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If you are looking for the intersection of past practices, current
thinking, and future insights into the ever-expanding world of
entrepreneurship education, then you will want to read and explore
the fifth edition of the Annals of Entrepreneurship Education and
Pedagogy. Prepared under the auspices of the United States
Association for Small Business and Entrepreneurship (USASBE), this
edited volume covers a broad range of scholarly, practical, and
thoughtful perspectives on a compelling range of entrepreneurship
education issues. The fifth edition spans topics ranging from
innovative practices in facilitating entrepreneurship teaching and
learning inside and outside the classroom, learning innovation, and
model programs, to the latest research from top programs and
thought leaders in entrepreneurship. Moreover, the fifth edition
builds on previous editions as it continues to investigate critical
issues in designing, implementing, and assessing experiential
learning techniques in the field of entrepreneurship. This
contemporary volume provides insights and challenges in the
development of entrepreneurship education for students, educators,
mentors, community leaders, and more. Annals of Entrepreneurship
Education and Pedagogy - 2023 is a must-have book for any
entrepreneurship professor, scholar, or program director dedicated
to advancing entrepreneurship education in the US and around the
world.
If you are looking for the intersection of past practices, current
thinking, and future insights into the ever-expanding world of
Entrepreneurship education, then you will want to read and explore
the third volume of the Annals of Entrepreneurship Education and
Pedagogy. Prepared under the auspices of the United States
Association for Small Business and Entrepreneurship (USASBE), this
compendium covers a broad range of scholarly, practical, and
thoughtful perspectives on a compelling range of entrepreneurship
education issues. The third volume spans topics ranging from
innovative practices in facilitating entrepreneurship teaching and
learning inside and outside the classroom, learning innovation,
model programs, to the latest research from top programs and
thoughts leaders in Entrepreneurship. Moreover, the third volume
builds on those previous as it continues to investigate critical
issues in designing, implementing and assessing experiential
learning techniques in the field of entrepreneurship. This updated
volume provides insights and challenges in the development of
entrepreneurship education for students, educators, mentors,
community leaders, and more. Annals of Entrepreneurship Education
and Pedagogy - 2018 is a must-have book for any entrepreneurship
professor, scholar or program director dedicated to advancing
entrepreneurship education in the U.S. and around the world.
Contributors include: S. Ahluwalia, N. Alabduljader, S. Alpi, B.
Aulet, C. Bandera, S.H. Barr, L. Bercot, T. Best, C. Bodnar, C.
Brush, K. Byrd, J.C. Carr, B.J. Cowden, P. Dickson, M. Dominik, K.
Ellborg, A. Eminet, Y.J. English, G. Gonzalez, B. Graham, L.
Gundry, A. Hargadon, J. Hart, G. Hertz, T.R. Holcomb, B. Honig, A.
Huang-Saad, J.A. Katz, E. Koester, S. Kogelen, P. Kreiser, A.
Kukreti, Y. Lee, J. Libarkin, E. Liguori, R.V. Mahto, C.H.
Matthews, W. McDowell, T.L. Michaelis, P. Mitra, K. Passerini, L.
Pittaway, J.M. Pollack, K. Pon, R.S. Ramani, J. Reid, L. Ross, Y.
Rubin, N. Sebra, S. Sen, L. Sheats, P. Shekhar, B.R. Smith, G.T.
Solomon, S. Solomon, S. Terjesen, S.W. Thiel, B. Thomsen, O. Voula,
M.K. Ward, A.H. Wrede, L.J. Zane, Y. Zhang, A. Zimbroff
If you are looking for the intersection of past practices, current
thinking, and future insights into the ever-expanding world of
entrepreneurship education, then you will want to read and explore
the fourth edition of the Annals of Entrepreneurship Education and
Pedagogy. Prepared under the auspices of the United States
Association for Small Business and Entrepreneurship (USASBE), this
edited volume covers a broad range of scholarly, practical, and
thoughtful perspectives on a compelling range of entrepreneurship
education issues. The fourth edition spans topics ranging from
innovative practices in facilitating entrepreneurship teaching and
learning inside and outside the classroom, learning innovation,
model programs, to the latest research from top programs and
thought leaders in entrepreneurship. Moreover, the fourth edition
builds on previous editions as it continues to investigate critical
issues in designing, implementing and assessing experiential
learning techniques in the field of entrepreneurship. This
contemporary volume provides insights and challenges in the
development of entrepreneurship education for students, educators,
mentors, community leaders, and more. Annals of Entrepreneurship
Education and Pedagogy - 2021 is a must-have book for any
entrepreneurship professor, scholar or program director dedicated
to advancing entrepreneurship education in the U.S. and around the
world.
This book deals specifically with the topic of the sexual abuse of
power in black churches. This problem has been estimated to be
three times as prevalent in the black churches, yet scant attention
has been brought to bear on this subject. This book is meant to
provide a framework for understanding the problem for the purpose
of preventing its occurrence in the context of the black church. It
examines the history of sexual ethics in the black community as a
means of understanding its deep-seated place in the life of the
black churches. The book uses the narratives of black women and
children who have been the primary victims of this abuse. It
identifies the major social and psychological reasons why and how
this abuse develops and continues. It is directed to pastors and
leaders of the church who wish to put an end to this injustice that
is largely born of ignorance and the adoption of a sexual ethic
that is derived from slavery and it effects.
This book presents insights into the experiences and perspectives
of educators in formal positions of leadership involved in
decision-making processes in an education system. Drawing on
qualitative research conducted in the New Brunswick education
system, the author identifies factors in the decision-making
process which influence whether or not a decision is implemented.
Probing what is required for effective decision-making, defined as
decision-making that results in implementation, the book examines
not only the role of formal educational leaders of schools
(administrators) but also the roles played by district and
department of education formal leaders. It uses five central themes
that surfaced from research to develop a novel leadership model for
ensuring implantation of decisions. These include knowledge and
skill; collaboration and communication; balance of autonomy,
accountability, and direction; political and bureaucratic
considerations; and strong moral imperative. The newfound model is
presented in the form of antecedent steps to the decision-making
process. Extending the literature by offering new, empirically
grounded insights for influencing the likelihood of implementation
following a decision-making process, it will appeal to leaders,
scholars, and students of educational leadership and reform.
Nature-Based Solutions and Water Security: An Action Agenda for the
21st Century presents an action agenda for natural infrastructure
on topics of standards and principles, technical evaluation and
design tools, capacity building and innovative finance. Chapters
introduce the topic and concepts of natural infrastructure, or
nature-based solutions (NBS) and water security, with important
background on the urgency of the global water crisis and the role
that NBS can, and should play, in addressing this crisis. Sections
also present the community of practice's collective thinking on a
prioritized action agenda to guide more rapid progress in
mainstreaming NBS. With contributions from global authors,
including key individuals and organizations active in developing
NBS solutions, users will also find important conclusions and
recommendations, thus presenting a collaboratively developed,
consensus roadmap to scaling NBS.
Victor Matthews, a veteran teacher and expert on the world of
ancient Israel, introduces students to the Hebrew prophets and
their social world. Drawing on archaeology and ancient Near Eastern
texts, Matthews examines the prophets chronologically, placing them
and their message into historical context. He explores pertinent
aspects of historical geography, economic conditions, and social
forces that influenced a prophet's life and message and explains
why prophets served an integral purpose in the development of
ancient Israelite religion. He also explores how prophets addressed
their audience and employed rhetorical methods, images, and
metaphors to communicate effectively. Logically organized, clearly
written, and classroom friendly, this book meets the needs of
beginning as well as advanced students. It is a substantially
revised and expanded edition of the successful text "Social World
of the Hebrew Prophets."
This book presents a new model, the competency framework, for
students, innovators, entrepreneurs, managers, and anyone who wants
to better understand the dynamic world of innovation and
entrepreneurship. Focused on both the individual and strategic
organizational level, this book is about people and the
competencies each person needs to learn to be successful in
creating a more dynamic future. Matthews and Brueggemann's
framework for innovation and entrepreneurship competencies empowers
individuals to excel at innovation and new venture creation. It
provides a practical guide and clear and concise understanding of
the knowledge, skills, attitudes, and experiences that are needed
to increase imagination, creativity, innovation and new venture
creation capability. Innovation and Entrepreneurship will be
attractive for students of entrepreneurship, innovation, management
and cross-disciplinary classes, such as design thinking. Presented
in a modular format, Innovation & Entrepreneurship informs the
future direction of people and technology, as well as the
educational systems producing the next generation of innovators and
entrepreneurs. Based on extensive academic research, this book is
organized into two sections: Twelve innovation elements and twelve
competency categories. The elements are the foundation and the
competency categories are the building blocks that inform our path
toward a more precise understanding of how innovation and
entrepreneurship plays an important role in economic development
and our daily lives.
Designed as a supplementary resource for students who have an
interest in the ancient Near East and biblical history, this volume
provides a basic introduction to the historical, archaeological,
and socio-contextual aspects of ancient Israel during its early
foundation period through the end of the monarchy in Judah. Victor
Matthews integrates extra-biblical information on the physical
realities of geo- and super-power politics, international and
interregional movement of peoples, and the evolutionary process of
complex states in the ancient Near East with information from
biblical narratives in order to explore the development of ancient
Israelites' identity, cultural traditions, and interactions with
other major cultures. In particular, he examines aspects of
everyday life in both village culture and urban settings as a key
to the development of social, legal, and religious traditions and
practices. The History of Bronze and Iron Age Israel features an
easy to navigate format, fairly non-technical language, and a
series of informative insets that highlights important
methodological concepts and comparative material.
If you are looking for the intersection of past practices, current
thinking, and future insights into the ever-expanding world of
Entrepreneurship education, then you will want to read and explore
the third volume of the Annals of Entrepreneurship Education and
Pedagogy. Prepared under the auspices of the United States
Association for Small Business and Entrepreneurship (USASBE), this
compendium covers a broad range of scholarly, practical, and
thoughtful perspectives on a compelling range of entrepreneurship
education issues. The third volume spans topics ranging from
innovative practices in facilitating entrepreneurship teaching and
learning inside and outside the classroom, learning innovation,
model programs, to the latest research from top programs and
thoughts leaders in Entrepreneurship. Moreover, the third volume
builds on those previous as it continues to investigate critical
issues in designing, implementing and assessing experiential
learning techniques in the field of entrepreneurship. This updated
volume provides insights and challenges in the development of
entrepreneurship education for students, educators, mentors,
community leaders, and more. Annals of Entrepreneurship Education
and Pedagogy - 2018 is a must-have book for any entrepreneurship
professor, scholar or program director dedicated to advancing
entrepreneurship education in the U.S. and around the world.
Contributors include: S. Ahluwalia, N. Alabduljader, S. Alpi, B.
Aulet, C. Bandera, S.H. Barr, L. Bercot, T. Best, C. Bodnar, C.
Brush, K. Byrd, J.C. Carr, B.J. Cowden, P. Dickson, M. Dominik, K.
Ellborg, A. Eminet, Y.J. English, G. Gonzalez, B. Graham, L.
Gundry, A. Hargadon, J. Hart, G. Hertz, T.R. Holcomb, B. Honig, A.
Huang-Saad, J.A. Katz, E. Koester, S. Kogelen, P. Kreiser, A.
Kukreti, Y. Lee, J. Libarkin, E. Liguori, R.V. Mahto, C.H.
Matthews, W. McDowell, T.L. Michaelis, P. Mitra, K. Passerini, L.
Pittaway, J.M. Pollack, K. Pon, R.S. Ramani, J. Reid, L. Ross, Y.
Rubin, N. Sebra, S. Sen, L. Sheats, P. Shekhar, B.R. Smith, G.T.
Solomon, S. Solomon, S. Terjesen, S.W. Thiel, B. Thomsen, O. Voula,
M.K. Ward, A.H. Wrede, L.J. Zane, Y. Zhang, A. Zimbroff
Donald Matthews affirms once and for all the African foundation of
African-American religious practice. His analysis of the methods
employed by historians, social scientists, and literary critics in
the study of African-American religion and the Negro spiritual
leads him to develop a methodology that encompasses contemporary
scholarship without compromising the integrity of African-American
religion and culture. Because the Negro spiritual is the earliest
extant body of African-American folk religious narration, Matthews
believes that it holds the key to understanding African-American
religion. He explores the works of such seminal black scholars as
W. E. B. DuBois, Melville Herskovits, and Zora Neale Hurston,
tracing the early development of the African-centered approach to
the interpretation of African-American religion. This approach
involves "cultural/structuralism", the author's term for the method
used by DuBois, Herskovits, and Hurston that emphasizes the thick
reading of narrative expressions. Such a reading allows the scholar
to identify the cultural significance of particular oral and
written texts and serves as a point of identification and a
cultural link between African and African-American religion.
Matthews' close analysis of the spiritual employs a dialectical and
postmodernist reading and reveals a religious philosophy that
addresses the deepest concerns and desires of Africans in America.
These concerns are cultural, political, and psychological, but are
ultimately related to African religious structures of meaning.
Honoring the Ancestors poses a challenge to end the battle between
Afrocentrists and multiculturalists by acknowledging their common
intellectual heritage in the works of DuBois, Herskovits, and
Hurston. It will be of great interest to students and scholars of
African-American religion and culture and those interested in
Afrocentric literature.
This book has two major emphases: it is an analysis of the methods employed by social scientists, historians, and literary critics in the study of African American religion; and it is a constructive theological statement regarding African American religion. The Negro Spiritual serves as the source material for both purposes. Since the Spiritual is the earliest body of African American folk religious narration, Matthews posits that it holds the key to the interpretation of African American religion. In presenting the results of the seminal black scholars W. E. B. Du Bois and Zora Neale Hurston, the author traces the early development of an African centered approach to the interpretation of African American religion.
This book presents a new model, the competency framework, for
students, innovators, entrepreneurs, managers, and anyone who wants
to better understand the dynamic world of innovation and
entrepreneurship. Focused on both the individual and strategic
organizational level, this book is about people and the
competencies each person needs to learn to be successful in
creating a more dynamic future. Matthews and Brueggemann's
framework for innovation and entrepreneurship competencies empowers
individuals to excel at innovation and new venture creation. It
provides a practical guide and clear and concise understanding of
the knowledge, skills, attitudes, and experiences that are needed
to increase imagination, creativity, innovation and new venture
creation capability. Innovation and Entrepreneurship will be
attractive for students of entrepreneurship, innovation, management
and cross-disciplinary classes, such as design thinking. Presented
in a modular format, Innovation & Entrepreneurship informs the
future direction of people and technology, as well as the
educational systems producing the next generation of innovators and
entrepreneurs. Based on extensive academic research, this book is
organized into two sections: Twelve innovation elements and twelve
competency categories. The elements are the foundation and the
competency categories are the building blocks that inform our path
toward a more precise understanding of how innovation and
entrepreneurship plays an important role in economic development
and our daily lives.
U. S. critical infrastructures, such as financial institutions,
commercial buildings, and energy production and transmission
facilities, are systems and assets, whether physical or virtual,
vital to the nations security, economy, and public health and
safety. To secure these systems and assets, federal policy and the
National Infrastructure Protection Plan (NIPP) establish
responsibilities for federal agencies designated as Sector-specific
agencies (SSAs), including leading, facilitating, or supporting the
security and resilience programs and associated activities of their
designated critical infrastructure sectors. The objectives of this
book are to determine the extent to which SSAs have identified the
significance of cyber risks to their respective sectors networks
and industrial control systems; taken actions to mitigate cyber
risks within their respective sectors; collaborated across sectors
to improve cybersecurity; and established performance metrics to
monitor improvements in their respective sectors.
This is an updated and substantially revised edition of Peter
Matthews's well-known Morphology, first published in 1974. It
includes chapters on inflectional and lexical morphology,
derivational processes and productivity, compounds, paradigms, and
much new material on markedness and other aspects of iconicity. As
in the first edition, the theoretical discussion is eclectic and
critical: its scope ranges from the ancient grammarians to the work
of Chomsky and his followers, the disintegration of the classical
Chomskyan scheme, and the renewed standing of morphology and
historical linguistics in recent years. The examples are drawn from
English and other European languages, ancient and modern. The work
will appeal both to specialists in particular languages - it
contains much original material - and students of general
linguistics. For this new edition much now obsolete discussion has
been removed and replaced by discussion of current trends, and the
further reading sections have been thoroughly updated.
Designed as a supplementary resource for students who have an
interest in the ancient Near East and biblical history, this volume
provides a basic introduction to the historical, archaeological,
and socio-contextual aspects of ancient Israel during its early
foundation period through the end of the monarchy in Judah. Victor
Matthews integrates extra-biblical information on the physical
realities of geo- and super-power politics, international and
interregional movement of peoples, and the evolutionary process of
complex states in the ancient Near East with information from
biblical narratives in order to explore the development of ancient
Israelites' identity, cultural traditions, and interactions with
other major cultures. In particular, he examines aspects of
everyday life in both village culture and urban settings as a key
to the development of social, legal, and religious traditions and
practices. The History of Bronze and Iron Age Israel features an
easy to navigate format, fairly non-technical language, and a
series of informative insets that highlights important
methodological concepts and comparative material.
Preaching's Preacher's Guide to the Best Bible Reference How can we
account for the "Book of the Law" suddenly being discovered during
Josiah's renovation of the temple (2 Chron 34:14)? We know from
Egypt and Mesopotamia that it was common to seal important
documents--including theological documents--in the masonry or
foundations of a palace or temple in order to inform a future king
who might undertake restoration of the building. What might the
psalmist have had in mind when praising God for removing our
transgressions "as far as the east is from the west" (Ps 103:12)?
In an Egyptian hymn to Amun-Re, the deity is praised for his
judgment of the guilty. As a result of the god's discernment the
guilty are assigned to the east and the righteous to the west. What
is meant by God "weighing the heart" (Prov 21:2)? In Egyptian
religious tradition we find the notion of the dead being judged
before the gods. As the soul is examined, the dead person's heart
is weighed in a scale against a feather symbolizing Truth. If the
answers are correct and the heart does not outweigh the feather,
the soul may enter the realm of everlasting life. The narratives,
genealogies, laws, poetry, proverbs and prophecies of the Old
Testament are deeply rooted in history. Archaeologists, historians
and social scientists have greatly advanced our knowledge of the
ancient world of the Bible. When we illuminate the stories of
Abraham or David, the imagery of the Psalms or Proverbs, or the
prophecies of Isaiah or Jeremiah with this backlight of culture and
history, these texts spring to new life. The unique commentary
joins The IVP Bible Background Commentary: New Testament in
providing historical, social and cultural background for each
passage of the Old Testament. From Genesis through Malachi, this
single volume gathers and condenses an abundance of specialized
knowledge--making it available and accessible to ordinary readers
of the Old Testament. Expert scholars John Walton, Victor Matthews
and Mark Chavalas have included along with the fruits of their
research and collaboration a glossary of historical terms, ancient
peoples, texts and inscriptions maps and charts of important
historical resources expanded explanations of significant
background issues introductory essays on each book of the Old
Testament The IVP Bible Background Commentary: Old Testament will
enrich your experience of the Old Testament--and your teaching and
preaching from Scripture--in a way that no other commentary can do.
Bringing to life the world portrayed in the stories in Judges and Ruth, this commentary offers readers an "insider" perspective on the narratives. After establishing a cultural and literary context, Victor Matthews analyzes each episode separately and as a whole.
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Catan
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Discovery Miles 8 870
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