Results 21 to 30 of about 4,665 (176)
Adolescents' trajectories of mental health in the MYRIAD trial
Abstract Background This study explored adolescent's mental health trajectories over the course of a school‐based mindfulness‐based intervention trial (MYRIAD). It examined whether intervention condition (mindfulness vs. teaching‐as‐usual), individual‐level and contextual‐level factors were associated with different trajectories.
Carolina Guzman Holst +8 more
wiley +1 more source
Champions and e-books: using student Library Champions to inform e-book purchasing strategies
How students really use e-books is a subject of much interest to library professionals. This has particular relevance when it comes to selecting suppliers and e-book platforms for institutional use. The question of preferred formats (print versus digital)
Caroline Gale
doaj +1 more source
The Dark Pyramid: Unpacking the Multidimensional Nature of the Dark Side of Leadership
Abstract The dark side of leadership has been employed as an umbrella term to cover an array of concepts typically concerned with the dysfunctionality and/or toxicity of individual leaders. As the field of leadership studies moves towards ‘post‐heroic’ perspectives, we apply the same ontological positioning, adopting a ‘post‐villainous’ perspective in ...
Peter Stephenson +2 more
wiley +1 more source
THE OLD ENGLISH PRAYER THE LORD’S PRAYER AS A SEMANTIC WAY OF CONVEYING CHRISTIAN MORALS
The paper highlights the integral traditional formula of the prayer Pater noster that has reached our days because of the New Testament, whereas its earlier variations remained at the level of literary monuments.
Anna V. Proskurina
doaj +1 more source
Germ Panic and Chalice Hygiene in the Church of England, c.1895–1930
The late‐Victorian medical revolution in bacteriology, and growing public awareness of hygienic standards and the danger of disease infection from germs, created alarm about the traditional Christian practice of drinking from a common cup at Holy Communion.
Andrew Atherstone
wiley +1 more source
Cognitive and Discursive Characteristics of English Riddle
The article focuses on specific features of English poetic riddles, their meaning construction, discourse representation and referent object positioning strategies.
Irina Vladimirovna Palashevskaya +1 more
doaj +1 more source
Abstract This article uses rare and detailed data on matriculants to the University of Oxford during the middle decades of the twentieth century as a prism through which to consider gendered processes of recruitment to elite institutions. The article makes four key claims. First, the broader shifts in middle‐class women's labour market participation in
Eve Worth, Naomi Muggleton, Aaron Reeves
wiley +1 more source
Jerusalem represents the heart of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The everchanging events there have perplexed and compelled analysts, political scientists, academics, and activists to devise countless solutions, especially since 1948.
Muhammad Yaseen Gada
doaj +1 more source
M. E. Grant Duff, Philosophic Liberalism and the Global Liberal Cause
Abstract Historians disagree about how best to conceptualize nineteenth‐century British Liberalism in relation to its international contexts. This article argues that we can better understand the patterns involved by interrogating individuals who bridged the worlds of partisan politics and elaborated thought.
Alex Middleton
wiley +1 more source
Exeter Book Riddles 48 and 59: Trautmann’s “Inscribed Ring”
Moritz Trautmann, in his 1915 edition of the Exeter Book Riddles, proposed the solution: “Inscribed Ring” to both Riddles 48 and 59; but his arguments have been largely ignored by subsequent editors and commentators, most of whom prefer the older ...
Orton Peter
doaj +1 more source

