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New Zealand schools have experienced unprecedented change during
the lastdecade.
Radicalrestructuringoftheframeworksforbothcurriculumand
qualificationsfollowedamovementtowards self-managementin 1989. The
curriculum framework, consisting of seven essential learning areas,
has been progressively introduced with completionnotexpecteduntil
2002. Thenew Qualifications Framework, based on unit standards, was
launched in 1994. The introduction of unit standards signalled an
emphatic movement towards the use of internal assessment for
awarding qualifications at the seniorsecondaryschoollevel.
Eachcoursehadunitstandardsdefined, which described the outcomes and
the performance criteria that would be used to determine whether or
not the standard had been achieved. Approximately five to eight
standards would be used for each full year course and each standard
had a number of credits associated with it. The plan, which has
since been modified, was for these credits to contribute to a
National Certificate of Educational Achievement, at years 12 and
13, and other, subject specific, National Certificates. Secondary
schools were faced with the task of recording and reporting 1 unit
standardresults to theNew Zealand Qualifications Authority . This,
by itself, was not a major issue as the significant suppliers of
CSIS had modules availablewhichsatisfiedthis need.
Atthistimeamodelwasbeingpresented to school audiences demonstrating
how the recording, reporting and evaluation ofassessment data,
relating to the curriculumframework, could be relatively straight
forward IF there was a common assessment 'currency' across the
school. This model was converted into software form for
demonstration purposes.
This book develops a framework for discussing primary school
teachers making changes to their understandings and practices. The
framework has been developed to allow the complexity of external
and internal aspects of change processes to be explored in a
holistic way.
External factors influencing teachers include increased
specification of the curriculum, changing demands for styles of
pedagogy and a rhetoric of Lifelong Learning. Such factors have to
be looked at in relation to individual teacher's internal responses
to mathematics. For many primary school teachers mathematics is a
subject that causes concern; its place within their personal
biographies may be uncomfortable and replete with memories of
confusion, pain and limited success. Professional understandings of
mathematics build upon the understandings from personal histories.
Discussing teacher change within the interplay of the external and
internal is inherently difficult. Responses to this difficulty have
tended to take the form of simplifying the task and dealing with
the external separately from the internal.
This book will be of interest to a wide range of people working
in the field of primary mathematics education, including policy
makers, Initial Teacher Education lecturers, Master's students and
researchers, practising primary school teachers and those engaged
in the management of mathematics in primary schools. While the
context of the book is specific to a period of time when a National
Numeracy Strategy was being introduced into schools in England, the
themes that the chapters tackle are broader and consider issues of
interest to anyone concerned with the development of mathematics
teaching.
This ninth volume presents about 1,100 letters, many unpublished, from the years 1859 to 1861. It records the writing of two major novels, A Tale of Two Cities and Great Expectations; the planning and writing of a substantial amount of the three Christmas numbers of this period, `A Haunted House', `A Message from the Sea', and `Tom Tiddler's Ground'; and the establishment of All the Year Round as a new journal to succeed Household Words. It also shows Dickens's delight with his new Kentish home, Gad's Hill.
Throughout history, societies have had to decide whom to
"sacrifice" and whom to help in times of disaster. This volume
examines how elite groups attempt to maintain power through the use
of particular economic, political, and ideological instruments and
how both ruling elites and common people endeavor to create
meaningful traditions while enduring hardship.The Political Economy
of Hazards and Disasters demonstrates how vulnerability is
economically constructed, primary producers adapt their production
regimes, how traders and merchants adapt their practices, and how
political economic objectives play out in recovery efforts.
New Zealand schools have experienced unprecedented change during
the lastdecade.
Radicalrestructuringoftheframeworksforbothcurriculumand
qualificationsfollowedamovementtowards self-managementin 1989. The
curriculum framework, consisting of seven essential learning areas,
has been progressively introduced with completionnotexpecteduntil
2002. Thenew Qualifications Framework, based on unit standards, was
launched in 1994. The introduction of unit standards signalled an
emphatic movement towards the use of internal assessment for
awarding qualifications at the seniorsecondaryschoollevel.
Eachcoursehadunitstandardsdefined,which described the outcomes and
the performance criteria that would be used to determine whether or
not the standard had been achieved. Approximately five to eight
standards would be used for each full year course and each standard
had a number of credits associated with it. The plan, which has
since been modified, was for these credits to contribute to a
National Certificate of Educational Achievement, at years 12 and
13, and other, subject specific, National Certificates. Secondary
schools were faced with the task of recording and reporting 1 unit
standardresults to theNew Zealand Qualifications Authority . This,
by itself, was not a major issue as the significant suppliers of
CSIS had modules availablewhichsatisfiedthis need.
Atthistimeamodelwasbeingpresented to school audiences demonstrating
how the recording, reporting and evaluation ofassessment data,
relating to the curriculumframework, could be relatively straight
forward IF there was a common assessment 'currency' across the
school. This model was converted into software form for
demonstration purposes.
This book develops a framework for discussing primary school
teachers making changes to their understandings and practices. The
framework has been developed to allow the complexity of external
and internal aspects of change processes to be explored in a
holistic way.
External factors influencing teachers include increased
specification of the curriculum, changing demands for styles of
pedagogy and a rhetoric of Lifelong Learning. Such factors have to
be looked at in relation to individual teacher's internal responses
to mathematics. For many primary school teachers mathematics is a
subject that causes concern; its place within their personal
biographies may be uncomfortable and replete with memories of
confusion, pain and limited success. Professional understandings of
mathematics build upon the understandings from personal histories.
Discussing teacher change within the interplay of the external and
internal is inherently difficult. Responses to this difficulty have
tended to take the form of simplifying the task and dealing with
the external separately from the internal.
This book will be of interest to a wide range of people working
in the field of primary mathematics education, including policy
makers, Initial Teacher Education lecturers, Master's students and
researchers, practising primary school teachers and those engaged
in the management of mathematics in primary schools. While the
context of the book is specific to a period of time when a National
Numeracy Strategy was being introduced into schools in England, the
themes that the chapters tackle are broader and consider issues of
interest to anyone concerned with the development of mathematics
teaching.
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The Duchess of Angus (Paperback)
Margaret Brown Kilik; Introduction by Jenny Davidson; Afterword by Char Miller; Foreword by Laura Hernandez-Ehrisman
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R382
Discovery Miles 3 820
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Written in the 1950s and discovered by family members years after
her death, Margaret Brown Kilik's shocking coming-of-age novel of
the emotional and sexual brutality of young women's lives in
wartime San Antonio deserves a place on the shelf alongside classic
novels like Sylvia Plath's The Bell Jar and Carson McCullers's The
Member of the Wedding. The Duchess of Angus reworks Kilik's unusual
personal history (her mother spent the 1930's running flophouse
hotels all over the United States, leaving Margaret to be brought
up by a host of relatives) into a riveting portrait of a young
woman navigating a conflicted and rapidly changing world, one in
which sex promises both freedom from convention and violent
subjection to men's will. Strikingly modern in its depiction of
protagonist Jane Davis and her gorgeous, unreadable friend Wade
Howell, The Duchess of Anguscovers some of the same emotional
territory as novels like Emma Cline's The Girls and Robyn
Wasserman's Girls on Fire. Includes an introduction by Jenny
Davidson and contextual essays by Laura Hernandez-Ehrisma and Char
Miller.
This eleventh volume presents 1158 letters, many previously unpublished or published only in part. Dickens's main work in the period is the completion of the monthly parts of Our Mutual Friend; unusually, it comes out in two volumes (January and November 1865) during the period of its run. The three All the Year Round Christmas numbers, `Doctor Marigold's Prescriptions', `Mugby Junction', and `No Thoroughfare' (written jointly with Wilkie Collins) are again highly successful. The most dramatic event in this volume is the railway accident at Staplehurst, Kent, on 9 June 1865, in which he is involved on returning from France, accompanied by Ellen Ternan and her mother. He gives two provincial reading tours, in 1866 and 1867, besides frequent readings in London, and on 9 November 1867 sails from Liverpool to Boston, to begin his American reading tour.
This volume presents 918 letters, 435 previously unpublished. Our Mutual Friend, Dickens's main work in this period, comes out monthly from 30 April 1864 to 31 October 1865. The three highly successful All the Year Round Christmas numbers, "Somebody's Luggage", "Mrs. Lirriper's Lodgings" and "Mrs. Lirriper's Legacy", take up much of his energies. Public readings continue, though less frequently; and Gad's Hill, where he entertains many of his friends, plays an increasingly major part in his life. But there is no other period in which he visits France so often, generally alone. The deliberately mystifying language he uses about these visits suggests he was seeing Ellen Ternan there, but there is no evidence to prove it.
In this groundbreaking contribution to the field of culture and
medicine, twenty-five professionals in medicine, nursing, and the
social sciences have contributed fourteen papers on the influence
of culture in health care. The topics range from the perception of
skills of international medical graduates, to conflicting
expectations of patient care of various cultural groups, to
cultural issues at the end of life. Health care educators,
practitioners, sociologists, policy makers, and learners at all
levels will find this book makes a significant foray into an
underexplored sector of research. [Video at
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LSJCuGeE5M0]
With nearly 900,000 federal civilian employees around the world,
DOD has responsibilities for preventing and responding to sexual
harassment and assault within its workforce. Chapter 1 examines the
extent to which DOD has visibility over such reported incidents and
has developed and implemented policies and procedures to respond to
and resolve these incidents. The Department of Veterans Affairs
(VA) has policies to prevent and address sexual harassment in the
workplace, but some aspects of the policies and of the complaint
processes may hinder those efforts. Chapters 2 and 3 address the
extent to which VA has policies to prevent and address sexual
harassment, how available data inform VA about sexual harassment,
and the extent to which VA provides training to employees on
preventing and addressing sexual harassment. The Department of the
Interior has a sexual harassment problem. For decades women and men
in national parks, refuges, and other public lands and offices have
not been given the protections they need to do their work free from
harm as reported in chapter 4. The Smithsonian Institution
(Smithsonian) is the worlds largest museum, education, and research
complex, with 19 museums and the National Zoo. An allegation of
sexual harassment between two Smithsonian affiliated persons was
made public and is discussed in chapter 5. Chapters 6-8 look at how
sexual harassment and assault has affected NOAA employees, and how
NOAA is trying to address the issue.
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God Writes My Story
Mary Margaret Brown
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R473
R398
Discovery Miles 3 980
Save R75 (16%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The irresistible illustrations of renowned author-illustrator Karen
Katz bring this charming story to life for a whole new generation
of Margaret Wise Brown fans in this sturdy board book, perfect for
little hands! This delightful and lyrical story by Margaret Wise
Brown follows four small children as they wake up with the sun and
greet the new day, while the world around them-animals and plants
alike-awakens, too.
This concluding volume covers the final two and a half years of Dickens's life: his reading tours in America and around England, the writing of Edwin Drood (left unfinished on his sudden death), and his characteristic involvement in scores of different interests and in writing to literally hundreds of correspondents. Also included are a large gathering of letters and items of new information which came to light too late for earlier volumes, an index to the present volume, and a cumulative Index of Correspondents.
The decades-old question surrounding the death of the Red Baron has
been embroiled in controversy. In this book, the author has
uncovered new information and insights, shedding new light on the
events of that day. This is a true story of young men who fought
and died for their country. It puts the reader behind the stick of
a Sopwith Camel from the pilot's point of view. This is the second
of two volumes. Part One of this comprehensive study covers the
life of Captain Arthur Roy Brown, who is well-known as an ace
fighter pilot. The basic story is told in Brown's own words, via
his previously unpublished letters home and the entries in his
Pilot's Flying Log Book. His surviving Combat Reports are also
included. The letters and the Combat Reports are unedited, and are
used to tell the story within a military, historical and
geographical context. They are accompanied by over 500 photographs,
most of them never before published, plus diagrams and maps. Part
Two of the book covers Captain Brown's encounter with Manfred von
Richthofen, the Red Baron, in detail. The story is told on the
basis of recently released official documents of the time, together
with recently offered letters written by some of the participants
and witnesses. The new information corrects several
well-established beliefs, and is able to provide the true story
together with the necessary confirmation. In 1995 Alan Bennett
toured the site in France where Captain Brown had attacked the Red
Baron on 21 April, 1918. As an experienced pilot of similar
aircraft, he had grave doubts as to the truth of some parts of the
story. The eventual result was a book written in conjunction with
Norman Franks: "The Red Baron's Last Flight." After plentiful
information from readers, Captain Roy Brown's family and Wop May's
son, plus further research in France, a considerably different
picture of the entire event and of Roy Brown's life emerged. The
new book, Captain Roy Brown, tells the complete definitive story.
Margaret Harmon is Captain Roy Brown's daughter. She lives in
Arizona, and provided most of her father's letters. Denny May is
Wilfrid "Wop" May's son. He lives in Alberta and is very active in
keeping his father's legacy alive. Alan Bennett finished compiling
his book on Captain Roy Brown around Christmas of 2006. He was
always striving for perfection to make sure his manuscript would be
as complete as possible. He received correspondence from around the
world to help him in this endeavour. Though not in great health
towards the end, he nevertheless continued his research with
passion and zeal. Alan Bennett passed away in January 2007.
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