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ALOPECIA AREATA OF EYELASHES: A SUBSET OF ALOPECIA AREATA Alopecia areata of eyelashes: A subset of alopecia areataNaga Prasad Grandhe MD, and Amrinder Jit Kanwar MDDermatology Online Journal 10 (2): 13. Alopecia areata (AA) is an autoimmune disease characterized by unpredictable, usually patchy, nonscarring hair loss. Although it most commonly affects the scalp, it can involve any hair-bearing area CLINICAL PRACTICE AND CASES IN EMERGENCY MEDICINE Clinical Practice and Cases in Emergency Medicine (CPC-EM) is an internationally recognized journal affiliated with the MEDLINE-indexed Western Journal of Emergency Medicine (West JEM). It will offer the latest in patient care case reports, images in the field of emergency medicine (EM) and state of the art clinicopathological cases. SOCIAL MEDIA USE AND STRESS Social media has become a pervasive form of communication, yet little is known about how use relates to stress. Previous research suggests a link between social media use and psychosocial variables such as self-esteem, depression, life satisfaction, and well-being. However, there is limited empirical knowledge concerning how social media use A COMMENTARY ON THE SATIRES OF JUVENAL Author(s): Courtney, Edward | Abstract: Edward Courtney's study of the Satires of Juvenal is the only full-scale commentary on the corpus since the nineteenth century and retains its value for students and scholars a generation after its first appearance in 1980. This commentary incorporates the findings of classical study up to that time, including the work of A. E. Housman, new discoveries THE IMPACT OF ELECTRICITY ON ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT: A Author(s): Stern, David I; Burke, Paul J; Bruns, Stephan B | Abstract: We find that electricity use and access are strongly correlated with economic development, as theory would suggest. Despite large empirical literatures and suggestive case evidence, there are, however, few methodologically strong studies that establish causal effects on an economy-wide basis. There is some evidence that A SOFT ROBOT THAT NAVIGATES ITS ENVIRONMENT THROUGH GROWTH. Author(s): Hawkes, Elliot W; Blumenschein, Laura H; Greer, Joseph D; Okamura, Allison M | Abstract: Across kingdoms and length scales, certain cells and organisms navigate their environments not through locomotion but through growth. This pattern of movement is found in fungal hyphae, developing neurons, and trailing plants, and is characterized by extension from the tip of the body, length TEACHERS’ REFLECTIONS ON CRITICAL PEDAGOGY IN THE CLASSROOM Author(s): Katz, Leanna | Abstract: This article presents the results from a qualitative research study that explores the experiences of nine high school teachers with some of the common themes in critical pedagogy. The study considers teachers who may not have explicitly learned about or applied critical pedagogy in their teaching and investigates how feasible and desirable they find the FRICTIONAL LICHENIFIED DERMATOSIS FROM PROLONGED USE OF ASEE MORE ONESCHOLARSHIP.ORG
PHOTOESSAY OF THE CUTANEOUS MANIFESTATIONS OF THESEE MORE ONESCHOLARSHIP.ORG
ESCHOLARSHIPUC BERKELEYUC DAVISUC IRVINEUCLAUC MERCEDUC RIVERSIDE eScholarship Publishing is an open access publishing platform subsidized by the University of California, managed by the California Digital Library, and offered free of charge to UC-affiliated departments, research units, publishing programs and individual scholars. We offer publishing and production tools, including a fulleditorial and peer
ALOPECIA AREATA OF EYELASHES: A SUBSET OF ALOPECIA AREATA Alopecia areata of eyelashes: A subset of alopecia areataNaga Prasad Grandhe MD, and Amrinder Jit Kanwar MDDermatology Online Journal 10 (2): 13. Alopecia areata (AA) is an autoimmune disease characterized by unpredictable, usually patchy, nonscarring hair loss. Although it most commonly affects the scalp, it can involve any hair-bearing area CLINICAL PRACTICE AND CASES IN EMERGENCY MEDICINE Clinical Practice and Cases in Emergency Medicine (CPC-EM) is an internationally recognized journal affiliated with the MEDLINE-indexed Western Journal of Emergency Medicine (West JEM). It will offer the latest in patient care case reports, images in the field of emergency medicine (EM) and state of the art clinicopathological cases. SOCIAL MEDIA USE AND STRESS Social media has become a pervasive form of communication, yet little is known about how use relates to stress. Previous research suggests a link between social media use and psychosocial variables such as self-esteem, depression, life satisfaction, and well-being. However, there is limited empirical knowledge concerning how social media use A COMMENTARY ON THE SATIRES OF JUVENAL Author(s): Courtney, Edward | Abstract: Edward Courtney's study of the Satires of Juvenal is the only full-scale commentary on the corpus since the nineteenth century and retains its value for students and scholars a generation after its first appearance in 1980. This commentary incorporates the findings of classical study up to that time, including the work of A. E. Housman, new discoveries THE IMPACT OF ELECTRICITY ON ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT: A Author(s): Stern, David I; Burke, Paul J; Bruns, Stephan B | Abstract: We find that electricity use and access are strongly correlated with economic development, as theory would suggest. Despite large empirical literatures and suggestive case evidence, there are, however, few methodologically strong studies that establish causal effects on an economy-wide basis. There is some evidence that A SOFT ROBOT THAT NAVIGATES ITS ENVIRONMENT THROUGH GROWTH. Author(s): Hawkes, Elliot W; Blumenschein, Laura H; Greer, Joseph D; Okamura, Allison M | Abstract: Across kingdoms and length scales, certain cells and organisms navigate their environments not through locomotion but through growth. This pattern of movement is found in fungal hyphae, developing neurons, and trailing plants, and is characterized by extension from the tip of the body, length TEACHERS’ REFLECTIONS ON CRITICAL PEDAGOGY IN THE CLASSROOM Author(s): Katz, Leanna | Abstract: This article presents the results from a qualitative research study that explores the experiences of nine high school teachers with some of the common themes in critical pedagogy. The study considers teachers who may not have explicitly learned about or applied critical pedagogy in their teaching and investigates how feasible and desirable they find the FRICTIONAL LICHENIFIED DERMATOSIS FROM PROLONGED USE OF ASEE MORE ONESCHOLARSHIP.ORG
PHOTOESSAY OF THE CUTANEOUS MANIFESTATIONS OF THESEE MORE ONESCHOLARSHIP.ORG
FRONTIERS OF BIOGEOGRAPHY Frontiers of Biogeography (FoB) is the scientific journal of the International Biogeography Society (IBS, www.biogeography.org), a not-for-profit organization dedicated to promotion of and public understanding of the biogeographical sciences.IBS launched FoB to provide an independent forum for biogeographical science, with the academic standards expected of a journal operated by and for an FROM INDUSTRIAL GARDEN TO FOOD DESERT: UNEARTHING THE ROOT Author(s): McClintock, Nathan | Abstract: In this paper, I use a framework of urban political ecology to explore the rise of urban agriculture (UA) in Oakland, California. As part of a growing effort to reduce its “ecological footprint” and to guarantee access to nutritious food for the urban poor, the City of Oakland has recently embraced a goal of sourcing 30 percent of its food locally OSIRIS AND THE DECEASED Author(s): Smith, Mark | Abstract: For the Egyptians, the god Osiris provided a model whereby the effects of the rupture caused by death could be totally reversed, since that deity underwent a twofold process of resurrection. Mummification reconstituted his “corporeal” self and justification against Seth his “social” self, re-integrating him and restoring his status among the gods. CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF FEAR OF CRIME: THE IMPACT OF Author(s): Grinshteyn, Erin Greer | Advisor(s): Ettner, Susan L | Abstract: Fear of crime has been defined in many ways; one definition is that it is an emotional reaction marked by feeling as though danger could result in physical harm. The amount of fear a person feels is dependent on factors that affect actual risk and perception of risk. For adolescents, personal characteristics JOURNAL OF CRITICAL MIXED RACE STUDIES The Journal of Critical Mixed Race Studies (JCMRS) is a peer-reviewed online interdisciplinary journal dedicated to Critical Mixed Race Studies (CMRS). JCMRS functions as an open-access forum for critical mixed race studies and will be available without cost to anyone with access to the Internet. THE IMPACT OF ELECTRICITY ON ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT: A Author(s): Stern, David I; Burke, Paul J; Bruns, Stephan B | Abstract: We find that electricity use and access are strongly correlated with economic development, as theory would suggest. Despite large empirical literatures and suggestive case evidence, there are, however, few methodologically strong studies that establish causal effects on aneconomy-wide basis.
FRICTIONAL LICHENIFIED DERMATOSIS FROM PROLONGED USE OF A Frictional lichenified dermatosis from prolonged use of a computer mouse: Case report and review of the literature of computer-related dermatoses Pedram Ghasri BS, Steven R Feldman MD PhD 1,2,3 Dermatology Online Journal 16 (12): 3 Center for Dermatology Research 1. Department of Dermatology 2. Department of Pathology 3. Department of Public Health Sciences Wake Forest University School of MORAL THEORIES AND CLONING IN KAZUO ISHIGURO’S NEVER LET ME GO Author(s): Petrillo, Stephanie | Abstract: In this paper I will consider the ethics of cloning as it occurs in Kazuo Ishiguro’s dystopian novel Never Let Me Go from the standpoint of a number of moral theories – consequentialism, natural law theory, Kantian moral theory, rights based theory, and virtue ethics. In light of the moral theories, I will develop an analysis for why cloning-for THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN EATING DISORDERS AND Author(s): Gibbons, Pat | Abstract: Many people (incorrectly) believe that eating disorders (ED) are more prevalent in the higher socioeconomic status (SES) groups. Studies conducted in the 1960s and 70s corroborate this statement; however, their methods may have biased the results. Recent studies using health questionnaires distributed to large heterogeneous populations have shown that EDs THE RUDOLPH SIGN OF NASAL VESTIBULAR FURUNCULOSIS The Rudolph sign of nasal vestibular furunculosis: Questions raised by this common but under-recognized nasal mucocutaneous disorder Kevin W Dahle, Richard D Sontheimer Dermatology Online Journal 18 (3): 6 Department of Dermatology, University of Utah School of Medicine, SaltLake City, Utah
SOCIAL MEDIA USE AND STRESS Social media has become a pervasive form of communication, yet little is known about how use relates to stress. Previous research suggests a link between social media use and psychosocial variables such as self-esteem, depression, life satisfaction, and well-being. However, there is limited empirical knowledge concerning how social media use THRESHOLDS AND THE SPECIES–AREA RELATIONSHIP: A SET OF1 Author(s): Matthews, Thomas J.; Rigal, François | Abstract: An increasing number of studies have focused on identifying thresholds in the species–area relationship (SAR). The most common approach in such studies is to use piecewise regression models. While a few software packages are available for fitting piecewise models, these resources are general regression packages (i.e., they are not A COMMENTARY ON THE SATIRES OF JUVENAL Author(s): Courtney, Edward | Abstract: Edward Courtney's study of the Satires of Juvenal is the only full-scale commentary on the corpus since the nineteenth century and retains its value for students and scholars a generation after its first appearance in 1980. This commentary incorporates the findings of classical study up to that time, including the work of A. E. Housman, new discoveries LIFE-CYCLE ENERGY AND EMISSIONS INVENTORIES FOR Author(s): Chester, Mikhail; Horvath, Arpad | Abstract: The development of life-cycle energy and emissions factors for passenger transportation modes is critical for understanding the total environmental costs of travel. Previous life-cycle studies have focused on the automobile given its dominating share of passenger travel and have included only few life-cycle components, typically FROM INDUSTRIAL GARDEN TO FOOD DESERT: UNEARTHING THE ROOT Author(s): McClintock, Nathan | Abstract: In this paper, I use a framework of urban political ecology to explore the rise of urban agriculture (UA) in Oakland, California. As part of a growing effort to reduce its “ecological footprint” and to guarantee access to nutritious food for the urban poor, the City of Oakland has recently embraced a goal of sourcing 30 percent of its food locally THE ATKINS DIET: AN UNRESOLVED DEBATE The Atkins Diet: An Unresolved Debate. Obesity is a public health problem reaching epidemic proportions in the United States (1). Many Americans are turning to popular diets, including the well-known Atkins diet. The Atkins diet allows the dieter to consume as much protein and fat as desired, while severely limiting carbohydrateconsumption.
THE ROLE OF INPUT REVISITED: NATIVIST VERSUS USAGE-BASED Author(s): Zyzik, Eve | Abstract: This article examines the role of input in two contrasting theories of language acquisition: nativist (UG) theory and the usage-based (emergentist) approach. Although extensive treatments of input are available for first language acquisition (cf. Gathercole & Hoff, 2007), such research rarely incorporates findings from second language acquisition. CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF FEAR OF CRIME: THE IMPACT OF Author(s): Grinshteyn, Erin Greer | Advisor(s): Ettner, Susan L | Abstract: Fear of crime has been defined in many ways; one definition is that it is an emotional reaction marked by feeling as though danger could result in physical harm. The amount of fear a person feels is dependent on factors that affect actual risk and perception of risk. For adolescents, personal characteristics A SOFT ROBOT THAT NAVIGATES ITS ENVIRONMENT THROUGH GROWTH. Author(s): Hawkes, Elliot W; Blumenschein, Laura H; Greer, Joseph D; Okamura, Allison M | Abstract: Across kingdoms and length scales, certain cells and organisms navigate their environments not through locomotion but through growth. This pattern of movement is found in fungal hyphae, developing neurons, and trailing plants, and is characterized by extension from the tip of the body, length TEACHERS’ REFLECTIONS ON CRITICAL PEDAGOGY IN THE CLASSROOM Author(s): Katz, Leanna | Abstract: This article presents the results from a qualitative research study that explores the experiences of nine high school teachers with some of the common themes in critical pedagogy. The study considers teachers who may not have explicitly learned about or applied critical pedagogy in their teaching and investigates how feasible and desirable they find the SOCIAL MEDIA USE AND STRESS Social media has become a pervasive form of communication, yet little is known about how use relates to stress. Previous research suggests a link between social media use and psychosocial variables such as self-esteem, depression, life satisfaction, and well-being. However, there is limited empirical knowledge concerning how social media use THRESHOLDS AND THE SPECIES–AREA RELATIONSHIP: A SET OF1 Author(s): Matthews, Thomas J.; Rigal, François | Abstract: An increasing number of studies have focused on identifying thresholds in the species–area relationship (SAR). The most common approach in such studies is to use piecewise regression models. While a few software packages are available for fitting piecewise models, these resources are general regression packages (i.e., they are not A COMMENTARY ON THE SATIRES OF JUVENAL Author(s): Courtney, Edward | Abstract: Edward Courtney's study of the Satires of Juvenal is the only full-scale commentary on the corpus since the nineteenth century and retains its value for students and scholars a generation after its first appearance in 1980. This commentary incorporates the findings of classical study up to that time, including the work of A. E. Housman, new discoveries LIFE-CYCLE ENERGY AND EMISSIONS INVENTORIES FOR Author(s): Chester, Mikhail; Horvath, Arpad | Abstract: The development of life-cycle energy and emissions factors for passenger transportation modes is critical for understanding the total environmental costs of travel. Previous life-cycle studies have focused on the automobile given its dominating share of passenger travel and have included only few life-cycle components, typically FROM INDUSTRIAL GARDEN TO FOOD DESERT: UNEARTHING THE ROOT Author(s): McClintock, Nathan | Abstract: In this paper, I use a framework of urban political ecology to explore the rise of urban agriculture (UA) in Oakland, California. As part of a growing effort to reduce its “ecological footprint” and to guarantee access to nutritious food for the urban poor, the City of Oakland has recently embraced a goal of sourcing 30 percent of its food locally THE ATKINS DIET: AN UNRESOLVED DEBATE The Atkins Diet: An Unresolved Debate. Obesity is a public health problem reaching epidemic proportions in the United States (1). Many Americans are turning to popular diets, including the well-known Atkins diet. The Atkins diet allows the dieter to consume as much protein and fat as desired, while severely limiting carbohydrateconsumption.
THE ROLE OF INPUT REVISITED: NATIVIST VERSUS USAGE-BASED Author(s): Zyzik, Eve | Abstract: This article examines the role of input in two contrasting theories of language acquisition: nativist (UG) theory and the usage-based (emergentist) approach. Although extensive treatments of input are available for first language acquisition (cf. Gathercole & Hoff, 2007), such research rarely incorporates findings from second language acquisition. CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF FEAR OF CRIME: THE IMPACT OF Author(s): Grinshteyn, Erin Greer | Advisor(s): Ettner, Susan L | Abstract: Fear of crime has been defined in many ways; one definition is that it is an emotional reaction marked by feeling as though danger could result in physical harm. The amount of fear a person feels is dependent on factors that affect actual risk and perception of risk. For adolescents, personal characteristics A SOFT ROBOT THAT NAVIGATES ITS ENVIRONMENT THROUGH GROWTH. Author(s): Hawkes, Elliot W; Blumenschein, Laura H; Greer, Joseph D; Okamura, Allison M | Abstract: Across kingdoms and length scales, certain cells and organisms navigate their environments not through locomotion but through growth. This pattern of movement is found in fungal hyphae, developing neurons, and trailing plants, and is characterized by extension from the tip of the body, length TEACHERS’ REFLECTIONS ON CRITICAL PEDAGOGY IN THE CLASSROOM Author(s): Katz, Leanna | Abstract: This article presents the results from a qualitative research study that explores the experiences of nine high school teachers with some of the common themes in critical pedagogy. The study considers teachers who may not have explicitly learned about or applied critical pedagogy in their teaching and investigates how feasible and desirable they find the UNDERGRADUATE AND GRADUATE STUDENTS’ MENTAL HEALTH DURING The COVID-19 pandemic has looming negative impacts on mental health of undergraduate and graduate students at research universities, according to the Student Experience in the Research University (SERU) Consortium survey of 30,725 undergraduate students and 15,346 graduate and professional students conducted in May-July 2020 at nine public research universities. TRANSMODERNITY: JOURNAL OF PERIPHERAL CULTURAL PRODUCTION TRANSMODERNITY: Journal of Peripheral Cultural Production of the Luso-Hispanic World, a peer-reviewed and interdisciplinary journal of Luso-Hispanic and U.S. Latino literary and cultural studies, is published by eScholarship and is part of the University of California.The Journal promotes the study of marginalized areas of Luso-Hispanic cultural production of any period and invitessubmissions
THE VERNAL POOL
As the leading creative writing journal for UC Merced undergraduate students, The Vernal Pool provides an edited expressive space for the student body to publish original work and an open, accessible venue for audiences to read, appreciate, celebrate and respond. Current issues can now be found at: https://thevernalpool.ucmerced.edu. ALOPECIA AREATA OF EYELASHES: A SUBSET OF ALOPECIA AREATA Alopecia areata of eyelashes: A subset of alopecia areataNaga Prasad Grandhe MD, and Amrinder Jit Kanwar MDDermatology Online Journal 10 (2): 13. Alopecia areata (AA) is an autoimmune disease characterized by unpredictable, usually patchy, nonscarring hair loss. Although it most commonly affects the scalp, it can involve any hair-bearing area THE EFFECTS OF RIDE-HAILING SERVICES ON GREENHOUSE GAS Author(s): Rodier, Caroline; Michaels, Julia | Abstract: Ride-hailing services, which allow consumers to order and pay for rides through smart phone applications, have grown to a substantial proportion of the transportation market. Today, an estimated 15% of adults across the U.S. and 21% living in major U.S. cities have used ride-hailingservices.
GENTRIFICATION NEAR RAIL TRANSIT AREAS: A MICRO-DATA Author(s): Boarnet, Marlon G.; Bostic, Raphael W.; Burinskiy, Evgeniy; Rodnyansky, Seva; Prohofsky, Allen | Abstract: Rail transit and neighborhood compositional changes are becoming clearly linked in the public mind. Examples where rail transit has been associated, at least anecdotally, with neighborhood gentrification abound. In Washington, D.C., the Green and Yellow lines are associated OSIRIS AND THE DECEASED Author(s): Smith, Mark | Abstract: For the Egyptians, the god Osiris provided a model whereby the effects of the rupture caused by death could be totally reversed, since that deity underwent a twofold process of resurrection. Mummification reconstituted his “corporeal” self and justification against Seth his “social” self, re-integrating him and restoring his status among the gods. THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN EATING DISORDERS AND Author(s): Gibbons, Pat | Abstract: Many people (incorrectly) believe that eating disorders (ED) are more prevalent in the higher socioeconomic status (SES) groups. Studies conducted in the 1960s and 70s corroborate this statement; however, their methods may have biased the results. Recent studies using health questionnaires distributed to large heterogeneous populations have shown that EDs CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY AND FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE Author(s): Tsoutsoura, Margarita. The Time vs. Money Effect: Shifting Product Attitudes and Decisions through Personal Connection JUDICIAL REVIEW OF LEGISLATION IN GHANA SINCE INDEPENDENCE Judicial Review of Legislation in Ghana since Independence. 1977. Author (s): Kumado, C.K. Main Content. Author & Article Info. Main Content. Download PDF to View. View Larger. CHALLENGING THE URBAN/RURAL DIVIDE: IMPLICATIONS FOR Author(s): Cochran, Abigail Lynn | Abstract: Defining the American urban form relies on a perceived division between ‘urban’ and ‘rural’ areas. I trace the idea of the urban/rural divide through the evolution of human settlement patterns in the United States from the nineteenth century onwards. I argue that while a superficial distinction between urban and rural land was once relevant SOCIAL MEDIA USE AND STRESS Social media has become a pervasive form of communication, yet little is known about how use relates to stress. Previous research suggests a link between social media use and psychosocial variables such as self-esteem, depression, life satisfaction, and well-being. However, there is limited empirical knowledge concerning how social media use THE EFFECTS OF RIDE-HAILING SERVICES ON GREENHOUSE GAS Author(s): Rodier, Caroline; Michaels, Julia | Abstract: Ride-hailing services, which allow consumers to order and pay for rides through smart phone applications, have grown to a substantial proportion of the transportation market. Today, an estimated 15% of adults across the U.S. and 21% living in major U.S. cities have used ride-hailing services. The growth of ride-hailing services has A COMMENTARY ON THE SATIRES OF JUVENAL Author(s): Courtney, Edward | Abstract: Edward Courtney's study of the Satires of Juvenal is the only full-scale commentary on the corpus since the nineteenth century and retains its value for students and scholars a generation after its first appearance in 1980. This commentary incorporates the findings of classical study up to that time, including the work of A. E. Housman, new discoveries TEACHERS’ REFLECTIONS ON CRITICAL PEDAGOGY IN THE CLASSROOM Author(s): Katz, Leanna | Abstract: This article presents the results from a qualitative research study that explores the experiences of nine high school teachers with some of the common themes in critical pedagogy. The study considers teachers who may not have explicitly learned about or applied critical pedagogy in their teaching and investigates how feasible and desirable they find the LIFE-CYCLE ENERGY AND EMISSIONS INVENTORIES FOR Author(s): Chester, Mikhail; Horvath, Arpad | Abstract: The development of life-cycle energy and emissions factors for passenger transportation modes is critical for understanding the total environmental costs of travel. Previous life-cycle studies have focused on the automobile given its dominating share of passenger travel and have included only few life-cycle components, typically CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF FEAR OF CRIME: THE IMPACT OF Author(s): Grinshteyn, Erin Greer | Advisor(s): Ettner, Susan L | Abstract: Fear of crime has been defined in many ways; one definition is that it is an emotional reaction marked by feeling as though danger could result in physical harm. The amount of fear a person feels is dependent on factors that affect actual risk and perception of risk. For adolescents, personal characteristics THE ATKINS DIET: AN UNRESOLVED DEBATE The Atkins Diet: An Unresolved Debate. Obesity is a public health problem reaching epidemic proportions in the United States (1). Many Americans are turning to popular diets, including the well-known Atkins diet. The Atkins diet allows the dieter to consume as much protein and fat as desired, while severely limiting carbohydrateconsumption.
A SOFT ROBOT THAT NAVIGATES ITS ENVIRONMENT THROUGH GROWTH. Author(s): Hawkes, Elliot W; Blumenschein, Laura H; Greer, Joseph D; Okamura, Allison M | Abstract: Across kingdoms and length scales, certain cells and organisms navigate their environments not through locomotion but through growth. This pattern of movement is found in fungal hyphae, developing neurons, and trailing plants, and is characterized by extension from the tip of the body, length FROM INDUSTRIAL GARDEN TO FOOD DESERT: UNEARTHING THE ROOT Author(s): McClintock, Nathan | Abstract: In this paper, I use a framework of urban political ecology to explore the rise of urban agriculture (UA) in Oakland, California. As part of a growing effort to reduce its “ecological footprint” and to guarantee access to nutritious food for the urban poor, the City of Oakland has recently embraced a goal of sourcing 30 percent of its food locally CHALLENGING THE URBAN/RURAL DIVIDE: IMPLICATIONS FOR Author(s): Cochran, Abigail Lynn | Abstract: Defining the American urban form relies on a perceived division between ‘urban’ and ‘rural’ areas. I trace the idea of the urban/rural divide through the evolution of human settlement patterns in the United States from the nineteenth century onwards. I argue that while a superficial distinction between urban and rural land was once relevant SOCIAL MEDIA USE AND STRESS Social media has become a pervasive form of communication, yet little is known about how use relates to stress. Previous research suggests a link between social media use and psychosocial variables such as self-esteem, depression, life satisfaction, and well-being. However, there is limited empirical knowledge concerning how social media use THE EFFECTS OF RIDE-HAILING SERVICES ON GREENHOUSE GAS Author(s): Rodier, Caroline; Michaels, Julia | Abstract: Ride-hailing services, which allow consumers to order and pay for rides through smart phone applications, have grown to a substantial proportion of the transportation market. Today, an estimated 15% of adults across the U.S. and 21% living in major U.S. cities have used ride-hailing services. The growth of ride-hailing services has A COMMENTARY ON THE SATIRES OF JUVENAL Author(s): Courtney, Edward | Abstract: Edward Courtney's study of the Satires of Juvenal is the only full-scale commentary on the corpus since the nineteenth century and retains its value for students and scholars a generation after its first appearance in 1980. This commentary incorporates the findings of classical study up to that time, including the work of A. E. Housman, new discoveries TEACHERS’ REFLECTIONS ON CRITICAL PEDAGOGY IN THE CLASSROOM Author(s): Katz, Leanna | Abstract: This article presents the results from a qualitative research study that explores the experiences of nine high school teachers with some of the common themes in critical pedagogy. The study considers teachers who may not have explicitly learned about or applied critical pedagogy in their teaching and investigates how feasible and desirable they find the LIFE-CYCLE ENERGY AND EMISSIONS INVENTORIES FOR Author(s): Chester, Mikhail; Horvath, Arpad | Abstract: The development of life-cycle energy and emissions factors for passenger transportation modes is critical for understanding the total environmental costs of travel. Previous life-cycle studies have focused on the automobile given its dominating share of passenger travel and have included only few life-cycle components, typically CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF FEAR OF CRIME: THE IMPACT OF Author(s): Grinshteyn, Erin Greer | Advisor(s): Ettner, Susan L | Abstract: Fear of crime has been defined in many ways; one definition is that it is an emotional reaction marked by feeling as though danger could result in physical harm. The amount of fear a person feels is dependent on factors that affect actual risk and perception of risk. For adolescents, personal characteristics THE ATKINS DIET: AN UNRESOLVED DEBATE The Atkins Diet: An Unresolved Debate. Obesity is a public health problem reaching epidemic proportions in the United States (1). Many Americans are turning to popular diets, including the well-known Atkins diet. The Atkins diet allows the dieter to consume as much protein and fat as desired, while severely limiting carbohydrateconsumption.
A SOFT ROBOT THAT NAVIGATES ITS ENVIRONMENT THROUGH GROWTH. Author(s): Hawkes, Elliot W; Blumenschein, Laura H; Greer, Joseph D; Okamura, Allison M | Abstract: Across kingdoms and length scales, certain cells and organisms navigate their environments not through locomotion but through growth. This pattern of movement is found in fungal hyphae, developing neurons, and trailing plants, and is characterized by extension from the tip of the body, length FROM INDUSTRIAL GARDEN TO FOOD DESERT: UNEARTHING THE ROOT Author(s): McClintock, Nathan | Abstract: In this paper, I use a framework of urban political ecology to explore the rise of urban agriculture (UA) in Oakland, California. As part of a growing effort to reduce its “ecological footprint” and to guarantee access to nutritious food for the urban poor, the City of Oakland has recently embraced a goal of sourcing 30 percent of its food locally UNDERGRADUATE AND GRADUATE STUDENTS’ MENTAL HEALTH DURING The COVID-19 pandemic has looming negative impacts on mental health of undergraduate and graduate students at research universities, according to the Student Experience in the Research University (SERU) Consortium survey of 30,725 undergraduate students and 15,346 graduate and professional students conducted in May-July 2020 at nine public research universities.THE VERNAL POOL
As the leading creative writing journal for UC Merced undergraduate students, The Vernal Pool provides an edited expressive space for the student body to publish original work and an open, accessible venue for audiences to read, appreciate, celebrate and respond. Current issues can now be found at: https://thevernalpool.ucmerced.edu. A COMMENTARY ON THE SATIRES OF JUVENAL Author(s): Courtney, Edward | Abstract: Edward Courtney's study of the Satires of Juvenal is the only full-scale commentary on the corpus since the nineteenth century and retains its value for students and scholars a generation after its first appearance in 1980. This commentary incorporates the findings of classical study up to that time, including the work of A. E. Housman, new discoveries HIMALAYAN LINGUISTICS Himalayan Linguistics is a free peer-reviewed web journal and archive devoted to the study of the languages of the Himalayas. It includes the series Languages and Peoples of the Eastern Himalayan Region, which incorporates the North East Indian Linguistics (NEIL) volumes. THE EFFECTS OF RIDE-HAILING SERVICES ON GREENHOUSE GAS Author(s): Rodier, Caroline; Michaels, Julia | Abstract: Ride-hailing services, which allow consumers to order and pay for rides through smart phone applications, have grown to a substantial proportion of the transportation market. Today, an estimated 15% of adults across the U.S. and 21% living in major U.S. cities have used ride-hailingservices.
OSIRIS AND THE DECEASED Author(s): Smith, Mark | Abstract: For the Egyptians, the god Osiris provided a model whereby the effects of the rupture caused by death could be totally reversed, since that deity underwent a twofold process of resurrection. Mummification reconstituted his “corporeal” self and justification against Seth his “social” self, re-integrating him and restoring his status among the gods. ALOPECIA AREATA OF EYELASHES: A SUBSET OF ALOPECIA AREATA Alopecia areata of eyelashes: A subset of alopecia areataNaga Prasad Grandhe MD, and Amrinder Jit Kanwar MDDermatology Online Journal 10 (2): 13. Alopecia areata (AA) is an autoimmune disease characterized by unpredictable, usually patchy, nonscarring hair loss. Although it most commonly affects the scalp, it can involve any hair-bearing area A ROUGH GUIDE TO INSULT IN PLAUTUS Author(s): Bork, Hans | Advisor(s): Richlin, Amy | Abstract: This dissertation examines how abuse-language and insults function in the plays of Plautus. Existing work on insults in Plautus is largely taxonomic, with small attention to the dynamics of insult among characters or to how insults are construed within the plays. Plautus is one of the most important Latin authors, and insult is a JUDICIAL REVIEW OF LEGISLATION IN GHANA SINCE INDEPENDENCE Judicial Review of Legislation in Ghana since Independence. 1977. Author (s): Kumado, C.K. Main Content. Author & Article Info. Main Content. Download PDF to View. View Larger. THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN EATING DISORDERS AND Author(s): Gibbons, Pat | Abstract: Many people (incorrectly) believe that eating disorders (ED) are more prevalent in the higher socioeconomic status (SES) groups. Studies conducted in the 1960s and 70s corroborate this statement; however, their methods may have biased the results. Recent studies using health questionnaires distributed to large heterogeneous populations have shown that EDs CHALLENGING THE URBAN/RURAL DIVIDE: IMPLICATIONS FOR Author(s): Cochran, Abigail Lynn | Abstract: Defining the American urban form relies on a perceived division between ‘urban’ and ‘rural’ areas. I trace the idea of the urban/rural divide through the evolution of human settlement patterns in the United States from the nineteenth century onwards. I argue that while a superficial distinction between urban and rural land was once relevant FROM INDUSTRIAL GARDEN TO FOOD DESERT: UNEARTHING THE ROOT66 Author(s): McClintock, Nathan | Abstract: In this paper, I use a framework of urban political ecology to explore the rise of urban agriculture (UA) in Oakland, California. As part of a growing effort to reduce its “ecological footprint” and to guarantee access to nutritious food for the urban poor, the City of Oakland has recently embraced a goal of sourcing 30 percent of its food locally JOURNAL OF LAW AND POLITICAL ECONOMY Kampourakis, Ioannis. The aspiration of this article is to start a conversation about the possible contribution of a Law and Political Economy research agenda in Europe. I first unpack the role of law in structuring the economy at the supranational level by examining the legacy of ordoliberalism and the Economic Constitution of the EU asthe
A COMMENTARY ON THE SATIRES OF JUVENAL Author(s): Courtney, Edward | Abstract: Edward Courtney's study of the Satires of Juvenal is the only full-scale commentary on the corpus since the nineteenth century and retains its value for students and scholars a generation after its first appearance in 1980. This commentary incorporates the findings of classical study up to that time, including the work of A. E. Housman, new discoveries MORAL THEORIES AND CLONING IN KAZUO ISHIGURO’S NEVER LET ME GO Author(s): Petrillo, Stephanie | Abstract: In this paper I will consider the ethics of cloning as it occurs in Kazuo Ishiguro’s dystopian novel Never Let Me Go from the standpoint of a number of moral theories – consequentialism, natural law theory, Kantian moral theory, rights based theory, and virtue ethics. In light of the moral theories, I will develop an analysis for why cloning-for TEACHERS’ REFLECTIONS ON CRITICAL PEDAGOGY IN THE CLASSROOM Author(s): Katz, Leanna | Abstract: This article presents the results from a qualitative research study that explores the experiences of nine high school teachers with some of the common themes in critical pedagogy. The study considers teachers who may not have explicitly learned about or applied critical pedagogy in their teaching and investigates how feasible and desirable they find the SOCIAL MEDIA USE AND STRESS Social media has become a pervasive form of communication, yet little is known about how use relates to stress. Previous research suggests a link between social media use and psychosocial variables such as self-esteem, depression, life satisfaction, and well-being. However, there is limited empirical knowledge concerning how social media use CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF FEAR OF CRIME: THE IMPACT OF Author(s): Grinshteyn, Erin Greer | Advisor(s): Ettner, Susan L | Abstract: Fear of crime has been defined in many ways; one definition is that it is an emotional reaction marked by feeling as though danger could result in physical harm. The amount of fear a person feels is dependent on factors that affect actual risk and perception of risk. For adolescents, personal characteristics A SOFT ROBOT THAT NAVIGATES ITS ENVIRONMENT THROUGH GROWTH. Author(s): Hawkes, Elliot W; Blumenschein, Laura H; Greer, Joseph D; Okamura, Allison M | Abstract: Across kingdoms and length scales, certain cells and organisms navigate their environments not through locomotion but through growth. This pattern of movement is found in fungal hyphae, developing neurons, and trailing plants, and is characterized by extension from the tip of the body, length THE RUDOLPH SIGN OF NASAL VESTIBULAR FURUNCULOSISSEE MORE ONESCHOLARSHIP.ORG
CHALLENGING THE URBAN/RURAL DIVIDE: IMPLICATIONS FOR Author(s): Cochran, Abigail Lynn | Abstract: Defining the American urban form relies on a perceived division between ‘urban’ and ‘rural’ areas. I trace the idea of the urban/rural divide through the evolution of human settlement patterns in the United States from the nineteenth century onwards. I argue that while a superficial distinction between urban and rural land was once relevant FROM INDUSTRIAL GARDEN TO FOOD DESERT: UNEARTHING THE ROOT66 Author(s): McClintock, Nathan | Abstract: In this paper, I use a framework of urban political ecology to explore the rise of urban agriculture (UA) in Oakland, California. As part of a growing effort to reduce its “ecological footprint” and to guarantee access to nutritious food for the urban poor, the City of Oakland has recently embraced a goal of sourcing 30 percent of its food locally JOURNAL OF LAW AND POLITICAL ECONOMY Kampourakis, Ioannis. The aspiration of this article is to start a conversation about the possible contribution of a Law and Political Economy research agenda in Europe. I first unpack the role of law in structuring the economy at the supranational level by examining the legacy of ordoliberalism and the Economic Constitution of the EU asthe
A COMMENTARY ON THE SATIRES OF JUVENAL Author(s): Courtney, Edward | Abstract: Edward Courtney's study of the Satires of Juvenal is the only full-scale commentary on the corpus since the nineteenth century and retains its value for students and scholars a generation after its first appearance in 1980. This commentary incorporates the findings of classical study up to that time, including the work of A. E. Housman, new discoveries MORAL THEORIES AND CLONING IN KAZUO ISHIGURO’S NEVER LET ME GO Author(s): Petrillo, Stephanie | Abstract: In this paper I will consider the ethics of cloning as it occurs in Kazuo Ishiguro’s dystopian novel Never Let Me Go from the standpoint of a number of moral theories – consequentialism, natural law theory, Kantian moral theory, rights based theory, and virtue ethics. In light of the moral theories, I will develop an analysis for why cloning-for TEACHERS’ REFLECTIONS ON CRITICAL PEDAGOGY IN THE CLASSROOM Author(s): Katz, Leanna | Abstract: This article presents the results from a qualitative research study that explores the experiences of nine high school teachers with some of the common themes in critical pedagogy. The study considers teachers who may not have explicitly learned about or applied critical pedagogy in their teaching and investigates how feasible and desirable they find the SOCIAL MEDIA USE AND STRESS Social media has become a pervasive form of communication, yet little is known about how use relates to stress. Previous research suggests a link between social media use and psychosocial variables such as self-esteem, depression, life satisfaction, and well-being. However, there is limited empirical knowledge concerning how social media use CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF FEAR OF CRIME: THE IMPACT OF Author(s): Grinshteyn, Erin Greer | Advisor(s): Ettner, Susan L | Abstract: Fear of crime has been defined in many ways; one definition is that it is an emotional reaction marked by feeling as though danger could result in physical harm. The amount of fear a person feels is dependent on factors that affect actual risk and perception of risk. For adolescents, personal characteristics A SOFT ROBOT THAT NAVIGATES ITS ENVIRONMENT THROUGH GROWTH. Author(s): Hawkes, Elliot W; Blumenschein, Laura H; Greer, Joseph D; Okamura, Allison M | Abstract: Across kingdoms and length scales, certain cells and organisms navigate their environments not through locomotion but through growth. This pattern of movement is found in fungal hyphae, developing neurons, and trailing plants, and is characterized by extension from the tip of the body, length THE RUDOLPH SIGN OF NASAL VESTIBULAR FURUNCULOSISSEE MORE ONESCHOLARSHIP.ORG
AN UNUSUAL CASE REPORT OF COVID-19 PRESENTING WITH Unfortunately, the symptomatic presentations of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) are proving more variable than previously thought. Case Report: Our case of COVID-19 presented with headache and then progressed to a meningitis-like illness with co-existing shingles rash. Conclusion: COVID-19 can have a variety of initial presentationsthat
JOURNAL OF LAW AND POLITICAL ECONOMY Kampourakis, Ioannis. The aspiration of this article is to start a conversation about the possible contribution of a Law and Political Economy research agenda in Europe. I first unpack the role of law in structuring the economy at the supranational level by examining the legacy of ordoliberalism and the Economic Constitution of the EU asthe
PARASITIC INFECTIONS OF THE NAILS Pruritus is a variable symptom and may be absent, slight, moderate or severe. Crusted scabies may masquerade as hyperkeratotic eczema, psoriasis, Darier’s disease and contact dermatitis as well as on the skin as on the nails. In the ordinary form of scabies, the nails are not involved but the distal subungual area may represent a reservoirof
UNDERGRADUATE AND GRADUATE STUDENTS’ MENTAL HEALTH DURING The COVID-19 pandemic has looming negative impacts on mental health of undergraduate and graduate students at research universities, according to the Student Experience in the Research University (SERU) Consortium survey of 30,725 undergraduate students and 15,346 graduate and professional students conducted in May-July 2020 at nine public research universities. TRANSMODERNITY: JOURNAL OF PERIPHERAL CULTURAL PRODUCTION TRANSMODERNITY: Journal of Peripheral Cultural Production of the Luso-Hispanic World, a peer-reviewed and interdisciplinary journal of Luso-Hispanic and U.S. Latino literary and cultural studies, is published by eScholarship and is part of the University of California.The Journal promotes the study of marginalized areas of Luso-Hispanic cultural production of any period and invitessubmissions
A COMMENTARY ON THE SATIRES OF JUVENAL Author(s): Courtney, Edward | Abstract: Edward Courtney's study of the Satires of Juvenal is the only full-scale commentary on the corpus since the nineteenth century and retains its value for students and scholars a generation after its first appearance in 1980. This commentary incorporates the findings of classical study up to that time, including the work of A. E. Housman, new discoveries JOURNAL OF EVOLUTION AND HEALTH: A JOINT PUBLICATION OF The Journal of Evolution and Health brings together academic researchers and clinical practitioners to develop evolutionary insights into the major factors affecting health, and to translate those insights into practical methods for improving human and animalhealth.
THE ROLE OF INPUT REVISITED: NATIVIST VERSUS USAGE-BASED Author(s): Zyzik, Eve | Abstract: This article examines the role of input in two contrasting theories of language acquisition: nativist (UG) theory and the usage-based (emergentist) approach. Although extensive treatments of input are available for first language acquisition (cf. Gathercole & Hoff, 2007), such research rarely incorporates findings from second language acquisition. MORAL THEORIES AND CLONING IN KAZUO ISHIGURO’S NEVER LET ME GO Author(s): Petrillo, Stephanie | Abstract: In this paper I will consider the ethics of cloning as it occurs in Kazuo Ishiguro’s dystopian novel Never Let Me Go from the standpoint of a number of moral theories – consequentialism, natural law theory, Kantian moral theory, rights based theory, and virtue ethics. In light of the moral theories, I will develop an analysis for why cloning-for DOCUMENTED EVIDENCE OF EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION & ITS Author(s): Sears, Brad; Mallory, Christy | Abstract: Although sexual orientation and gender identity have no relationship to workplace performance, during the past four decades a large body of research using a variety of methodologies has consistently documented high levels of discrimination against lesbians, gay men, bisexuals and transgendered (LGBT) people at work. Evidence of CHALLENGING THE URBAN/RURAL DIVIDE: IMPLICATIONS FOR Author(s): Cochran, Abigail Lynn | Abstract: Defining the American urban form relies on a perceived division between ‘urban’ and ‘rural’ areas. I trace the idea of the urban/rural divide through the evolution of human settlement patterns in the United States from the nineteenth century onwards. I argue that while a superficial distinction between urban and rural land was once relevant MORAL THEORIES AND CLONING IN KAZUO ISHIGURO’S NEVER LET ME GO Author(s): Petrillo, Stephanie | Abstract: In this paper I will consider the ethics of cloning as it occurs in Kazuo Ishiguro’s dystopian novel Never Let Me Go from the standpoint of a number of moral theories – consequentialism, natural law theory, Kantian moral theory, rights based theory, and virtue ethics. In light of the moral theories, I will develop an analysis for why cloning-for FROM INDUSTRIAL GARDEN TO FOOD DESERT: UNEARTHING THE ROOT Author(s): McClintock, Nathan | Abstract: In this paper, I use a framework of urban political ecology to explore the rise of urban agriculture (UA) in Oakland, California. As part of a growing effort to reduce its “ecological footprint” and to guarantee access to nutritious food for the urban poor, the City of Oakland has recently embraced a goal of sourcing 30 percent of its food locally A COMMENTARY ON THE SATIRES OF JUVENAL Author(s): Courtney, Edward | Abstract: Edward Courtney's study of the Satires of Juvenal is the only full-scale commentary on the corpus since the nineteenth century and retains its value for students and scholars a generation after its first appearance in 1980. This commentary incorporates the findings of classical study up to that time, including the work of A. E. Housman, new discoveries THE ROLE OF INPUT REVISITED: NATIVIST VERSUS USAGE-BASED Author(s): Zyzik, Eve | Abstract: This article examines the role of input in two contrasting theories of language acquisition: nativist (UG) theory and the usage-based (emergentist) approach. Although extensive treatments of input are available for first language acquisition (cf. Gathercole & Hoff, 2007), such research rarely incorporates findings from second language acquisition. CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF FEAR OF CRIME: THE IMPACT OF Author(s): Grinshteyn, Erin Greer | Advisor(s): Ettner, Susan L | Abstract: Fear of crime has been defined in many ways; one definition is that it is an emotional reaction marked by feeling as though danger could result in physical harm. The amount of fear a person feels is dependent on factors that affect actual risk and perception of risk. For adolescents, personal characteristics SOCIAL MEDIA USE AND STRESS Social media has become a pervasive form of communication, yet little is known about how use relates to stress. Previous research suggests a link between social media use and psychosocial variables such as self-esteem, depression, life satisfaction, and well-being. However, there is limited empirical knowledge concerning how social media use FRICTIONAL LICHENIFIED DERMATOSIS FROM PROLONGED USE OF ASEE MORE ONESCHOLARSHIP.ORG
THE RUDOLPH SIGN OF NASAL VESTIBULAR FURUNCULOSISSEE MORE ONESCHOLARSHIP.ORG
TEACHERS’ REFLECTIONS ON CRITICAL PEDAGOGY IN THE CLASSROOM Author(s): Katz, Leanna | Abstract: This article presents the results from a qualitative research study that explores the experiences of nine high school teachers with some of the common themes in critical pedagogy. The study considers teachers who may not have explicitly learned about or applied critical pedagogy in their teaching and investigates how feasible and desirable they find the CHALLENGING THE URBAN/RURAL DIVIDE: IMPLICATIONS FOR Author(s): Cochran, Abigail Lynn | Abstract: Defining the American urban form relies on a perceived division between ‘urban’ and ‘rural’ areas. I trace the idea of the urban/rural divide through the evolution of human settlement patterns in the United States from the nineteenth century onwards. I argue that while a superficial distinction between urban and rural land was once relevant MORAL THEORIES AND CLONING IN KAZUO ISHIGURO’S NEVER LET ME GO Author(s): Petrillo, Stephanie | Abstract: In this paper I will consider the ethics of cloning as it occurs in Kazuo Ishiguro’s dystopian novel Never Let Me Go from the standpoint of a number of moral theories – consequentialism, natural law theory, Kantian moral theory, rights based theory, and virtue ethics. In light of the moral theories, I will develop an analysis for why cloning-for FROM INDUSTRIAL GARDEN TO FOOD DESERT: UNEARTHING THE ROOT Author(s): McClintock, Nathan | Abstract: In this paper, I use a framework of urban political ecology to explore the rise of urban agriculture (UA) in Oakland, California. As part of a growing effort to reduce its “ecological footprint” and to guarantee access to nutritious food for the urban poor, the City of Oakland has recently embraced a goal of sourcing 30 percent of its food locally A COMMENTARY ON THE SATIRES OF JUVENAL Author(s): Courtney, Edward | Abstract: Edward Courtney's study of the Satires of Juvenal is the only full-scale commentary on the corpus since the nineteenth century and retains its value for students and scholars a generation after its first appearance in 1980. This commentary incorporates the findings of classical study up to that time, including the work of A. E. Housman, new discoveries THE ROLE OF INPUT REVISITED: NATIVIST VERSUS USAGE-BASED Author(s): Zyzik, Eve | Abstract: This article examines the role of input in two contrasting theories of language acquisition: nativist (UG) theory and the usage-based (emergentist) approach. Although extensive treatments of input are available for first language acquisition (cf. Gathercole & Hoff, 2007), such research rarely incorporates findings from second language acquisition. CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF FEAR OF CRIME: THE IMPACT OF Author(s): Grinshteyn, Erin Greer | Advisor(s): Ettner, Susan L | Abstract: Fear of crime has been defined in many ways; one definition is that it is an emotional reaction marked by feeling as though danger could result in physical harm. The amount of fear a person feels is dependent on factors that affect actual risk and perception of risk. For adolescents, personal characteristics SOCIAL MEDIA USE AND STRESS Social media has become a pervasive form of communication, yet little is known about how use relates to stress. Previous research suggests a link between social media use and psychosocial variables such as self-esteem, depression, life satisfaction, and well-being. However, there is limited empirical knowledge concerning how social media use FRICTIONAL LICHENIFIED DERMATOSIS FROM PROLONGED USE OF ASEE MORE ONESCHOLARSHIP.ORG
THE RUDOLPH SIGN OF NASAL VESTIBULAR FURUNCULOSISSEE MORE ONESCHOLARSHIP.ORG
TEACHERS’ REFLECTIONS ON CRITICAL PEDAGOGY IN THE CLASSROOM Author(s): Katz, Leanna | Abstract: This article presents the results from a qualitative research study that explores the experiences of nine high school teachers with some of the common themes in critical pedagogy. The study considers teachers who may not have explicitly learned about or applied critical pedagogy in their teaching and investigates how feasible and desirable they find the AN UNUSUAL CASE REPORT OF COVID-19 PRESENTING WITH Unfortunately, the symptomatic presentations of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) are proving more variable than previously thought. Case Report: Our case of COVID-19 presented with headache and then progressed to a meningitis-like illness with co-existing shingles rash. Conclusion: COVID-19 can have a variety of initial presentationsthat
PARASITIC INFECTIONS OF THE NAILS Pruritus is a variable symptom and may be absent, slight, moderate or severe. Crusted scabies may masquerade as hyperkeratotic eczema, psoriasis, Darier’s disease and contact dermatitis as well as on the skin as on the nails. In the ordinary form of scabies, the nails are not involved but the distal subungual area may represent a reservoirof
A COMMENTARY ON THE SATIRES OF JUVENAL Author(s): Courtney, Edward | Abstract: Edward Courtney's study of the Satires of Juvenal is the only full-scale commentary on the corpus since the nineteenth century and retains its value for students and scholars a generation after its first appearance in 1980. This commentary incorporates the findings of classical study up to that time, including the work of A. E. Housman, new discoveries SOCIAL MEDIA USE AND STRESS Social media has become a pervasive form of communication, yet little is known about how use relates to stress. Previous research suggests a link between social media use and psychosocial variables such as self-esteem, depression, life satisfaction, and well-being. However, there is limited empirical knowledge concerning how social media use JOURNAL OF LAW AND POLITICAL ECONOMY Kampourakis, Ioannis. The aspiration of this article is to start a conversation about the possible contribution of a Law and Political Economy research agenda in Europe. I first unpack the role of law in structuring the economy at the supranational level by examining the legacy of ordoliberalism and the Economic Constitution of the EU asthe
CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF FEAR OF CRIME: THE IMPACT OF Author(s): Grinshteyn, Erin Greer | Advisor(s): Ettner, Susan L | Abstract: Fear of crime has been defined in many ways; one definition is that it is an emotional reaction marked by feeling as though danger could result in physical harm. The amount of fear a person feels is dependent on factors that affect actual risk and perception of risk. For adolescents, personal characteristics FRICTIONAL LICHENIFIED DERMATOSIS FROM PROLONGED USE OF A Frictional lichenified dermatosis from prolonged use of a computer mouse: Case report and review of the literature of computer-related dermatoses Pedram Ghasri BS, Steven R Feldman MD PhD 1,2,3 Dermatology Online Journal 16 (12): 3 Center for Dermatology Research 1. Department of Dermatology 2. Department of Pathology 3. Department of Public Health Sciences Wake Forest University School of DOCUMENTED EVIDENCE OF EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION & ITS Author(s): Sears, Brad; Mallory, Christy | Abstract: Although sexual orientation and gender identity have no relationship to workplace performance, during the past four decades a large body of research using a variety of methodologies has consistently documented high levels of discrimination against lesbians, gay men, bisexuals and transgendered (LGBT) people at work. Evidence of THOMAS AQUINAS ON THE NATURE AND EXPERIENCE OF BEAUTY The present study is an investigation into a little studied aspect of the thought of Thomas Aquinas, namely, his view of the nature and experience of beauty. Aquinas has defined beauty, provisionally, as “that which pleases when seen.”. This study is structured around the three key components of the definition: (1) the things themselves WHAT'S IN A NAME? THE EFFECT OF SOUND SYMBOLISM ON Email Facebook Twitter. What's in a Name? The effect of sound symbolism on perception of facial attractiveness. 2004. Author (s):Perfors, Amy.
CHALLENGING THE URBAN/RURAL DIVIDE: IMPLICATIONS FOR Author(s): Cochran, Abigail Lynn | Abstract: Defining the American urban form relies on a perceived division between ‘urban’ and ‘rural’ areas. I trace the idea of the urban/rural divide through the evolution of human settlement patterns in the United States from the nineteenth century onwards. I argue that while a superficial distinction between urban and rural land was once relevant SOCIAL MEDIA USE AND STRESS Social media has become a pervasive form of communication, yet little is known about how use relates to stress. Previous research suggests a link between social media use and psychosocial variables such as self-esteem, depression, life satisfaction, and well-being. However, there is limited empirical knowledge concerning how social media use A COMMENTARY ON THE SATIRES OF JUVENAL Author(s): Courtney, Edward | Abstract: Edward Courtney's study of the Satires of Juvenal is the only full-scale commentary on the corpus since the nineteenth century and retains its value for students and scholars a generation after its first appearance in 1980. This commentary incorporates the findings of classical study up to that time, including the work of A. E. Housman, new discoveries THE EFFECTS OF RIDE-HAILING SERVICES ON GREENHOUSE GAS Author(s): Rodier, Caroline; Michaels, Julia | Abstract: Ride-hailing services, which allow consumers to order and pay for rides through smart phone applications, have grown to a substantial proportion of the transportation market. Today, an estimated 15% of adults across the U.S. and 21% living in major U.S. cities have used ride-hailing services. The growth of ride-hailing services has TEACHERS’ REFLECTIONS ON CRITICAL PEDAGOGY IN THE CLASSROOM Author(s): Katz, Leanna | Abstract: This article presents the results from a qualitative research study that explores the experiences of nine high school teachers with some of the common themes in critical pedagogy. The study considers teachers who may not have explicitly learned about or applied critical pedagogy in their teaching and investigates how feasible and desirable they find the THE ROLE OF INPUT REVISITED: NATIVIST VERSUS USAGE-BASED Author(s): Zyzik, Eve | Abstract: This article examines the role of input in two contrasting theories of language acquisition: nativist (UG) theory and the usage-based (emergentist) approach. Although extensive treatments of input are available for first language acquisition (cf. Gathercole & Hoff, 2007), such research rarely incorporates findings from second language acquisition. FROM INDUSTRIAL GARDEN TO FOOD DESERT: UNEARTHING THE ROOT Author(s): McClintock, Nathan | Abstract: In this paper, I use a framework of urban political ecology to explore the rise of urban agriculture (UA) in Oakland, California. As part of a growing effort to reduce its “ecological footprint” and to guarantee access to nutritious food for the urban poor, the City of Oakland has recently embraced a goal of sourcing 30 percent of its food locally A SOFT ROBOT THAT NAVIGATES ITS ENVIRONMENT THROUGH GROWTH. Author(s): Hawkes, Elliot W; Blumenschein, Laura H; Greer, Joseph D; Okamura, Allison M | Abstract: Across kingdoms and length scales, certain cells and organisms navigate their environments not through locomotion but through growth. This pattern of movement is found in fungal hyphae, developing neurons, and trailing plants, and is characterized by extension from the tip of the body, length THE ATKINS DIET: AN UNRESOLVED DEBATE The Atkins Diet: An Unresolved Debate. Obesity is a public health problem reaching epidemic proportions in the United States (1). Many Americans are turning to popular diets, including the well-known Atkins diet. The Atkins diet allows the dieter to consume as much protein and fat as desired, while severely limiting carbohydrateconsumption.
WHAT'S IN A NAME? THE EFFECT OF SOUND SYMBOLISM ON Email Facebook Twitter. What's in a Name? The effect of sound symbolism on perception of facial attractiveness. 2004. Author (s):Perfors, Amy.
CHALLENGING THE URBAN/RURAL DIVIDE: IMPLICATIONS FOR Author(s): Cochran, Abigail Lynn | Abstract: Defining the American urban form relies on a perceived division between ‘urban’ and ‘rural’ areas. I trace the idea of the urban/rural divide through the evolution of human settlement patterns in the United States from the nineteenth century onwards. I argue that while a superficial distinction between urban and rural land was once relevant SOCIAL MEDIA USE AND STRESS Social media has become a pervasive form of communication, yet little is known about how use relates to stress. Previous research suggests a link between social media use and psychosocial variables such as self-esteem, depression, life satisfaction, and well-being. However, there is limited empirical knowledge concerning how social media use A COMMENTARY ON THE SATIRES OF JUVENAL Author(s): Courtney, Edward | Abstract: Edward Courtney's study of the Satires of Juvenal is the only full-scale commentary on the corpus since the nineteenth century and retains its value for students and scholars a generation after its first appearance in 1980. This commentary incorporates the findings of classical study up to that time, including the work of A. E. Housman, new discoveries THE EFFECTS OF RIDE-HAILING SERVICES ON GREENHOUSE GAS Author(s): Rodier, Caroline; Michaels, Julia | Abstract: Ride-hailing services, which allow consumers to order and pay for rides through smart phone applications, have grown to a substantial proportion of the transportation market. Today, an estimated 15% of adults across the U.S. and 21% living in major U.S. cities have used ride-hailing services. The growth of ride-hailing services has TEACHERS’ REFLECTIONS ON CRITICAL PEDAGOGY IN THE CLASSROOM Author(s): Katz, Leanna | Abstract: This article presents the results from a qualitative research study that explores the experiences of nine high school teachers with some of the common themes in critical pedagogy. The study considers teachers who may not have explicitly learned about or applied critical pedagogy in their teaching and investigates how feasible and desirable they find the THE ROLE OF INPUT REVISITED: NATIVIST VERSUS USAGE-BASED Author(s): Zyzik, Eve | Abstract: This article examines the role of input in two contrasting theories of language acquisition: nativist (UG) theory and the usage-based (emergentist) approach. Although extensive treatments of input are available for first language acquisition (cf. Gathercole & Hoff, 2007), such research rarely incorporates findings from second language acquisition. FROM INDUSTRIAL GARDEN TO FOOD DESERT: UNEARTHING THE ROOT Author(s): McClintock, Nathan | Abstract: In this paper, I use a framework of urban political ecology to explore the rise of urban agriculture (UA) in Oakland, California. As part of a growing effort to reduce its “ecological footprint” and to guarantee access to nutritious food for the urban poor, the City of Oakland has recently embraced a goal of sourcing 30 percent of its food locally A SOFT ROBOT THAT NAVIGATES ITS ENVIRONMENT THROUGH GROWTH. Author(s): Hawkes, Elliot W; Blumenschein, Laura H; Greer, Joseph D; Okamura, Allison M | Abstract: Across kingdoms and length scales, certain cells and organisms navigate their environments not through locomotion but through growth. This pattern of movement is found in fungal hyphae, developing neurons, and trailing plants, and is characterized by extension from the tip of the body, length THE ATKINS DIET: AN UNRESOLVED DEBATE The Atkins Diet: An Unresolved Debate. Obesity is a public health problem reaching epidemic proportions in the United States (1). Many Americans are turning to popular diets, including the well-known Atkins diet. The Atkins diet allows the dieter to consume as much protein and fat as desired, while severely limiting carbohydrateconsumption.
WHAT'S IN A NAME? THE EFFECT OF SOUND SYMBOLISM ON Email Facebook Twitter. What's in a Name? The effect of sound symbolism on perception of facial attractiveness. 2004. Author (s):Perfors, Amy.
THE PSYCHOLOGICAL IMPACT OF COVID-19 ON HOSPITAL STAFF Results: Of 3,500 hospital employees, 1,246 (36%) responded to the survey. We included 1,232 individuals in the final analysis. Overall, psychological distress was common among the respondents: 21% and 33% of staff reported significant depression and anxiety, respectively, while 46% experienced overwhelming stress due to COVID-19. UNDERGRADUATE AND GRADUATE STUDENTS’ MENTAL HEALTH DURING The COVID-19 pandemic has looming negative impacts on mental health of undergraduate and graduate students at research universities, according to the Student Experience in the Research University (SERU) Consortium survey of 30,725 undergraduate students and 15,346 graduate and professional students conducted in May-July 2020 at nine public research universities. JOURNAL OF LAW AND POLITICAL ECONOMY Kampourakis, Ioannis. The aspiration of this article is to start a conversation about the possible contribution of a Law and Political Economy research agenda in Europe. I first unpack the role of law in structuring the economy at the supranational level by examining the legacy of ordoliberalism and the Economic Constitution of the EU asthe
THE EFFECTS OF RIDE-HAILING SERVICES ON GREENHOUSE GAS Author(s): Rodier, Caroline; Michaels, Julia | Abstract: Ride-hailing services, which allow consumers to order and pay for rides through smart phone applications, have grown to a substantial proportion of the transportation market. Today, an estimated 15% of adults across the U.S. and 21% living in major U.S. cities have used ride-hailingservices.
CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF FEAR OF CRIME: THE IMPACT OF Author(s): Grinshteyn, Erin Greer | Advisor(s): Ettner, Susan L | Abstract: Fear of crime has been defined in many ways; one definition is that it is an emotional reaction marked by feeling as though danger could result in physical harm. The amount of fear a person feels is dependent on factors that affect actual risk and perception of risk. For adolescents, personal characteristics THE ATKINS DIET: AN UNRESOLVED DEBATE The Atkins Diet: An Unresolved Debate. Obesity is a public health problem reaching epidemic proportions in the United States (1). Many Americans are turning to popular diets, including the well-known Atkins diet. The Atkins diet allows the dieter to consume as much protein and fat as desired, while severely limiting carbohydrateconsumption.
A LEGAL AND REGULATORY ASSESSMENT FOR THE POTENTIAL OF A Legal and Regulatory Assessment for the Potential of Urban Air Mobility (UAM) 2018. Author (s): Serrao, Jacqueline. Nilsson, Sarah. Kimmel, Shawn. et al. REDUCING EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT LENGTH OF STAY AND WAIT Introduction: In the past 20 years there has been a significant decline in the number of inpatient psychiatric beds in the United States, while the number of patients seeking psychiatric treatment in the emergency department (ED) has increased over the same time period.Given the increase in demand for psychiatric services and decrease in availability of inpatient treatment the ED is becoming CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY AND FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE The Time vs. Money Effect: Shifting Product Attitudes and Decisions through Personal Connection OSIRIS AND THE DECEASED Author(s): Smith, Mark | Abstract: For the Egyptians, the god Osiris provided a model whereby the effects of the rupture caused by death could be totally reversed, since that deity underwent a twofold process of resurrection. Mummification reconstituted his “corporeal” self and justification against Seth his “social” self, re-integrating him and restoring his status among the gods. CHALLENGING THE URBAN/RURAL DIVIDE: IMPLICATIONS FOR Author(s): Cochran, Abigail Lynn | Abstract: Defining the American urban form relies on a perceived division between ‘urban’ and ‘rural’ areas. I trace the idea of the urban/rural divide through the evolution of human settlement patterns in the United States from the nineteenth century onwards. I argue that while a superficial distinction between urban and rural land was once relevant SOCIAL MEDIA USE AND STRESS Social media has become a pervasive form of communication, yet little is known about how use relates to stress. Previous research suggests a link between social media use and psychosocial variables such as self-esteem, depression, life satisfaction, and well-being. However, there is limited empirical knowledge concerning how social media use A COMMENTARY ON THE SATIRES OF JUVENAL Author(s): Courtney, Edward | Abstract: Edward Courtney's study of the Satires of Juvenal is the only full-scale commentary on the corpus since the nineteenth century and retains its value for students and scholars a generation after its first appearance in 1980. This commentary incorporates the findings of classical study up to that time, including the work of A. E. Housman, new discoveries THE EFFECTS OF RIDE-HAILING SERVICES ON GREENHOUSE GAS Author(s): Rodier, Caroline; Michaels, Julia | Abstract: Ride-hailing services, which allow consumers to order and pay for rides through smart phone applications, have grown to a substantial proportion of the transportation market. Today, an estimated 15% of adults across the U.S. and 21% living in major U.S. cities have used ride-hailing services. The growth of ride-hailing services has THINKING THROUGH THE DECOLONIAL TURN: POST-CONTINENTAL Author(s): Maldonado-Torres, Nelson. Guest Editor | Abstract: Thinking through the Decolonial Turn: Post-continental Interventions in Theory, Philosophy, and Critique—An Introduction THE ROLE OF INPUT REVISITED: NATIVIST VERSUS USAGE-BASED Author(s): Zyzik, Eve | Abstract: This article examines the role of input in two contrasting theories of language acquisition: nativist (UG) theory and the usage-based (emergentist) approach. Although extensive treatments of input are available for first language acquisition (cf. Gathercole & Hoff, 2007), such research rarely incorporates findings from second language acquisition. CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF FEAR OF CRIME: THE IMPACT OF Author(s): Grinshteyn, Erin Greer | Advisor(s): Ettner, Susan L | Abstract: Fear of crime has been defined in many ways; one definition is that it is an emotional reaction marked by feeling as though danger could result in physical harm. The amount of fear a person feels is dependent on factors that affect actual risk and perception of risk. For adolescents, personal characteristics TEACHERS’ REFLECTIONS ON CRITICAL PEDAGOGY IN THE CLASSROOM Author(s): Katz, Leanna | Abstract: This article presents the results from a qualitative research study that explores the experiences of nine high school teachers with some of the common themes in critical pedagogy. The study considers teachers who may not have explicitly learned about or applied critical pedagogy in their teaching and investigates how feasible and desirable they find the WHAT'S IN A NAME? THE EFFECT OF SOUND SYMBOLISM ON PDF. Share. Email Facebook Twitter. What's in a Name? The effect of sound symbolism on perception of facial attractiveness. 2004. Author(s): Perfors, Amy.
JUDICIAL REVIEW OF LEGISLATION IN GHANA SINCE INDEPENDENCE Judicial Review of Legislation in Ghana since Independence. 1977. Author (s): Kumado, C.K. Main Content. Author & Article Info. Main Content. Download PDF to View. View Larger. CHALLENGING THE URBAN/RURAL DIVIDE: IMPLICATIONS FOR Author(s): Cochran, Abigail Lynn | Abstract: Defining the American urban form relies on a perceived division between ‘urban’ and ‘rural’ areas. I trace the idea of the urban/rural divide through the evolution of human settlement patterns in the United States from the nineteenth century onwards. I argue that while a superficial distinction between urban and rural land was once relevant SOCIAL MEDIA USE AND STRESS Social media has become a pervasive form of communication, yet little is known about how use relates to stress. Previous research suggests a link between social media use and psychosocial variables such as self-esteem, depression, life satisfaction, and well-being. However, there is limited empirical knowledge concerning how social media use A COMMENTARY ON THE SATIRES OF JUVENAL Author(s): Courtney, Edward | Abstract: Edward Courtney's study of the Satires of Juvenal is the only full-scale commentary on the corpus since the nineteenth century and retains its value for students and scholars a generation after its first appearance in 1980. This commentary incorporates the findings of classical study up to that time, including the work of A. E. Housman, new discoveries THE EFFECTS OF RIDE-HAILING SERVICES ON GREENHOUSE GAS Author(s): Rodier, Caroline; Michaels, Julia | Abstract: Ride-hailing services, which allow consumers to order and pay for rides through smart phone applications, have grown to a substantial proportion of the transportation market. Today, an estimated 15% of adults across the U.S. and 21% living in major U.S. cities have used ride-hailing services. The growth of ride-hailing services has THINKING THROUGH THE DECOLONIAL TURN: POST-CONTINENTAL Author(s): Maldonado-Torres, Nelson. Guest Editor | Abstract: Thinking through the Decolonial Turn: Post-continental Interventions in Theory, Philosophy, and Critique—An Introduction THE ROLE OF INPUT REVISITED: NATIVIST VERSUS USAGE-BASED Author(s): Zyzik, Eve | Abstract: This article examines the role of input in two contrasting theories of language acquisition: nativist (UG) theory and the usage-based (emergentist) approach. Although extensive treatments of input are available for first language acquisition (cf. Gathercole & Hoff, 2007), such research rarely incorporates findings from second language acquisition. CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF FEAR OF CRIME: THE IMPACT OF Author(s): Grinshteyn, Erin Greer | Advisor(s): Ettner, Susan L | Abstract: Fear of crime has been defined in many ways; one definition is that it is an emotional reaction marked by feeling as though danger could result in physical harm. The amount of fear a person feels is dependent on factors that affect actual risk and perception of risk. For adolescents, personal characteristics TEACHERS’ REFLECTIONS ON CRITICAL PEDAGOGY IN THE CLASSROOM Author(s): Katz, Leanna | Abstract: This article presents the results from a qualitative research study that explores the experiences of nine high school teachers with some of the common themes in critical pedagogy. The study considers teachers who may not have explicitly learned about or applied critical pedagogy in their teaching and investigates how feasible and desirable they find the WHAT'S IN A NAME? THE EFFECT OF SOUND SYMBOLISM ON PDF. Share. Email Facebook Twitter. What's in a Name? The effect of sound symbolism on perception of facial attractiveness. 2004. Author(s): Perfors, Amy.
JUDICIAL REVIEW OF LEGISLATION IN GHANA SINCE INDEPENDENCE Judicial Review of Legislation in Ghana since Independence. 1977. Author (s): Kumado, C.K. Main Content. Author & Article Info. Main Content. Download PDF to View. View Larger. THE PSYCHOLOGICAL IMPACT OF COVID-19 ON HOSPITAL STAFF Results: Of 3,500 hospital employees, 1,246 (36%) responded to the survey. We included 1,232 individuals in the final analysis. Overall, psychological distress was common among the respondents: 21% and 33% of staff reported significant depression and anxiety, respectively, while 46% experienced overwhelming stress due to COVID-19. A CASE REPORT OF ACUTE TRANSVERSE MYELITIS FOLLOWING NOVEL Case Report: We present the case of a 28-year-old female patient who presented after a confirmed COVID-19 infection with lower back pain, bilateral symmetric upper and lower extremity numbness, and urinary retention. The patient was diagnosed with acute transverse myelitis. She required intravenous corticosteroids and plasma exchange with THE EFFECTS OF RIDE-HAILING SERVICES ON GREENHOUSE GAS Author(s): Rodier, Caroline; Michaels, Julia | Abstract: Ride-hailing services, which allow consumers to order and pay for rides through smart phone applications, have grown to a substantial proportion of the transportation market. Today, an estimated 15% of adults across the U.S. and 21% living in major U.S. cities have used ride-hailingservices.
CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF FEAR OF CRIME: THE IMPACT OF Author(s): Grinshteyn, Erin Greer | Advisor(s): Ettner, Susan L | Abstract: Fear of crime has been defined in many ways; one definition is that it is an emotional reaction marked by feeling as though danger could result in physical harm. The amount of fear a person feels is dependent on factors that affect actual risk and perception of risk. For adolescents, personal characteristics JOURNAL OF CRITICAL MIXED RACE STUDIES The Journal of Critical Mixed Race Studies (JCMRS) is a peer-reviewed online interdisciplinary journal dedicated to Critical Mixed Race Studies (CMRS). JCMRS functions as an open-access forum for critical mixed race studies and will be available without cost to anyone with access to the Internet. OSIRIS AND THE DECEASED Author(s): Smith, Mark | Abstract: For the Egyptians, the god Osiris provided a model whereby the effects of the rupture caused by death could be totally reversed, since that deity underwent a twofold process of resurrection. Mummification reconstituted his “corporeal” self and justification against Seth his “social” self, re-integrating him and restoring his status among the gods. MORAL THEORIES AND CLONING IN KAZUO ISHIGURO’S NEVER LET ME GO Author(s): Petrillo, Stephanie | Abstract: In this paper I will consider the ethics of cloning as it occurs in Kazuo Ishiguro’s dystopian novel Never Let Me Go from the standpoint of a number of moral theories – consequentialism, natural law theory, Kantian moral theory, rights based theory, and virtue ethics. In light of the moral theories, I will develop an analysis for why cloning-for THE IMPACT OF ELECTRICITY ON ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT: A Author(s): Stern, David I; Burke, Paul J; Bruns, Stephan B | Abstract: We find that electricity use and access are strongly correlated with economic development, as theory would suggest. Despite large empirical literatures and suggestive case evidence, there are, however, few methodologically strong studies that establish causal effects on an economy-wide basis. There is some evidence that THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN EATING DISORDERS AND Author(s): Gibbons, Pat | Abstract: Many people (incorrectly) believe that eating disorders (ED) are more prevalent in the higher socioeconomic status (SES) groups. Studies conducted in the 1960s and 70s corroborate this statement; however, their methods may have biased the results. Recent studies using health questionnaires distributed to large heterogeneous populations have shown that EDs MULTI-STORIED LIVES: GLOBAL SIMULATION AS AN APPROACH TO Author(s): Michelson, Kristen; Dupuy, Beatrice | Abstract: Recent scholarship has proposed a pedagogy of multiliteracies to frame FL curricula and instruction, and encourage critical reflection about language use through a variety of discourses and textual genres. One pedagogical framework conducive to fostering learners’ intersemiotic awareness is Global Simulation (GS). Skip to main contentsearch
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