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At the turn of the last century, military analysts began to notice
U.S. strategy selection seemed driven by casualty risk, with
optimal strategies being those that yielded the fewest potential
killed, wounded, and missing. In other words, the military yield of
a strategy was subordinated to casualty considerations and these
considerations appeared exaggerated, if not outlandish at the time.
Have Iraq and Afghanistan moved us away from subordinating strategy
to casualty worries or is this argument worth revisiting? This
collection includes the views of Jeffrey Record, Karl P. Mueller,
Charles K. Hyde, and Richard A. Lacquement, Jr. These pieces
originally appeared in military publications of the U.S.
governmentand mark the high tide of our national casualty phobia
debate.
There is a weapon that looms large in the history of arms, one that
has largely disappeared from memory: the warhammer. For over 300
years, across Asia, Europe, and even North Africa, the warhammer
was the close-combat weapon of choice. The high-tech plate armor of
the 14th and 15th Centuries stood absolutely no chance against it.
The mass-produced plate armor of the 16th and 17th Centuries fared
even worse against what is one of history's most successful weapon
designs. Small, almost dainty in appearance, the warhammer lives on
today in fantasy, in movies, and games in an imaginary giant,
heavy, sledge hammer shape, a form that distorts its true history
and its lethal meaning as a small, handy, post-medieval "wonder
weapon." In this work, James Roth explores warhammer design,
function, and variations of the weapon across cultures. Through
discussion of 184 figures, he plots the outlines of a warhammer
history and presents the argument that the persistence of this
weapon on battlefields was tied to the historical duration of plate
armor. Included is a chapter on fencing with warhammers and other
chapters on the German Dolchstreitkolben and Polish and Ukrainian
horseman's hammers. This is the most complete survey of the
warhammer in print today. About the author: James Roth (a
pseudonym) fenced competitively at the US regional levels.
Ex-infantry, he is a trained bayonet fencer and is a former
technical writer specializing in modern weapons systems.
* What should students be able to do and how should they be able to
think as a result of study in a discipline?* What does learning in
the disciplines look like at different developmental levels?* How
does one go about designing such learning and assessment in the
disciplines?* What institutional structures and processes can
assist faculty to engage and teach their disciplines as frameworks
for student learning?Creating ways to make a discipline come alive
for those who are not experts even for students who may not take
more than one or two courses in the disciplines they study requires
rigorous thought about what really matters in a field and how to
engage students in the practice of it.Faculty from Alverno College
representing a range of liberal arts disciplines chemistry,
economics, history, literature, mathematics and philosophy here
reflect on what it has meant for them to approach their disciplines
as frameworks for student learning. They present the intellectual
biographies of their explorations, the insights they have gained
and examples of the practices they have adopted.The authors all
demonstrate how the ways of thinking they have identified as
significant for their students in their respective disciplines have
affected the way they design learning experiences and assessments.
They show how they have shaped their teaching around the ways of
thinking they want their students to develop within and across
their disciplines; and what that means in terms of designing
assessments that require students to demonstrate their thinking and
understanding through application and use. This book will appeal to
faculty interested in going beyond mere techniques to a more
substantive analysis of how their view of their respective
disciplines might change when seen through the lens of student
learning. It will also serve the needs of graduate students;
trainers of Tas; and anyone engaged in faculty development or
interested in the scholarship of teaching."
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