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This book serves as a platform for educators and researchers to
unite educational technology and social justice. While educational
technology is a rapidly changing and progressive field of research
and practice, it remains largely separate from education for social
justice. Current literature about educational technology is often
approached from a technical, how-to perspective that emphasizes
ways to implement technology into the classroom. Technology is
often viewed as inevitable, yet neutral and value-free. Educational
technology, however, is anything but neutral. The contributors
collectively advance a hopeful discourse by exploring the potential
of technology as a vehicle to transform and emancipate, while not
forgoing a critically reflective measure of self-conscious critique
of our own role as educators, students, or scholars in oppressive
silences, constraints and conditions. This edited collection makes
an important and unique contribution to the field, as it will be
the first published volume to detail research, theory, and practice
regarding student use of technology in achieving liberatory aims
since IAP's 2009 publication, ICT for Education, Development and
Social Justice. The fields of educational technology and social
justice are vast and applicable in many domains, including teacher
education, graduate programs, and K-12 education. This work is
intended to appeal to a diverse academic and professional audience
of K-12 teachers, teacher educators, educational technology and
social justice scholars, and policy makers. Scholars and academics
instructing graduate-level educational technology courses can
reference this edited collection as the most current text on
socially just educational technology. Educational practitioners
from teacher education programs and the K-12 sector may use this
book as a source of ideas and inspiration to incorporate student
use of technology toward emancipatory aims. This title could be
adopted as a course text for both undergraduate and graduate
education courses in: media literacy, digital literacy, distance
education, education for social justice, and teacher preparation,
and educational technology courses. Readers will also be able to
use the book as a guide when critically analyzing their own
professional practice, whether it is in research, working with K-12
students, or preparing future educators or scholars.
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The Birthday Party (Paperback)
Laurent Mauvignier; Translated by Daniel Becker
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R515
R421
Discovery Miles 4 210
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Buried deep in rural France, little remains of the isolated hamlet
of the Three Lone Girls, save a few houses and a curiously
assembled quartet: Patrice Bergogne, inheritor of his family’s
farm; his wife, Marion; their daughter, Ida; and their neighbour,
Christine, an artist. While Patrice plans a surprise for his
wife’s fortieth birthday, inexplicable events start to disrupt
the hamlet’s quiet existence: anonymous, menacing letters, an
unfamiliar car rolling up the driveway. And as night falls,
strangers stalk the houses, unleashing a nightmarish chain of
events. Â Â Told in rhythmic, propulsive prose that
weaves seamlessly from one consciousness to the next over the
course of a day, Laurent Mauvignier’s The Birthday Party is a
deft unravelling of the stories we hide from others and from
ourselves, a gripping tale of the violent irruptions of the past
into the present, written by a major contemporary French writer.
In the first book written by the child of someone who died from an
eating disorder, Daniel Becker shows us the heartbreaking details
of his mother's anorexia nervosa—her unrelenting obsession with
food and her inability to nourish herself. His earliest memory of
her is watching as she packs her suitcase for the first of numerous
hospitalizations. From the observations of that confused child to
his realization of helplessness as an adult, Daniel conveys the
inner world of an anorectic and her family. He provides an intimate
portrayal of how he, his father and his two brothers each struggled
to balance their loyalty to Mom against the increasing awareness
that only by separating from her could they ensure their own
survival. In the end, Daniel must come to terms with his mother’s
slow demise and begin to lead a life out from under the shadow of
her illness. Part cautionary tale and fully descriptive of how
eating disorder effects family members.
Field stations and marine laboratories (FSMLs) are sentinels of
Earth's climate, providing scientists with the infrastructure to
collect data in otherwise inaccessible areas of the globe. Many
FSMLs were built around and continue to perpetuate male-dominated
institutional ideologies, making it difficult for women, BIPOC, and
those with intersecting identities to progress, succeed, and
thrive. In a collaborative effort across field ecologists and
communication scholars working with women navigating these spaces,
this book's priorities are to: 1) document the gender history of
FSMLs; 2) provide a context for the current organizational culture
and understand the current communication climate dynamics; 3)
explore current barriers to leadership, success, and factors that
contribute to positive communication climates in FSMLs, and 4)
explore strategies, programs, and interventions for supporting
women's leadership roles, as well as, to develop best practices for
policy, resource allocation, and field station design to better
support and increase women's leadership roles in FSMLs.
The third of a series of Multispecialty presentations in plastic
surgery is this issue on Rhinoplasty, led by Dr. Babak Azzizadeh
with plastic surgery section editor Dr. Ronald Gruber and facial
plastic surgery section Editor Dr. Daniel Becker. This
comprehensive publication on all aspects of Rhinoplasty and
Revision Rhinoplasty presents clinical management from plastic
surgeons and facial plastic surgeons on topics including:
Anatomy/Analysis of the Nose in Rhinoplasty; External and Endonasal
Rhinoplasty; Airway Obstruction; Surgical Treatment of Nasal
Obstruction in Rhinoplasty; Cleft Lip Nose; Humpectomy/Spreader
Flaps; Costal Cartilage Grafts in Rhinoplasty; Nasal Bones and
Osteotomies; Dorsal Hump Osteotomies; Dorsal Augmentation; Short
Nose Correction; Nasal Tip Deficiency; Projection and De-projection
Techniques in Rhinoplasty; Projection and De-projection in
Rhinoplasty; Use of Fillers in Rhinoplasty; Surgical Treatment of
the Middle Nasal Vault; Bulbous and Broad Nasal Tip; The Crooked
Nose; Surgical Treatment of the Twisted Nose; Nasal Base
Deformities; Alar Rim Deformities; Rhinoplasty in the Asian
Patient; Rhinoplasty in the African-American Patient; Rhinoplasty
in the Latino Patient; Revision Rhinoplasty; Chin Advancement,
Augmentation, and Reduction as an Adjunct to Rhinoplasty.
"History will one day look upon the movement to affirm the
personhood of unborn children in the same way we now look upon the
abolition of slavery and the end of the Holocaust. Dan Becker has
been a reliable and principled voice for the unborn. His book
advancing personhood for the most vulnerable among us is like a
sound of the trumpet that will reverberate throughout time. The
Holocaust of the unborn is the darkest chapter in American history
and Dan Becker's book is a call to turn the page and restore a
culture of life. It is a must read." Mathew D. Staver Dean and
Professor of Law Liberty University School of Law
Das Gesetz zur Verhutung erbkranken Nachwuchses vom 14. Juli 1933
war bereits Gegenstand von Arbeiten unterschiedlicher
wissenschaftlicher Disziplinen. Dieses Buch nahert sich dem Thema
aus rechtshistorischer Perspektive. Im Zentrum der Untersuchung
steht die Frage, ob "Asoziale" und "Gemeinschaftsfremde" im Sinne
der nationalsozialistischen Terminologie der Zwangssterilisierung
nach dem Gesetz zur Verhutung erbkranken Nachwuchses unterlagen.
Grundlage der Untersuchung sind neben der zeitgenoessischen
Fachliteratur insbesondere die veroeffentlichten Entscheidungen der
Erbgesundheits- und Erbgesundheitsobergerichte.
The contents in this publication of Facial Plastic Surgery
Clinics devoted to nasal reconstruction include: Anatomy and
Physiology, General Concepts in Nasal Reconstruction;
Reconstruction of the Dorsal and Sidewall Defects; Reconstruction
of Nasal Tip and Columellar Defects; Reconstruction of Alar
Defects; Transposition Flaps in Nasal Reconstruction; Bilobed Flaps
in Nasal Reconstruction; Glabellar Flaps in Nasal Reconstruction;
Melolabial Flaps in Nasal Reconstruction; Forehead Flaps in Nasal
Reconstruction; Microvascular Flaps in Nasal Reconstruction;
Options for Internal Lining in Nasal Reconstruction; Cartilage
Grafting in Nasal Reconstruction; Complex Nasal Reconstruction: Two
Case Studies
Otorhinolaryngologists and Facial Plastic and Reconstructive
Surgeons who have focused their energies on functional and cosmetic
septorhinoplasty do offer a unique perspective and experience of
the surgical management of nasal obstruction, and this perspective
is highlighted in this edition. Many of the chapters focus on
complex problems related to the septum: treating the caudal septum,
a discussion of complications of septal surgery including their
avoidance and their management, and when to consider the open
rhinoplasty approach to septal surgery. Surgical pearls for
septoplasty are also considered. Functional rhinoplasty also
naturally receives significant attention in this edition, with
consideration of the surgical treatment of the saddle nose,
treatment of nasal obstruction in the traumatized nose, treatment
of the dorsal deviation, and surgical and non-surgical treatment of
the nasal valve. Piriform aperture stenosis, a less common form of
nasal obstruction, is also considered. A number of facial plastic
surgical case studies round out this edition.
This book serves as a platform for educators and researchers to
unite educational technology and social justice. While educational
technology is a rapidly changing and progressive field of research
and practice, it remains largely separate from education for social
justice. Current literature about educational technology is often
approached from a technical, how-to perspective that emphasizes
ways to implement technology into the classroom. Technology is
often viewed as inevitable, yet neutral and value-free. Educational
technology, however, is anything but neutral. The contributors
collectively advance a hopeful discourse by exploring the potential
of technology as a vehicle to transform and emancipate, while not
forgoing a critically reflective measure of self-conscious critique
of our own role as educators, students, or scholars in oppressive
silences, constraints and conditions. This edited collection makes
an important and unique contribution to the field, as it will be
the first published volume to detail research, theory, and practice
regarding student use of technology in achieving liberatory aims
since IAP's 2009 publication, ICT for Education, Development and
Social Justice. The fields of educational technology and social
justice are vast and applicable in many domains, including teacher
education, graduate programs, and K-12 education. This work is
intended to appeal to a diverse academic and professional audience
of K-12 teachers, teacher educators, educational technology and
social justice scholars, and policy makers. Scholars and academics
instructing graduate-level educational technology courses can
reference this edited collection as the most current text on
socially just educational technology. Educational practitioners
from teacher education programs and the K-12 sector may use this
book as a source of ideas and inspiration to incorporate student
use of technology toward emancipatory aims. This title could be
adopted as a course text for both undergraduate and graduate
education courses in: media literacy, digital literacy, distance
education, education for social justice, and teacher preparation,
and educational technology courses. Readers will also be able to
use the book as a guide when critically analyzing their own
professional practice, whether it is in research, working with K-12
students, or preparing future educators or scholars.
Diplomarbeit aus dem Jahr 2000 im Fachbereich BWL - Investition und
Finanzierung, Note: 1,3, Universitat zu Koln (Wirtschafts- und
Sozialwissenschaften), Sprache: Deutsch, Abstract: Inhaltsangabe:
Einleitung: Tracking Stocks stellen ein innovatives
Restrukturierungsinstrument im Eigenkapitalbereich dar, das die
separate Abbildung von Vermogensrechten bestimmter
Geschaftsbereiche eines Unternehmens am Kapitalmarkt ermoglicht.
Dabei wird fur jede Geschaftseinheit, deren wirtschaftliche
Entwicklung am Kapitalmarkt abgebildet werden soll, eine separate
Aktiengattung (Tracking Stock-Gattung) an der Borse eingefuhrt und
gehandelt. Als Tracking Stocks werden demnach die Aktien auf eine
Geschaftseinheit (tracked unit) eines Unternehmens bezeichnet. Im
Gegensatz zu den herkommlichen Restrukturierungsinstrumenten wie
z.B. Equity Carve-Out oder Spin-Off bilden die einzelnen Tracking
Stock-Gattungen mit den jeweils reprasentierten Geschaftseinheiten
jedoch weiterhin eine rechtliche Einheit. In den letzten funf
Jahren ist die Anzahl der realisierten und angekundigten Tracking
Stock-Transaktionen sprunghaft angestiegen. Wahrend bis 1992
jeweils hochstens 2 Tracking Stock-Emissionen pro Jahr durchgefuhrt
wurden, sind alleine im Jahr 1999 ganze 20 Emissionen durchgefuhrt
oder angekundigt worden. Dies belegt eindrucksvoll das gegenwartige
und zukunftige Anwendungspotential von Tracking Stocks. Zu der
wachsenden Bedeutung von Tracking Stocks hat insbesondere eine
allgemeine Entwicklung der Organisationsstrategie von zahlreichen
Konzernunternehmungen beigetragen, die nach dem Ausbleiben der
erhofften Vorteile grosser diversifizierter Konglomerate seit Mitte
der achtziger Jahre ihren Grad der Diversifikation verringern, um
Investoren unter anderem die Moglichkeit zu geben, in einzelne
Geschaftsbereiche investieren zu konnen. Nicht nur operative
Potentiale sondern auch Potentiale durch organisatorische
Restrukturierung sollten ausgeschopft werden. Wahrend in der
Vergangenheit hauptsa
Forgeries are an omnipresent part of our culture and closely
related to traditional ideas of authenticity, legality, authorship,
creativity, and innovation. Based on the concept of mimesis, this
volume illustrates how forgeries must be understood as autonomous
aesthetic practices - creative acts in themselves - rather than as
mere rip-offs of an original work of art. The proceedings bring
together research from different scholarly fields. They focus on
various mimetic practices such as pseudo-translations, imposters,
identity theft, and hoaxes in different artistic and historic
contexts. By opening up the scope of the aesthetic implications of
fakes, this anthology aims to consolidate forging as an autonomous
method of creation.
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