|
|
Showing 1 - 6 of
6 matches in All Departments
LGBTQ+ advocacy and support continues to be a priority in the U.S.
higher education, and recent research shows this as a critical
population who continues to be marginalized and mistreated on
college and university campuses. Over the last few decades there
has been significant research describing how LGBTQ students
experience higher education and highlighting that these students
are not graduating or succeeding at the same rates as the general
population. However, few if any research studies or articles
address LGBTQ advocacy on community college campuses. There are
more than 1,000 community colleges in the U.S. Even with the
extraordinary number of students that the community college system
educates, approximately 15 institutions nationally have paid staff
to provide LGBTQ services to students. That being said, community
colleges are now putting a larger emphasis on understanding and
supporting this community. For example, The California Community
College (CCC) system's 116 colleges now require all campuses to
create a plan on how to improve success rates of LGBTQ+ students.
The CCC is the largest higher education system in the country
serving over 2 million students. This comprehensive practitioner
focused book will combine relevant research and guidance on
practices to aid colleges in establishing services and programs to
build effective LGBTQ+ services on their college campuses.
This daring volume combines the best of writing on running with the
appeal of the best literary writing, essays that take in the sights
and sounds and smells of real life, of real risk, of real pain and
of real elation. Emphasizing female voices, this collection of
eleven personal essays set in different countries around the world
offers a deep but accessible look at the power of running in our
lives to make us feel more and to see ourselves in a new light.
From acclaimed novelist Emily Mitchell and Portland attorney Anne
Milligan to author Vanessa Runs and ESPN reporter Bonnie Ford, a
diverse lineup of writers captures a variety of perspectives on
running at night. These are stories that can inspire people of all
ages and backgrounds to take on a thrilling new challenge. The
contributors all have distinct tales to tell, but each brings a
freshness and depth to their experiences that make Night Running a
necessary part of every runner's library - and a valuable addition
to the reading lists of all thoughtful readers.
LGBTQ+ advocacy and support continues to be a priority in the U.S.
higher education, and recent research shows this as a critical
population who continues to be marginalized and mistreated on
college and university campuses. Over the last few decades there
has been significant research describing how LGBTQ students
experience higher education and highlighting that these students
are not graduating or succeeding at the same rates as the general
population. However, few if any research studies or articles
address LGBTQ advocacy on community college campuses. There are
more than 1,000 community colleges in the U.S. Even with the
extraordinary number of students that the community college system
educates, approximately 15 institutions nationally have paid staff
to provide LGBTQ services to students. That being said, community
colleges are now putting a larger emphasis on understanding and
supporting this community. For example, The California Community
College (CCC) system's 116 colleges now require all campuses to
create a plan on how to improve success rates of LGBTQ+ students.
The CCC is the largest higher education system in the country
serving over 2 million students. This comprehensive practitioner
focused book will combine relevant research and guidance on
practices to aid colleges in establishing services and programs to
build effective LGBTQ+ services on their college campuses.
In the summer of 1918, with the Germans threatening Paris, Edward
Steichen arrives in France to photograph the war for the American
army. There, he finds a country filled with poignant memories for
him: early artistic success, marriage, the birth of two daughters,
and a love affair that divided his family. Told with elegance and
transporting historical sensitivity, Emily Mitchell's first novel
captures the life of a great American artist caught in the
reckoning of a painful past in a world beset by war. A Finalist for
the New York Public Library's Young Lion's Fiction Award and named
a Best Book of the Year by the Providence Journal, the
Austin-American-Stateman, and the Madison Capital Times.
|
|