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result(s) for
"Dixon, Mary, author"
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Studying the effectiveness of teacher education : early career teachers in diverse settings
This book provides an evidentiary basis for policy decisions regarding initial teacher education and beginning teaching and informs the design and delivery of teacher preparation programs. Based on a rigorous analysis of international literature and the policy context for teacher education globally, and assessing data generated through a longitudinal study conducted in Australia, it investigates the effectiveness of teacher education in preparing teachers for the variety of school settings in which they begin their teaching careers.
Canada and the Beijing conference on women : governmental politics and NGO participation
2001,2007,2002
An examination of how Canada's policies for the Fourth World Conference on Women were formulated.
Simpsons comics game on!
by
Groening, Matt, creator
,
Boothby, Ian, author
,
McCann, Jesse Leon, author
in
Simpsons (Fictitious characters) Comic books, strips, etc.
,
Dysfunctional families Comic books, strips, etc.
,
Springfield (Imaginary place) Comic books, strips, etc.
2018
A loophole in the town charter creates a time zone free-for-all, Homer remembers when he was forced to choose between his high school sweetheart and Mr. Burn's debutante niece, and Ned moves in with the Simpsons.
Canada and the International Seabed
This stronger alliance gave priority to negotiating an internationally acceptable treaty and safeguarding Canada's land-based nickel industry. A second coalition - officers from the Department of Finance, the Department of Industry, Trade, and Commerce, and the Ministry of State for Science and Technology - contended that the push for quantitive restrictions diverted attention from the more crucial areas of protection of technological and financial resources. Riddell-Dixon argues that the dominant coalition succeeded because of ministerial support, structural and functional advantages, and an effective choice of tactics. Consequently they were able to manage other domestic sources of foreign policy.
La Harpe's post: a tale of French-Wichita contact on the eastern plains
by
Good, Mary Elizabeth
,
Menzel, Eric
,
Thompson, Joe B
in
Acculturation
,
Frontier and pioneer life
,
Indians of North America
2008
In 1718, Jean-Baptiste Benard, Sieur de la Harpe, departed St. Malo in Brittany for the New World. La Harpe, a member of the French bourgeoisie, arrived at Dauphin Island on the Gulf coast to take up the entrepreneurial concession provided by the director of the French colony, Jean Baptiste Lemoyne de Bienville, La Harpe's charge was to open a trading post on the Red River just above a Caddoan village not far from present-day Texarkana. Following the establishment of this post, La Harpe ventured farther north to extend his trade market into the region occupied by the Wichita Indians. Here he encountered a Tawakoni village with an estimated 6,000 inhabitants, a number that swelled to 7,000 during the ten-day visit. Despite years of ethnohistoric and archaeological research, no scholar had successfully established where this important meeting took place. Then in 1988, George Odell and his crew surveyed and excavated an area 13 miles south of Tulsa, along the Arkansas River, that revealed undeniable association of Native American habitation refuse with 18th-century European trade goods. Odell here presents a full account of the presumed location of the Tawakoni village as revealed through the analysis of excavated materials from nine specialist collaborators. In a strikingly well written narrative report, employing careful study and innovative analysis supported by appendixes containing the excavation data, Odell combines documentary history and archaeological evidence to pinpoint the probable site of the first European contact with North American Plains Indians.
Gender, Sexuality and Colonial Modernities
1999,2005,2011
Gender, Sexuality and Colonial Modernities considers the ways in which modernity was constructed, in all its incompleteness, through colonialism. Using a variety of archival resources and equally diverse methodologies, the authors trace modernity's unstable foundations in the slippages and ruptures of colonial gender and sexual politics. As a whole, the essays illustrate that modern colonial regimes are never self-evidently hegemonic, but are always in process - subject to disruption and contest - and never finally accomplished; and are therefore unfinished business.