50 research outputs found

    The value of educational missions

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    Thesis (M.A.)--Boston Universit

    IS 501 Kingdom, Church, and World

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    (1) Clapp, Rodney. A Peculiar People: The Church as Culture in a Postchristian Society. Downers Grove, IL: IVP, 1996. (2) McLaren, Brian D. A New Kind of Christian. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2001. (3) Snyder, Howard. Kingdom, Church, and World. Wipf and Stock, 2001. (4) Willimon, William. Shaped by the Bible. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1990. (5) Wright, N.T. The Challenge of Jesus. Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity, 1999.https://place.asburyseminary.edu/syllabi/2274/thumbnail.jp

    IS 501 Kingdom, Church, and World

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    (1) Clapp, Rodney. Border Crossings. Brazos Press, 2000. (2) McClaren, Brian D. A New Kind of Christian. Jossey-Bass, 2001. (3) Newbiggen, Leslie. The Open Secret: An Introduction to the Theology of Mission. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Wm.B. Eerdmans, 1995. (4) Snyder, Howard. God’s Kingdom Now. Wiff and Stock, 2001. (5) Wright, Tom. The Challenge of Jesus. Downers Grove, Illinois: InterVarsity, 1999.https://place.asburyseminary.edu/syllabi/2275/thumbnail.jp

    IS 501 Christian Formation: Kingdom, Church, and World

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    Donovan, Vincent. Christianity Rediscovered. Orbis Books, 2003. Hart, Trevor. Faith Thinking: The Dynamics of Christian Theology. Downers Grove, IL: IVP, 1995. Hauerwas, Stanley and William Willimon, Resident Aliens, Abingdon, 1989. McLaren, Brian D. The Story We Find Ourselves In. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2003. Snyder, Howard. Kingdom, Church, and World. Wipf and Stock, 2001. Wesley Reading Packet available at Cokesburyhttps://place.asburyseminary.edu/syllabi/2517/thumbnail.jp

    The Ursinus Weekly, May 1, 1975

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    S.F.A.R.C. update • Meistersingers: More than music • USGA questionnaire encourages response • New Yorker critic graduation speaker • Medical school entrances • How to succeed debuts tomorrow in Bearpit • Editorial: Disgust: By the students, of the students! • Letters to the editor: Meekness? • Alumni meet • Feminism: Where? • Inexpensive or just plain cheap • Actors comment • Conflict simulation activities • 2 games, 2 losses • Tennis time • Intramurals • Focus: Steve Fisher • Flyers go for cup! • Lacrosse lookout • Requesthttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/weekly/1037/thumbnail.jp

    The Ursinus Weekly, November 1, 1973

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    UN Day held at UC • USGA-Union lock horns over new rep. position • SFARC elections held; warning system set • Protheatre productions scheduled for weekend • Musicians initiated into Pi Nu Epsilon • Editorial: The American Film Theatre; New furniture in Wilkinson lounge • Letters to the editor: Jazz fan responds; Starving student complains; Mr. Self speaks • Alumni corner • Jazz: Herman Herd in motion • Faculty Portrait: Dr. Peter G. Jessup • A discourse on mental divorce • Billy Jack • Ursinus downs U of P; then falls to Rams • Bears lose fifth game to a tough Widener teamhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/weekly/1004/thumbnail.jp

    “If it feels right, do it”: Intuitive decision making in a sample of high-level coaches

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    Comprehensive understanding and application of decision making is important for the professional practice and status of sports coaches. Accordingly, building on a strong work base exploring the use of professional judgement and decision making in sport, we report a preliminary investigation into uses of intuition by high-level coaches. Two contrasting groups of high-level coaches from adventure sports (n = 10) and rugby union (n = 8), were interviewed on their experiences of using intuitive and deliberative decision making styles, the source of these skills, and the interaction between the two. Participants reported similarly high levels of usage to other professions. Interaction between the two styles was apparent to varying degrees, while the role of experience was seen as an important precursor to greater intuitive practice and employment. Initially intuitive then deliberate decision making was a particular feature, offering participants an immediate check on the accuracy and validity of the decision. Integration of these data with the extant literature and implications for practice are discussed

    Insights into the genetics of menopausal vasomotor symptoms: genome-wide analyses of routinely-collected primary care health records.

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    This is the final version. Available from BMC via the DOI in this record. Availability of data and materials: All data used in the discovery analyses are available from UK Biobank on application at https://www.ukbiobank.ac.uk/enable-your-research/apply-for-access. Data from UK Biobank that are released to approved projects are de-identifed with project specifc identifers assigned to individuals. The genome-wide summary statistics generated by the study are available on the GWAS Catalog (https://www.ebi.ac.uk/gwas) under accession ID GCST90267381.BACKGROUND: Vasomotor symptoms (VMS) can often significantly impact women's quality of life at menopause. In vivo studies have shown that increased neurokinin B (NKB) / neurokinin 3 receptor (NK3R) signalling contributes to VMS, with previous genetic studies implicating the TACR3 gene locus that encodes NK3R. Large-scale genomic analyses offer the possibility of biological insights but few such studies have collected data on VMS, while proxy phenotypes such as hormone replacement therapy (HRT) use are likely to be affected by changes in clinical practice. We investigated the genetic basis of VMS by analysing routinely-collected health records. METHODS: We performed a GWAS of VMS derived from linked primary-care records and cross-sectional self-reported HRT use in up to 153,152 women from UK Biobank, a population-based cohort. In a subset of this cohort (n = 39,356), we analysed exome-sequencing data to test the association with VMS of rare deleterious genetic variants. Finally, we used Mendelian randomisation analysis to investigate the reasons for HRT use over time. RESULTS: Our GWAS of health-records derived VMS identified a genetic signal near TACR3 associated with a lower risk of VMS (OR=0.76 (95% CI 0.72,0.80) per A allele, P=3.7x10-27), which was consistent with previous studies, validating this approach. Conditional analyses demonstrated independence of genetic signals for puberty timing and VMS at the TACR3 locus, including a rare variant predicted to reduce functional NK3R levels that was associated with later menarche (P = 5 × 10-9) but showed no association with VMS (P = 0.6). Younger menopause age was causally-associated with greater HRT use before 2002 but not after. CONCLUSIONS: We provide support for TACR3 in the genetic basis of VMS but unexpectedly find that rare genomic variants predicted to lower NK3R levels did not modify VMS, despite the proven efficacy of NK3R antagonists. Using genomics we demonstrate changes in genetic associations with HRT use over time, arising from a change in clinical practice since the early 2000s, which is likely to reflect a switch from preventing post-menopausal complications in women with earlier menopause to primarily treating VMS. Our study demonstrates that integrating routinely-collected primary care health records and genomic data offers great potential for exploring the genetic basis of symptoms.Cancer Research UKMedical Research CouncilUK Research and Innovatio

    The stigma turbine:A theoretical framework for conceptualizing and contextualizing marketplace stigma

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    Stigmas, or discredited personal attributes, emanate from social perceptions of physical characteristics, aspects of character, and “tribal” associations (e.g., race; Goffman 1963). Extant research emphasizes the perspective of the stigma target, with some scholars exploring how social institutions shape stigma. Yet the ways stakeholders within the socio-commercial sphere create, perpetuate, or resist stigma remain overlooked. We introduce and define marketplace stigma as the labeling, stereotyping, and devaluation by and of commercial stakeholders (consumers, companies and their employees, stockholders, institutions) and their offerings (products, services, experiences). We offer the Stigma Turbine (ST) as a unifying conceptual framework that locates marketplace stigma within the broader sociocultural context, and illuminates its relationship to forces that exacerbate or blunt stigma. In unpacking the ST, we reveal the critical role market stakeholders can play in (de)stigmatization, explore implications for marketing practice and public policy, and offer a research agenda to further our understanding of marketplace stigma and stakeholder welfare
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