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Inclusive Language MOOCs [PDF]
This article discusses the application of MOOCs for refugees and migrants in order to help these groups of people develop the language competences and transverse skills which they require to improve their level of social inclusion and possibilities in ...
Timothy Read +2 more
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Opportunity to Integrate the American Medical Association's Inclusive Language Guidance [PDF]
Inclusive language is a cornerstone for inclusive, just, and equitable health care. While the American Medical Association released inclusive language guidance in 2021, it was unclear the extent to which physician practice organizations and their ...
Brelahn Wyatt-Nash +3 more
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Linguistic Traces of Subjectivity and Dissent. A Discursive Analysis of Inclusive Language in Argentina [PDF]
In Argentina, the so-called “inclusive language” aims at avoiding the bias for a particular sex or gender and objects to a grammatical binary system (feminine – masculine).
Carolina Tosi
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The CPD Needs of Irish-Medium Primary and Post-Primary Teachers in Special Education
There are few professional development courses available to teachers with a focus on meeting the special educational needs (SEN) of students in immersion education contexts worldwide.
Sinéad Nic Aindriú +3 more
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This article discusses the design and content of an online continuous professional development (CPD) course in special education provision for students in Irish immersion (IM) primary and post-primary schools. The course was developed using the data from
Sinéad Nic Aindriú +3 more
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Sex, language and financial inclusion* [PDF]
AbstractReference to gender in language can lead individuals to draw distinctions between genders and reinforce traditional views of gender roles. To test our hypothesis that language gender marking exerts an influence on the gender gap in financial inclusion, we draw on data for 117 countries in the World Bank's Global Findex database and perform ...
Osei-Tutu, Francis, Weill, Laurent
openaire +2 more sources
Upon hearing “Some of Michelangelo’s sculptures are in Rome,” adults can easily generate a scalar implicature and infer that the intended meaning of the utterance corresponds to “Some but not all Michelangelo’s sculptures are in Rome.” Comprehension ...
Irene Mognon +3 more
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Female forms of occupational names (feminativa) – is there a need to use them in sex education?
The paper at issue presents the social functioning of Polish female forms of occupational names (feminativa), as well as their role in the process of sex education, also in relation to perpetration of gender stereotypes. In the first part of the paper, a
Weronika Klon +2 more
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Normative Conflicts in the context of Culture Wars [PDF]
The article addresses the issue of normative conflicts from the theoretical perspective of philosophy of values and socio-cultural anthropology and in the context of the current culture wars in Western societies, instigated by radical ideologies that ...
Ion PLĂMĂDEALĂ
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Variété inclusive et vérité morphologique : petite typologie des noms communs de personne abrégés
For some years now, abbreviations of French personal nouns have been multiplying in usage, and there is a rich variety of formal realisations (different cuts, different abbreviation signs, etc.).
Daniel Elmiger
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