148,778 research outputs found
I\u27ll show you mine, if you show me yours : a brief and preliminary examination of parental report cards
This article examines the recently introduced phenomenon of parental report cards,taking a preliminary look at some of the reasons,both real and perceived, behind the concept. Increased parental involvement in the education of children is as universally applauded as apple pie and motherhood. Educators and parent-teacher organizations have, for years, encouraged greater involvement on the part of parents—encouragement that in the past seldom ventured beyond simple and generic letters from a principal or superintendent or, in some instances, a more personalized letter from a teacher. Parents have long been urged, but have never actually been required, to participate in their children’s education. Although the time has not yet come for compulsory parental education and/or actual report cards assessing the amount of commitment parents show toward their children’s education, symbolic report cards have begun to appear, in which parents are asked to assess their own performance as parents
Global religious changes and civil life in two Chinese societies: a comparison of Jiangsu and Taiwan
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15570274.2015.1039305Published versio
Teaching the Basic Ethics Class Through Simulation: The Northwestern Program in Advocacy and Professionalism
The Northwestern University School of Law created and published a set of materials for teaching the basic ethics course principally through the simulation method. Burns provides a very compressed summary of the underlying program, describes the classes themselves and the mix of teaching methods professors employ, and briefly discusses the program materials
The Nature of Cima Dome
In the Mojave Desert of southeasternmost California is a remarkably
smooth, symmetrical rock-alluvial dome which takes its name
from Cima on the Union Pacific Railroad. Lawson (1915, pp. 26, 33)
cited Cima Dome as a prime example of a panfan, but Thompson
(1929, p. 550) later showed that its upper part is bare rock. Davis
(1933, pp. 240-243) considered it a fine example of a convex desert
dome evolved from back-wearing of a fault block, but this concept
is contradicted by the geological relations (Hewett, 1954), which
throw more light on the nature and origin of Cima Dome than do
geomorphological theories
Iron Rings, Doctor Honoris Causa Raoul Bott, Carl Herz, and a Hidden Hand
The degree of Doctor of Sciences, honoris causa, was conferred on Raoul Bott
by McGill University in 1987. Much of the work to make this happen was done by
Carl Herz. Some of the author's personal recollections of both professors are
included, along with some context for the awarding of this degree and ample
historical tangents. Some cultural aspects occurring in the addresses are
elaborated on, primarily, the Canadian engineer's iron ring. This paper also
reprints both the convocation address of Raoul Bott and the presentation of
Carl Herz on that occasion.Comment: An edited and reformatted version of this paper, with an additional
photo, will appear in a volume dedicated to Raoul Bott. The author hopes to
expand on some aspects of this preprint in future version
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