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34 matches in All Departments
Appropriate for the Front Office Operations or Front Desk
Operations course in Hospitality Management departments. The text
details policies and procedures that address the department's
critical role of serving guests, coordinating employee
communication and utilizing technology to benefit guests, staff and
owners. The front office is the "hub" of the property's
communications and operations systems and usually the first point
of contact for a hotel guest.
Music Video Games takes a look (and listen) at the popular genre of
music games - video games in which music is at the forefront of
player interaction and gameplay. With chapters on a wide variety of
music games, ranging from well-known console games such as Guitar
Hero and Rock Band to new, emerging games for smartphones and
tablets, scholars from diverse disciplines and backgrounds discuss
the history, development, and cultural impact of music games. Each
chapter investigates important themes surrounding the ways in which
we play music and play with music in video games. Starting with the
precursors to music games - including Simon, the hand-held
electronic music game from the 1980s, Michael Austin's collection
goes on to discuss issues in musicianship and performance,
authenticity and "selling out," and composing, creating, and
learning music with video games. Including a glossary and detailed
indices, Austin and his team shine a much needed light on the often
overlooked subject of music video games.
Inspire a new generation of capable and curious scientists. This
book will help build pupils' understanding through clear
explanations, practicals and skills-based activities, ensuring that
they're ready for the next step in their learning and promoting a
sense of cynefin through examples and contexts from all around
Wales. - Improve working scientifically skills and prepare students
for future lab work with practical skills and suggested activities
highlighted throughout - Guide pupils through the trickier maths
and literacy skills with key term definitions and worked examples
with step-by-step solutions - Support a holistic approach with
links between the 'what matters' statements in the Science and
Technology Area of Learning and Experience (AoLE) - Boost progress
using summaries to recap prior knowledge, alongside 'Check your
understanding' questions to embed understanding - Develop pupils'
curiosity and interest in science with historical context and
examples, including many from across Wales
Inspire a new generation of capable and curious scientists. This
book will help build pupils' understanding through clear
explanations, practicals and skills-based activities, ensuring that
they're ready for the next step in their learning and promoting a
sense of cynefin through examples and contexts from all around
Wales. - Improve working scientifically skills and prepare students
for future lab work with practical skills and suggested activities
highlighted throughout - Guide pupils through the trickier maths
and literacy skills with key term definitions and worked examples
with step-by-step solutions - Support a holistic approach with
links between the 'what matters' statements in the Science and
Technology Area of Learning and Experience (AoLE) - Boost progress
using summaries to recap prior knowledge, alongside 'Check your
understanding' questions to embed understanding - Develop pupils'
curiosity and interest in science with historical context and
examples, including many from across Wales
This book is based on an important but complicated question: How
have nonprofit human service organizations sustained themselves
over time? It documents the organizational histories of pioneering
nonprofits that have unique missions and significant longevity - in
one case, 157 years. This volume provides one of the few documented
histories of nonprofit human service organizations and includes a
cross-case analysis of the major themes that help to expand our
understanding of organizational lifecycles with respect to
organizational growth and resilience. The major themes appear in
the form of clusters of organizations that are exemplars of:
leadership (experiences of either founding or long-term executive
directors); internal operations (capacity to respond to changing
community needs); and external relations (capacity to develop
unique and/or sustained relationships with funding sources and/or
donor populations). These cases also provide students of nonprofit
management with opportunities for case-based learning that
complements the more time-limited and episodic teaching cases which
rarely provide learners with a longitudinal perspective of
nonprofit organizations. This book was originally published as a
special issue of the Journal of Evidence-Based Social Work.
With 77 readings by some of the world's great thinkers, Reading the
World is the only great ideas reader to offer a global perspective,
allowing students to explore the development of ideas across
cultures, an increasingly important approach in our diverse
society. Selections strike a balance between Western and
non-Western, classic and contemporary, verbal and visual, and
longer and shorter. The new edition features a new chapter on
Ethics & Empathy, a new casebook on Visual Arguments, 36 new
readings in total, and new guidance on identifying and avoiding
bias.
Inspire a new generation of capable and curious scientists. This
book will help build pupils' understanding through clear
explanations, practicals and skills-based activities, ensuring that
they're ready for the next step in their learning and promoting a
sense of cynefin through examples and contexts from all around
Wales. - Improve working scientifically skills and prepare students
for future lab work with practical skills and suggested activities
highlighted throughout - Guide pupils through the trickier maths
and literacy skills with key term definitions and worked examples
with step-by-step solutions - Support a holistic approach with
links between the 'what matters' statements in the Science and
Technology Area of Learning and Experience (AoLE) - Boost progress
using summaries to recap prior knowledge, alongside 'Check your
understanding' questions to embed understanding - Develop pupils'
curiosity and interest in science with historical context and
examples, including many from across Wales
In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, popular works of
literature attracted-as they attract today-sequels, prequels,
franchises, continuations, and parodies. Sequels of all kinds
demonstrate the economic realities of the literary marketplace.
That they can do so, however, represents something fundamental
about the way that human beings process narrative information. We
crave narrative closure, but we also resist its finality, making
such closure both inevitable and inadequate in human narratives.
Many cultures have incorporated this fundamental ambiguity towards
closure in the mythic framework that fuels their narrative
imaginations. New Testaments examines both the inevitability and
the inadequacy of closure in the sequels to four major works of
literature written in England between 1660 and 1740: Paradise Lost,
The Pilgrim's Progress, Robinson Crusoe, and Pamela. Each of these
works spawned sequels that, while often very different from the
original works, connected themselves to those works work through
rhetorical strategies that can be loosely defined as figural. Such
strategies came directly from the culture's two dominant religious
narratives: the Old and the New Testaments of the Christian
Bible-two vastly dissimilar works that were universally seen as
complementary parts of a unified and coherent narrative.
Build and assess your students' KS3 Science knowledge,
understanding and skills through better learning techniques,
ensuring a solid foundation for GCSE and further science study.
Science Progress Student Book develops understanding of key facts
and concepts with up-to-date content by topic and carefully
designed questions and activities to encourage students to measure
their own progress - Tests understanding and encourages student
progression with hundreds of coded differentiated questions
featured on every page - Assess your students' understanding of a
topic with over 30 Show You Can Tasks that cover every topic -
Builds 'working scientifically' skills by providing contexts and
activities throughout that encourage students to use real scientist
skills - Supports all learning abilities with easy to follow
content, clear explanations and photos that encourage discussion -
Examine students' technical vocabulary with free online access to
an extended glossary, key word tests and answer hints
With 77 readings by some of the world's great thinkers, Reading the
World is the only great ideas reader to offer a global perspective,
allowing students to explore the development of ideas across
cultures, an increasingly important approach in our diverse
society. Selections strike a balance between Western and
non-Western, classic and contemporary, verbal and visual, and
longer and shorter. The new edition features a new chapter on
Ethics & Empathy, a new casebook on Visual Arguments, 36 new
readings in total and new guidance on identifying and avoiding
bias.
Raised by devout Mormon parents, Vardis Fisher drifted from the
faith after college. Yet throughout his long career, his writing
consistently reflected Mormon thought. Beginning in the early
1930s, the public turned to Fisher's novels like Children of God to
understand the increasingly visible Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints. His striking works vaulted him into the same
literary tier as William Faulkner while his commercial success
opened the New York publishing world to many of the founding
figures in the Mormon literary canon. Michael Austin looks at
Fisher as the first prominent American author to write
sympathetically about the Church and examines his work against the
backdrop of Mormon intellectual history. Engrossing and
enlightening, Vardis Fisher illuminates the acclaimed author's
impact on Mormon culture, American letters, and the literary
tradition of the American West.
Build and assess your students' KS3 Science knowledge,
understanding and skills through better learning techniques,
ensuring a solid foundation for GCSE and further science study.
Science Progress Student Book develops understanding of key facts
and concepts with up-to-date content by topic and carefully
designed questions and activities to encourage students to measure
their own progress - Tests understanding and encourages student
progression with hundreds of coded differentiated questions
featured on every page - Assess your students' understanding of a
topic with over 30 Show You Can Tasks that cover every topic -
Builds 'working scientifically' skills by providing contexts and
activities throughout that encourage students to use real scientist
skills - Supports all learning abilities with easy to follow
content, clear explanations and photos that encourage discussion -
Examine students' technical vocabulary with free online access to
an extended glossary, key word tests and answer hints
This book is based on an important but complicated question: How
have nonprofit human service organizations sustained themselves
over time? It documents the organizational histories of pioneering
nonprofits that have unique missions and significant longevity - in
one case, 157 years. This volume provides one of the few documented
histories of nonprofit human service organizations and includes a
cross-case analysis of the major themes that help to expand our
understanding of organizational lifecycles with respect to
organizational growth and resilience. The major themes appear in
the form of clusters of organizations that are exemplars of:
leadership (experiences of either founding or long-term executive
directors); internal operations (capacity to respond to changing
community needs); and external relations (capacity to develop
unique and/or sustained relationships with funding sources and/or
donor populations). These cases also provide students of nonprofit
management with opportunities for case-based learning that
complements the more time-limited and episodic teaching cases which
rarely provide learners with a longitudinal perspective of
nonprofit organizations. This book was originally published as a
special issue of the Journal of Evidence-Based Social Work.
Understanding the Book of Mormon on its own terms and through its
two-way connection with the Bible Like the Hebrew Bible and the
Christian Bible, the Book of Mormon uses narratives to develop
ideas and present instruction. Michael Austin reveals how the Book
of Mormon connects itself to narratives in the Christian Bible with
many of the same tools that the New Testament used to connect
itself to the Hebrew Bible to create the Christian Bible. As Austin
shows, the canonical context for interpreting the Book of Mormon
includes the Christian Bible, the Book of Mormon itself, and other
writings and revelations that hold scriptural status in most
Restoration denominations. Austin pays particular attention to how
the Book of Mormon connects itself to the Christian Bible both to
form a new canon and to use the canonical relationship to reframe
and reinterpret biblical narratives. This canonical context
provides an important and fruitful method for interpreting the Book
of Mormon.
Martina the beautiful cockroach doesn't know coffee beans about
love and marriage. That's where her Cuban family comes in. While
some of the Cucarachas offer her gifts to make her more attractive,
only Abuela, her grandmother, gives her something really useful: un
consejo incre ble, some shocking advice.
Winner of the 2021 Bandelier/Lavrin Book Prize from the Rocky
Mountain Council for Latin American Studies 2021 Ermine
Wheeler-Voegelin Award Honorable Mention from the American Society
for Ethnohistory In Colonial Kinship: Guarani, Spaniards, and
Africans in Paraguay, historian Shawn Michael Austin traces the
history of conquest and colonization in Paraguay during the
sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Emphasizing the social and
cultural agency of Guarani--one of the primary indigenous peoples
of Paraguay--not only in Jesuit missions but also in colonial
settlements and Indian pueblos scattered in and around the Spanish
city of Asuncion, Austin argues that interethnic relations and
cultural change in Paraguay can only be properly understood through
the Guarani logic of kinship. In the colonial backwater of
Paraguay, conquistadors were forced to marry into Guarani families
in order to acquire indigenous tributaries, thereby becoming
"brothers-in-law" (tovaja) to Guarani chieftains. This pattern of
interethnic exchange infused colonial relations and institutions
with Guarani social meanings and expectations of reciprocity that
forever changed Spaniards, African slaves, and their descendants.
Austin demonstrates that Guarani of diverse social and political
positions actively shaped colonial society along indigenous lines.
In Colonial Kinship, historian Shawn Michael Austin traces the
history of conquest and colonization in Paraguay during the
sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Emphasizing the social and
cultural agency of Guaranà - the indigenous people of Paraguay -
not only in Jesuit missions but also in colonial settlements and
Indian pueblos scattered in and around the Spanish city of
Asuncion, Austin argues that interethnic relations and cultural
change in Paraguay can only be properly understood through the
GuaranÃÂ logic of kinship. In the colonial backwater of Paraguay,
conquistadors were forced to marry into GuaranÃÂ families in
order to acquire indigenous tributaries, thereby becoming
"brothers-in-law" (tovajÃ) to GuaranÃÂ chieftains. This pattern
of interethnic exchange infused colonial relations and institutions
with GuaranÃÂ social meanings and expectations of reciprocity
that forever changed Spaniards, African slaves, and their
descendants. Austin demonstrates that GuaranÃÂ of diverse social
and political positions actively shaped colonial society along
indigenous lines.
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