changing models
of the corporation and the state. This is then followed with
double-entry accounting as a tool of long-distance merchants and
bankers, then the monitoring of the process of production by
professional corporate managers. Davis provides a framework of
analysis for examining money historically, beyond the operation of
those particular institutions, which includes the possibility of
conceptualizing and organizing the world differently. This volume
is of great importance to academics and students who are interested
in economic history and history of economic thought, as well as
international political economics and critique of political
economy.
Money is usually understood as a valuable object, the value of
which is attributed to it by its users and which other users
recognize. It serves to link disparate institutions, providing a
disguised whole and prime tool for the "invisible hand" of the
market. This book offers an interpretation of money as a social
institution. Money provides the link between the household and the
firm, the worker and his product, making that very division seem
natural and money as imminently practical. Money as a Social
Institution begins in the medieval period and traces the evolution
of money alongside consequent implications for the changing models
of the corporation and the state. This is then followed with
double-entry accounting as a tool of long-distance merchants and
bankers, then the monitoring of the process of production by
professional corporate managers. Davis provides a framework of
analysis for examining money historically, beyond the operation of
those particular institutions, which includes the possibility of
conceptualizing and organizing the world differently. This volume
is of great importance to academics and students who are interested
in economic history and history of economic thought, as well as
international political economics and critique of political
economy.
First Published in 2000. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
|