24 research outputs found

    The Newfoundland Museum, St John's, Possessions: A Collection in Progress

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    Narrative theology in Religious Education

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    This is an Author's Accepted Manuscript of an article published in British Journal of Religious Education, 20 March 2013. Copyright © 2013 Taylor & Francis. Available online at: http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/01416200.2013.785931This article advocates a pedagogy of Religious Education (RE) based upon a narratival framework informed by both narrative theology and narrative philosophy. Drawing on the work of narrative theologians including Stanley Hauerwas, the article outlines the nature of the framework, describes the four phases of learning that comprise the pedagogy, and explains how such an approach can overcome existing difficulties in how biblical texts are handled within RE. Working from the narrative assumption that individuals and communities are formed by reading, sharing and living within stories, it suggests that the pedagogy might encourage pupils to think about how the lives of Christians are shaped by their interpretations of biblical narratives, to offer their own interpretations of biblical and other texts, and to consider the stories – religious, non-religious or both – which shape their own lives. In so doing, the article moves away from a ‘proof-texting’ approach to the Bible towards one in which pupils are enabled to think about the significance of biblical narratives for both Christians and themselves

    Caractérisation fonctionnelle de sept variations faux-sens dans le gène du récepteur sensible au calcium (CASR)

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    International audienceLe récepteur sensible au calcium (CaSR) est un RCPG qui régule l’homéostasie du calcium extracellulaire (Ca2+e), codé parle gène CASR. Cette régulation se fait par la mobilisation du calcium intracellulaire (Ca2+i) et la voie de signalisationMAPK. Les mutations du gène CASR entraînant une perte ou un gain de fonction mènent à l’hypercalcémiehypocalciurique familiale de type 1 (HHF1) ou à l’hypocalcémie autosomique dominante (HAD), respectivement

    Caractérisation fonctionnelle de sept variations faux-sens dans le gène du récepteur sensible au calcium (CASR)

    No full text
    International audienceLe récepteur sensible au calcium (CaSR) est un RCPG qui régule l’homéostasie du calcium extracellulaire (Ca2+e), codé parle gène CASR. Cette régulation se fait par la mobilisation du calcium intracellulaire (Ca2+i) et la voie de signalisationMAPK. Les mutations du gène CASR entraînant une perte ou un gain de fonction mènent à l’hypercalcémiehypocalciurique familiale de type 1 (HHF1) ou à l’hypocalcémie autosomique dominante (HAD), respectivement
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