54 research outputs found

    The Owl in Winter: The Final Tornada of Marcabru’s Pastourelle “L’autrier jost’una sebissa”

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    Marcabru’s shepherdess in “L’autrier jost’una sebissa” ends her debate with the lecherous knight by offering a cryptic tornada about manna, an owl, and a person with a painting — topics which appear to have nothing to do with the logical sequence of the debate but which in fact are crucially important to the poet and to the way in which he binds up his theme. The cryptic surface of the tornada conceals an intricately figurative sententia whose field of reference includes bird lore, Old Occitan proverbs, Augustinian rhetorical theory, and Marcabru’s own signature as a witty, learned, and often obscene satirist

    Contraception in women over forty

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    Contraception in women over the age of 40 has received little attention, and accurate data are not readily available. This paper compares data from surveys from the United States and five major countries in Western Europe. Consideration is given to the possible effect on these women of the threat of reduced availability of suitable contraceptive methods as a result of current developments within society at large. This is of particular importance as it appears that, especially in Western Europe, contraception is underutilized in this age group. The benefits and risks of various methods of contraception are discussed. Use of the pill by older women remains controversial. Misconceptions about pill use and the IUD seem to be widespread among women of all age

    A survey of family planning in the Philippines

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    In a multi-centre survey in 1986, 400 married Filipino women aged 15-40 were interviewed about their use of contraceptive methods, and specifically about their perceptions of the effects on health of oral contraceptives and their attitudes to contraceptive methods. The sample was randomly selected in the urban and rural areas surveyed and cannot be considered representative for the country as a whole. The results showed that women hold definitive views on the health risks posed by oral contraceptives and point to the importance of family planning clinics as a source of contraceptive counselling. The overall rate of contraceptive use must be regarded as insufficient to meet contraceptive need

    Teacher leadership in the balance: a phenomenological study

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    Accountability policies constitute a form of surveillance that in many cases serve to suppress teachers' leadership from within the classroom for the benefit of students. However, some teachers working in schools that are operating under surveillance from accountability policies successfully practice this type of teacher leadership. The Theory of the U (Scharmer, 2009b; Senge et al., 2005), may explain why some teachers succeed in exhibiting leadership under conditions of accountability. In order to explore the theory of the U as a theoretical basis for teacher leadership, this study employed phenomenology as both philosophical approach and method to uncover the lived experiences of teacher leaders in low-performing and underperforming schools in order to answer these research questions: * How do teacher leaders (TLs) perceive and describe their experience of teacher leadership? * How do the pressures of accountability policies such as NCLB or Race to the Top figure in teacher leaders' lived experiences? * What constraints on their leadership do teacher leaders perceive? * What are teacher leaders' perceptions of supports/mediating factors that enable them to demonstrate leadership? * What strategies do teacher leaders employ to negotiate structural constraints on teacher leadership? * What similarities and/or differences are there in the experiences of TL's who have left the classroom versus those who have stayed? Three interviews were conducted with each of eight participants who were recognized by others as teachers who led from within the classroom for the benefit of students following the procedure for phenomenological interviewing advocated by Seidman (1991). Half of the participants continued to teach in low-performing schools and half had left the classroom and were working as new teacher coaches. Data were analyzed using the method of phenomenological analysis presented by Moustakas (1994). Analysis occurred in four stages: 1) open, descriptive coding; 2) identifying invariant constituents by eliminating codes that are not necessary and sufficient to understanding the experience; 3) clustering invariant constituents into themes; and 4) checking the themes against the participant's entire case file. Profiles of each participant's experience of the research questions were developed. Themes were developed and articulated across all participants as well as for each group, teachers who stayed in the classroom and those who left. Common themes that emerged across the research questions included support from collaboration and from colleagues and support from administration. All of the teacher leaders experienced conflicting values as a constraint. Overall, the teacher leaders shared an overriding sense of personal responsibility and an intense focus on meeting the needs of their students. Study findings suggested that the successful exercise of teacher leadership from within the classroom for the benefit of students under the constraints of accountability policies depended upon a delicate balance between living within structural constraints and challenging those constraints. The support of colleagues and principals was critical in developing and sustaining leadership for all participants. Inner sources (Scharmer et al., 2002) of a sense of personal responsibility and a focus on meeting the needs of students appeared to help teachers negotiate constraints on their leadership that resulted from accountability policies. Tapping into inner sources (Scharmer et al., 2002) of leadership allowed the teacher leaders in this study to find ways to enact outcomes for their students that were different from the status quo, in spite of technologies of surveillance (Bushnell, 2003) and other structural forces that might discourage such agency. The results of the study led to several implications for teacher educators, administrators, and policy makers

    The Revivifying Word : Literature, Philosophy, and the Theory of Life in Europe's Romantic Age /

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    Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 25 Nov 2014)

    The sufferings of young Werther and Elective affinities

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