Catalogue Search | MBRL
Search Results Heading
Explore the vast range of titles available.
MBRLSearchResults
-
DisciplineDiscipline
-
Is Peer ReviewedIs Peer Reviewed
-
Reading LevelReading Level
-
Content TypeContent Type
-
YearFrom:-To:
-
More FiltersMore FiltersItem TypeIs Full-Text AvailableSubjectCountry Of PublicationPublisherSourceDonorLanguagePlace of PublicationContributorsLocation
Done
Filters
Reset
179
result(s) for
"Belton, Brian"
Sort by:
'Cadjan - Kiduhu' : global perspectives on youth work
In this book academics, practitioners and scholars from all over the planet present relatively heterogeneous perspectives to produce something of the homogenous whole that youth work might be understood to be. This promotes the understanding that to lock down youth work in notional stasis (bolt it into a \"carceral archipelago') would be the antithesis of practice, which would effectively destroy it as youth work. Other writers have effectively tried to achieve just this, or perhaps identified (put a flag in) what they see (or want to be) the 'core' of youth work practice. But youth work is not an apple. A global and historical perspective of youth work shows it to be a relentlessly developing range of responses to a persistently growing and shifting range of phenomena, issues and directions presented by and to societies and the young people in those societies. Here the authors offer a set of responses from within the incessantly metamorphosing field that can generically be called?youth work; they do this in this time, from many places and a diversity of identities, but they all identify what they present professionally and/or academically with what they agree to be the glorious rainbow palette that youth work is.--Back cover.
Second teenager to plead guiilty
1998
By Kim Westad Times Colonist staff A second teen charged in the beating that preceded Reena Virk's death will plead guilty today. Defence lawyer Dale Marshall said d Sunday that his 14-year-old client will plead guilty to assault causing bodily harm.
Newspaper Article
JEFF BELL - WHERE YOU LIVE
1997
C-FAX cruiser gets corralled by listeners Sometimes you just can't give those freebies away. Dave Townsend of C-FAX radio found that out recently when he was behind the wheel of the station's Community Cruiser. He was reading out vehicle descriptions and licence plates over the air and inviting the drivers, assuming they were listening to C-FAX, to pull over to get a prize of $25 worth of gas. Townsend spotted a likely vehicle on Dallas Road and did histhing, unaware he was broadcasting the description and location of two undercover Victoria cops. Ian Hunter, a Victoria advocate for legalizing marijuana, is helping with a Hemp Council effort to establish a \"disaster relief fund\" for the children of Lasqueti Island.
Newspaper Article
News
1997
MARILYN MCCALL - HORSE AND RIDER - Riders vault into limelight via Otter Point Farm class Motorists travelling Otter Point Road are often distracted by the sight of young riders running beside a trotting horse and vaulting on to its back, or standing up on the back of a cantering horse or facing backwards on a horse as it canters around the ring. Frequently cars pull over to the side of the road to watch the students of Jaye Fardella practice vaulting. Jaye first got into vaulting after a workshop on vaulting offered at the B.C. Horse Industry short course in Abbotsford caught her eye.She had taught her students the basics of trail riding, cross country and games, and she wanted to do something different. When she approached the kids, they were keen, but the parents were a little reluctant. Vaulters begin at a walk, and when they can do seven moves in 60 seconds, they qualify for a walk badge. A vaulter may sit sideways, or move onto the neck and sit backwards, holding each move for three seconds or three beats of the horse. For the trot badge, the vaulter again performs the seven moves, but this time doing an unassisted mount while the horse is trotting, and also standing on the back of the jogging horse. Jaye says that some riders do their canter badge before the trot badge, finding it easier to vault during the smoother canter gait than it is during the bouncy trot.
Newspaper Article