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This book explores how teachers can re-examine their emotional
investments in enacting dominant settler values through changing
their text selection and teaching practices. Based on a
longitudinal qualitative research study conducted by a national
team of literacy scholars in collaboration with practicing literacy
teachers at eight sites across Canada, the book investigates how
groups of teachers, working collaboratively in inquiry groups,
develop and implement curriculum to promote their own and their
students’ understandings of social justice in postcolonial and
settler spaces. In particular, the book highlights the rich and
dynamic landscape of postcolonial authors, illustrators and texts,
the development of culturally- sensitive curricula, and critical
pedagogies possible in addressing contemporary and historical
issues, both local and global. This book is primarily of interest
to literacy scholars, literacy instructors (teacher educators) in
teacher education programs, educational leaders, practicing
teachers from the K-12 spectrum, and school district staff and
policy makers with responsibilities for or interests in the
potential of literacy and literature engagement for social justice
education. The book is also be of interest to postsecondary
educators and teacher educators wishing to use literature in social
justice, anti-racist, and anti-oppressive courses.
"I am drawn to the concept of the Heldin family and your main
character, Hilda, as she moves through life and faces different
questions and experiences."
-Amy Gingerich, Editorial Director, "The Herald Press"
In the early 1900s, fourteen-year-old Hilda Heldin offers God a
promise-she will give her heart to Jesus if He heals her ailing
mother. But God does not make bargains.
Not long after Hilda's mother dies, her father, a Mennonite
preacher and Minnesota farmer prays for a new wife. Worried that
his three children need a mother, he pens a letter to Ukrainian
schoolteacher Leah Loewen, a spinster he knows. Before long, they
are married-even as Hilda and her younger sister still struggle
with their grief. Hilda must meet the challenges of her Mennonite
faith and life on the prairie, she finds the strength to endure
weather catastrophes, world wars, birth, and death-all while
maturing into adulthood and discovering her true identity.
"Heldin" tells an unforgettable tale of a brave woman's
compelling, coming-of-age journey as she tries to come to terms
with the faith that governs her life.
Strategy, the link between mission and operational plans to improve
an institution’s performance, is a critical element to the future
success of higher education (HE). Hoshin Kanri (HK), the
application of Lean principles and practices to strategy
development, deployment, and management is a systematic and
effective approach to support institutional success, particularly
when competition is high. Surprisingly, despite its known
effectiveness and advantages over other approaches to strategy
development, deployment, and management, the application of HK in
HE is limited. This book promotes greater awareness, appreciation,
and application of HK at HE institutions. The book is divided into
four sections: Section One (Introduction to Hoshin Kanri) provides
a general overview of HK and its potential contributions when used
in HE settings. Section Two (Case Studies) provide several examples
where aspects of HK were introduced at HE institutions. These case
studies, which vary in scope, use of HK practices and tools, and
identified benefits, offer insights both for helping senior leaders
recognize the value of HK (and adopt the HK process) as well as
on-the-ground experiences using HK tools and techniques –
including barriers and challenges – during implementation. The
third section (Expanding the Application of Hoshin Kanri in Higher
Education) includes several chapters on how to begin an HE
institution’s HK journey. The chapters include practical steps
for gaining support for and implementing HK strategy development,
deployment, and management tailored for HE institutions across both
typical and novel applications of HK. In the fourth and final
section (Implications for Practice and Research) the co-editors
present a high-level summary of the "current state" of HK in HE and
offer thoughts and recommendations on the "future state" directions
for practice, research opportunities, and challenges for HK in HE.
The book underscores the key benefits HK can offer HE institutions.
With its Lean roots of continuous improvement and respect for
people, HK offers HE institutions an effective and sustainable
approach to strategy implementation, deployment, and management. HK
can be used institution-wide or at any level or area within an
institution. While the local application of HK won’t achieve the
full benefits possible through institution-wide adoption, it offers
a marked improvement over other strategy approaches, that fail to
respect people and leverage their knowledge, expertise, and
insights to apply continuous improvement to move their office,
department, or function forward.
Many voices clamor to be heard in debates about whether shamans
cure, and whether shamanic spirituality is worth continuing or
recovering in the 21rst century. This book represents my personal
and analytical forays into shamanic studies, based on extensive,
periodic fieldwork in several areas of Siberia and Inner Asia,
beginning in 1976 in the Ob River (Khanty-Mansi) Region, sustained
by long-term research in the Sakha Republic (Yakutia), and
including trips to Tuva (Tyva) and Buriatia of the Russian
Federation. It is historical and current, ethnographic and
reflexive, geographically specific and theoretical when
appropriate. New insights into the fascinating resurgence of
shamanism are gained through exploration of political repression of
religion and its transcendence. Literature representing eclectic
claims to expertise is reviewed and interpreted in light of
Siberian experiences. ""
Simple Ordinary Differential Equations may have solutions in terms of power series whose coefficients grow at such a rate that the series has a radius of convergence equal to zero. In fact, every linear meromorphic system has a formal solution of a certain form, which can be relatively easily computed, but which generally involves such power series diverging everywhere. In this book the author presents the classical theory of meromorphic systems of ODE in the new light shed upon it by the recent achievements in the theory of summability of formal power series.
In an environment of diminishing resources, growing enrollment, and
increasing expectations of accountability, Lean Higher Education:
Increasing the Value and Performance of University Processes
provides the understanding and the tools required to return
education to the consumers it was designed to serve the students.
It supplies a unifying framework for implementing and sustaining a
Lean Higher Education (LHE) transformation at any institution,
regardless of size or mission. Using straightforward language,
relevant examples, and step-by-step guidelines for introducing Lean
interventions, this authoritative resource explains how to involve
stakeholders in the delivery of quality every step of the way. The
author details a flexible series of steps to help ensure
stakeholders understand all critical work processes. He presents a
wealth of empirical evidence that highlights successful
applications of Lean concepts at major universities and provides
proven methods for uncovering and eliminating activities that
overburden staff yet contribute little or no added value to
stakeholders. Complete with standardized methods for correctly
diagnosing workplace problems and implementing appropriate
solutions, this valuable reference arms you with the understanding
and the tools to effectively balance the needs of all stakeholders.
By implementing the Lean practices covered in these pages your
school will be better positioned to provide higher quality
education, at reduced costs, with efficient processes that instill
pride, maximize value, and respect the long-term interests of your
students, faculty, and staff.
The last decade witnessed an unprecedented annual growth of the
literature dealing with the philosophy of economics, as well as the
first signs of an institutionalization (conferences, an
international journal) of the philosophy of economics as a
scientific subject in itself - in particular in the U.S. In 1981 a
meeting took place with participants mainly of European
"continental" origin. In July 1987, we organized a second
conference "Philosophy of Economics II" at Tilburg Uni versity, The
Netherlands, mainly aiming at the establishment of first contacts
between the middle-European group and researchers from the U.S. The
present volume contains the papers presented at this conference.
Philosophical thought on economics in recent years split up in many
different streams, two of which are represented in the larger part
of this volume. The first of these streams was formed by a group of
researchers mainly from middle-Europe, who make empirical studies
of the logical structures of the different theories as they find
them presented in economic literature. Two methods prevail here.
First, the structuralist method, as exemplified in the writings of
Sneed, Stegmiiller and others, of describing the object of a theory
as a set of ("partial potential") models. Such models consist of
sets and relationships between these sets, which represent the
concepts used in the theory."
Recent advances in surgical procedures for the management of focal
liver diseases have greatly increased the demand for diagnostic
accuracy. So far these demands have been only partially met by
further technical developments such as colour coded duplex
sonography, spiral CT and marked improvements in magnetic resonance
imaging. It is becoming increasingly clear that liver specific
contrast media are essential for utilizing these technical
developments to their fullest advantage in patient care. Against
this background, a workshop was held to explore the current methods
of diagnostic imaging of the liver and to try and establish a
profile for the future liver specific contrast media. The
pathologist's introductory and general overview is followed by
chapters on the individual imaging procedures such as ultrasound,
CT and MRI, so that each of the three is given the attention it
deserves. The book will be of interest to radiologists from the
various disciplines, and also those who plan and perform therapies,
particularly surgeons and internists.
Strategy, the link between mission and operational plans to improve
an institution’s performance, is a critical element to the future
success of higher education (HE). Hoshin Kanri (HK), the
application of Lean principles and practices to strategy
development, deployment, and management is a systematic and
effective approach to support institutional success, particularly
when competition is high. Surprisingly, despite its known
effectiveness and advantages over other approaches to strategy
development, deployment, and management, the application of HK in
HE is limited. This book promotes greater awareness, appreciation,
and application of HK at HE institutions. The book is divided into
four sections: Section One (Introduction to Hoshin Kanri) provides
a general overview of HK and its potential contributions when used
in HE settings. Section Two (Case Studies) provide several examples
where aspects of HK were introduced at HE institutions. These case
studies, which vary in scope, use of HK practices and tools, and
identified benefits, offer insights both for helping senior leaders
recognize the value of HK (and adopt the HK process) as well as
on-the-ground experiences using HK tools and techniques –
including barriers and challenges – during implementation. The
third section (Expanding the Application of Hoshin Kanri in Higher
Education) includes several chapters on how to begin an HE
institution’s HK journey. The chapters include practical steps
for gaining support for and implementing HK strategy development,
deployment, and management tailored for HE institutions across both
typical and novel applications of HK. In the fourth and final
section (Implications for Practice and Research) the co-editors
present a high-level summary of the "current state" of HK in HE and
offer thoughts and recommendations on the "future state" directions
for practice, research opportunities, and challenges for HK in HE.
The book underscores the key benefits HK can offer HE institutions.
With its Lean roots of continuous improvement and respect for
people, HK offers HE institutions an effective and sustainable
approach to strategy implementation, deployment, and management. HK
can be used institution-wide or at any level or area within an
institution. While the local application of HK won’t achieve the
full benefits possible through institution-wide adoption, it offers
a marked improvement over other strategy approaches, that fail to
respect people and leverage their knowledge, expertise, and
insights to apply continuous improvement to move their office,
department, or function forward.
The papers in this volume were presented at the colloquium
"Reduktion in der Wissenschaft: Struktur, Beispiele, philos-
ophische PrObleme", held in Bielefeld, West Germany, July 18- 21,
1983. Altogether eighteen talks were delivered at the symposium,
and all appear here with the exception of Professor Ehlers'
address. In addition, we are pleased to be able to include three
papers by invited participants (Kamiah, Ludwig, Scheibe) who were
unable to attend the meeting. The meeting itself brought together a
sizeable group of logicians, philosophers and working scientists to
discuss and debate the theme of reduction, one that occupies a
central place in contemporary philosophy of science. The
participants and contributors succeeded in opening up new
directions in reduction studies and presenting fresh case studies
of re- duction from many different areas of scientific practice.
Their efforts will greatly enhance our understanding of reduction
and, consequently, our grasp of the complex process of scien- tific
change and the unity and growth of scientific knowledge.
"This is truly an outstanding book. [It] brings together all of the
latest research in clinical trials methodology and how it can be
applied to drug development.... Chang et al provide applications to
industry-supported trials. This will allow statisticians in the
industry community to take these methods seriously." Jay Herson,
Johns Hopkins University The pharmaceutical industry's approach to
drug discovery and development has rapidly transformed in the last
decade from the more traditional Research and Development (R &
D) approach to a more innovative approach in which strategies are
employed to compress and optimize the clinical development plan and
associated timelines. However, these strategies are generally being
considered on an individual trial basis and not as part of a fully
integrated overall development program. Such optimization at the
trial level is somewhat near-sighted and does not ensure cost,
time, or development efficiency of the overall program. This book
seeks to address this imbalance by establishing a statistical
framework for overall/global clinical development optimization and
providing tactics and techniques to support such optimization,
including clinical trial simulations. Provides a statistical
framework for achieve global optimization in each phase of the drug
development process. Describes specific techniques to support
optimization including adaptive designs, precision medicine,
survival-endpoints, dose finding and multiple testing. Gives
practical approaches to handling missing data in clinical trials
using SAS. Looks at key controversial issues from both a clinical
and statistical perspective. Presents a generous number of case
studies from multiple therapeutic areas that help motivate and
illustrate the statistical methods introduced in the book. Puts
great emphasis on software implementation of the statistical
methods with multiple examples of software code (both SAS and R).
It is important for statisticians to possess a deep knowledge of
the drug development process beyond statistical considerations. For
these reasons, this book incorporates both statistical and
"clinical/medical" perspectives.
"This is truly an outstanding book. [It] brings together all of the
latest research in clinical trials methodology and how it can be
applied to drug development.... Chang et al provide applications to
industry-supported trials. This will allow statisticians in the
industry community to take these methods seriously." Jay Herson,
Johns Hopkins University The pharmaceutical industry's approach to
drug discovery and development has rapidly transformed in the last
decade from the more traditional Research and Development (R &
D) approach to a more innovative approach in which strategies are
employed to compress and optimize the clinical development plan and
associated timelines. However, these strategies are generally being
considered on an individual trial basis and not as part of a fully
integrated overall development program. Such optimization at the
trial level is somewhat near-sighted and does not ensure cost,
time, or development efficiency of the overall program. This book
seeks to address this imbalance by establishing a statistical
framework for overall/global clinical development optimization and
providing tactics and techniques to support such optimization,
including clinical trial simulations. Provides a statistical
framework for achieve global optimization in each phase of the drug
development process. Describes specific techniques to support
optimization including adaptive designs, precision medicine,
survival-endpoints, dose finding and multiple testing. Gives
practical approaches to handling missing data in clinical trials
using SAS. Looks at key controversial issues from both a clinical
and statistical perspective. Presents a generous number of case
studies from multiple therapeutic areas that help motivate and
illustrate the statistical methods introduced in the book. Puts
great emphasis on software implementation of the statistical
methods with multiple examples of software code (both SAS and R).
It is important for statisticians to possess a deep knowledge of
the drug development process beyond statistical considerations. For
these reasons, this book incorporates both statistical and
"clinical/medical" perspectives.
This book has grown out of eight years of close collaboration among
its authors. From the very beginning we decided that its content
should come out as the result of a truly common effort. That is, we
did not "distribute" parts of the text planned to each one of us.
On the contrary, we made a point that each single paragraph be the
product of a common reflection. Genuine team-work is not as usual
in philosophy as it is in other academic disciplines. We think,
however, that this is more due to the idiosyncrasy of philosophers
than to the nature of their subject. Close collaboration with
positive results is as rewarding as anything can be, but it may
also prove to be quite difficult to implement. In our case, part of
the difficulties came from purely geographic separation. This
caused unsuspected delays in coordinating the work. But more than
this, as time passed, the accumulation of particular results and
ideas outran our ability to fit them into an organic unity.
Different styles of exposition, different ways of formalization,
different levels of complexity were simultaneously present in a
voluminous manuscript that had become completely unmanageable. In
particular, a portion of the text had been conceived in the
language of category theory and employed ideas of a rather abstract
nature, while another part was expounded in the more conventional
set-theoretic style, stressing intui tivity and concreteness."
Addresses the most important theoretical and practical problems
underlying public budgeting. This anthology is organized topically
rather than historically, with an effort to delineate the issues
needed to understand some of the controversies in the field. It
describes what public budgeting is, where it comes from, and what
it is for.
The ancient heartland of shamanism is no longer forbidden territory
- to travelers or to the spirits. But the spirits never left the
vastnesses of Siberia and Central Asia, as these writings reveal.
Russian and native experts, and an American cultural anthropologist
who has done fieldwork in the region, introduce us to shamans as
the poets, therapists, healers, and even leaders of their
communities. Among the special features of this collection are
remarkable transcriptions of shamanic exhortations and a
pathbreaking study of shamanic tales and rituals.
Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
Russia is not only vast, it is also culturally diverse, the core of
an empire that spanned Eurasia. In addition to the majority Russian
Orthodox and various other Christian groups, the Russian Federation
includes large communities of Muslims, Jews, Buddhists, and members
of other religious groups, some with ancient historical roots. All
are in a state of ferment, and securing formal state recognition
for specific communities is often daunting. This collection
provides entry into the diversity of Russia's religious
communities. Marjorie Mandelstam Balzer's introduction to the
volume illuminates major political, social, and
cultural-anthropological trends. The book is organized by religious
tradition or identity, with further thematic perspectives on each
set of readings. The authors include ethnologists, sociologists,
political analysts, and religious leaders from many regions of the
Federation. They analyze the changing dynamics of religion and
politics within each community and in the context of the current
drive to recentralize both political and religious authority in
Moscow. Topical coverage extends from reassertions of Russian
Orthodoxy to activities of Christian and Muslim missionaries to the
revival of many other religions, including indigenous shamanic
ones.
Russia is not only vast, it is also culturally diverse, the core of
an empire that spanned Eurasia. In addition to the majority Russian
Orthodox and various other Christian groups, the Russian Federation
includes large communities of Muslims, Jews, Buddhists, and members
of other religious groups, some with ancient historical roots. All
are in a state of ferment, and securing formal state recognition
for specific communities is often daunting. This collection
provides entry into the diversity of Russia's religious
communities. Marjorie Mandelstam Balzer's introduction to the
volume illuminates major political, social, and
cultural-anthropological trends. The book is organized by religious
tradition or identity, with further thematic perspectives on each
set of readings. The authors include ethnologists, sociologists,
political analysts, and religious leaders from many regions of the
Federation. They analyze the changing dynamics of religion and
politics within each community and in the context of the current
drive to recentralize both political and religious authority in
Moscow. Topical coverage extends from reassertions of Russian
Orthodoxy to activities of Christian and Muslim missionaries to the
revival of many other religions, including indigenous shamanic
ones.
There has been a revival of all things Celtic in recent decades,
producing everything from Irish folk music to a rise in pagan
mysticism. By contrast, Tracy Balzer's book, THIN PLACES: An
Evangelical Journey into Celtic Christianity is written to
introduce contemporary Christians to the great spiritual legacy of
the early Celts, a legacy that has remained undiscovered or
inaccessible for many in the evangelical tradition. Thin Places not
only reveals the deeply scriptural, sacramental faith of the Celts,
but also provides ways for us to learn from this ancient faith
expression, applying fresh and lively spiritual disciplines to our
lives today.
Joan D. Koss-Chioino and Philip Hefner's new volume is unique in
exploring the meaning of spiritual transformation and healing with
new research from a scientific perspective. An interdisciplinary
group of contributors-anthropological, psychological, medical,
theological, and biological scientists-investigate the role of
religious communities and healing practitioners, with spiritual
transformation as their medium of healing. Individual authors
evaluate the meaning of spiritual transformations and the
consequences for those who experience it; the contributions of
indigenous healing systems; new frameworks for neurological and
physiological correlates of transformative religious experiences;
the support from neuroscience for the radical empathy and
intersubjective exchange that takes place in healing practices; and
evidence for universal elements of the healing process. This
exciting new book will be an invaluable resource for those
generally interested in the role of religion in society, across the
sciences, social sciences, and all religious traditions. With a
foreword by Solomon H. Katz.
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