1,421 research outputs found

    Sidebar [Winter 1991]

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    Sidebar, Winter 1991https://repository.stcloudstate.edu/comm_newsletters/1032/thumbnail.jp

    The UCF Report, Vol. 10 No. 19, March 23, 1988

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    All the University invited to witness groundbreaking 88: Historical moment of 21 years ago to be reenacted on campus green April 5; Research for DOD: IST-developed software replaces human readers; London trip

    Spartan Daily, November 7, 1990

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    Volume 95, Issue 49https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/8048/thumbnail.jp

    Great Hanshin-Awaji earthquake and Japanese information technology

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    Sidebar [Winter 1989]

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    Sidebar, Winter 1989https://repository.stcloudstate.edu/comm_newsletters/1028/thumbnail.jp

    Focal Spot, Fall 1979

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    https://digitalcommons.wustl.edu/focal_spot_archives/1024/thumbnail.jp

    ICCSA 2022

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    Producción CientíficaThe process of economic, social, and cultural development leads to relevant changes in urban areas. Urban transformations usually generate a series of public and private real estate compounds which constitute real obstacles to urban walkability. The growing attention towards the sustainable development goals established on a global scale introduced new contents in urban redevelopment policies, aimed at favoring higher levels of accessibility in the consolidated fabric, particularly that of the pedestrian type. In addition, the recent pandemic has recently reassessed the role of pedestrian mobility as a primary way of moving instead of using other means of transport. As a result, urban walkability has moved at the core of the sustainable city paradigm. More precisely, issues related to accessibility and walkability should be considered when addressing the obstacle generated by those sites that can be properly defined ‘urban enclaves’, especially when abandoned or under redevelopment. These conditions may encourage the gradual reopening of these areas for citizens. Within this framework, the Sustainable Urban Mobility Plan (SUMP) can represent a strategic tool for identifying the critical aspects to face for the creation of a new network of pedestrian routes aimed at improving urban walkability. The objective of this study is to define a set of principles and criteria, both tangible and intangible, for calculating the proximity index (PI). The PI may consequently drive urban regeneration projects also through the design of new paths for crossing the enclaves to improve urban permeability and, therefore, the level of walkabilitySardinia Foundation (CUP F74I19001040007

    Montana Kaimin, April 11, 1990

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    Student newspaper of the University of Montana, Missoula.https://scholarworks.umt.edu/studentnewspaper/9299/thumbnail.jp

    Let\u27s enjoy teaching life: an autoethnography of a novice ESL teacher\u27s two years of teaching English in a private girls\u27 secondary school in Japan

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    This thesis is an account of a beginning ESL teacher’s two years teaching abroad at a private all-girl’s secondary school in Nishinomiya, Japan. It is an autoethnography and includes written and visual artifacts from the author’s time spent teaching English to junior high school students
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