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This book focuses on first-generation graduate students in the US
and the graduate or post-baccalaureate programs that house and
educate these students. The several voices in this book, including
first-generation graduate students, address the phenomena of
graduate students' experiences and related university practices,
with the practices connected to traditional academic and Western
values and to academic and neoliberal institutional logics.
First-generation graduate students' narratives, or testimonies,
serve as the foundation of the analysis of students' pathways to
graduate school and their experiences within graduate school. The
conditions for first-generation graduate students in their programs
require remedies that will facilitate student well-being, peer
community attachment, and persistence, and will educate and train
students for achievement in graduate school and for employment
after graduate school.
The first modern edition of a text which shows the suspicion with
which Geoffrey of Monmouth's History of the Kings of Britain was
received two decades after it first appeared. The history of the
Yorkshire secular clerk, Alfred of Beverley (c.1148 x c.1151), an
important primary source in Anglo-Norman historiography, supplies a
history of Britain from its supposed foundation by Brutus down to
the death of Henry I in 1135. Alfred's history is of particular
interest in that it is the first Insular Latin chronicle to
incorporate the legendary British history of Geoffrey of Monmouth
(published c.mid 1130s) within a continuous account of the island's
past. In attempting to fuse the radically new Galfridian account of
the past with that of the conventional twelfth-century (Bedan)
view, Alfred's use and manipulation of his sources is highly
revealing and suggests a quite critical reception of Geoffrey's
history, a mindset which by the end of the twelfth century appears
almost entirely to have disappeared amongst chroniclers. Alfred's
history is also an important, and presently undervalued, witness to
the reception and dissemination of three of the most important
Anglo-Norman histories: Symeon of Durham Historia Regum, The
Chronicle of John of Worcester and Henry of Huntingdon, Historia
Anglorum, from which works it borrows extensively. In the manner of
use of these sources, the author tells us much about the
ecclesiastical and intellectual interests and outlook of the
period.
Understanding Community Colleges provides a critical examination of
contemporary issues and practices and policy of community colleges.
This contributed volume brings together highly respected scholars
as well as new scholars for a comprehensive analysis of the
community college landscape, including management and governance,
finance, student demographics and development, teaching and
learning, policy, faculty, and workforce development. At the end of
each chapter, the "Questions for Discussion" section helps to
bridge the gap between research and practice. Written for students
enrolled in higher education and community college graduate
programs, as well as social sciences scholars, this provocative new
edition covers the latest developments in the field, including
trends in enrollment, developmental education, student services,
funding, and shared governance.
Understanding Community Colleges provides a critical examination of
contemporary issues and practices and policy of community colleges.
This contributed volume brings together highly respected scholars
as well as new scholars for a comprehensive analysis of the
community college landscape, including management and governance,
finance, student demographics and development, teaching and
learning, policy, faculty, and workforce development. At the end of
each chapter, the "Questions for Discussion" section helps to
bridge the gap between research and practice. Written for students
enrolled in higher education and community college graduate
programs, as well as social sciences scholars, this provocative new
edition covers the latest developments in the field, including
trends in enrollment, developmental education, student services,
funding, and shared governance.
This book examines seven higher education organizations, exploring
their interconnected lines: organizational change and
organizational stability. These lines are nested within historical,
social, cultural, and political contexts of two nations-the US and
Canada-two provinces and three states: Alberta, British Columbia,
California, Hawai'i, and Washington. The author studies the
development of the community college and the development of the
university from community college origins, bringing to the
forefront these seven individual stories. Addressing continuity and
discontinuity and identity preservation and identity change, as
well as individual organizations' responses to government policy,
Levin analyzes and illuminates those policies with neoliberal
assumptions and values.
Wide-ranging and current research into the Anglo-Norman and Angevin
worlds. This volume of the Haskins Society Journal brings together
a rich and interdisciplinary collection of articles. Topics range
from the politics and military organization of northern worlds of
the Anglo-Normans and Angevins in the twelfth and thirteenth
centuries, to the economic activity of women in Catalonia and
political unrest in thirteenth-century Tripoli. Martin Millett's
chapter on the significance of rural life in Roman Britain for the
early Middle Ages continues the Journal's commitment to
archaeological approaches to medieval history, while contributions
on AElfric's complex use of sources in his homilies, Byrhtferth of
Ramsey's reinterpretation of the Alfredian past, and the little
known History of Alfred of Beverly engage with crucial questions of
sources and historiographical production within Anglo-Saxon and
Anglo-Norman England. Pieces on the political meaning of the
EmpressHelena and Constantine I for Angevin political ambitions and
the role of relics such as the Holy Lance in strategies of
political legitimation in Anglo-Saxon England and Ottonian Germany
in the tenth century complete the volume. Contributors: David
Bachrach, Mark Blincoe, Katherine Cross, Sarah Ifft Decker, Joyce
Hill, Katherine Hodges-Kluck, Jesse Izzo, Martin Millett, John
Patrick Slevin, Oliver Stoutner, Laura Wangerin.
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