Results 111 to 120 of about 88,869 (296)
The Great-Teacher Myth: Turkish Cinema vs. World Cinema
The aim of this study is to trace “the great-teacher myth” in the examples of the Turkish and the world cinema and unpack the symbolic messages about the teaching profession by the way of analyzing the films in which the great or bad teacher characters ...
Hüseyin Barut, Mustafa Sever
doaj +1 more source
Body donor programs in Australia and New Zealand: Current status and future opportunities
Abstract Body donation is critical to anatomy study in Australia and New Zealand. Annually, more than 10,000 students, anatomists, researchers, and clinicians access tissue donated by local consented donors through university‐based body donation programs. However, little research has been published about their operations.
Rebekah A. Jenkin, Kevin A. Keay
wiley +1 more source
Verbatim theater: A transformative approach for bringing research to life
Abstract Traditional methods of research translation within the scientific and health professions community are typically quite narrow, often focusing on written textual outputs and conference presentations. Considering translation approaches for our research findings and ‘who’ and ‘what’ we are trying to influence is worthy of alternative approaches ...
Janeane Dart, Gabrielle Brand
wiley +1 more source
Abstract To negotiate quality in early childhood education and care, we must ask from different perspectives what constitutes a good centre for children. The children themselves have only recently been identified as a resource to contribute to that discussion.
Katrin Macha +4 more
wiley +1 more source
‘Where are the adults?’: Troubling child‐activism and children's political participation
Abstract Children's political participation is a well‐established theme in childhood studies. In this article we offer an original account of child activism that takes into account the entangled and emergent aspect of children as activists. We begin with a historical and a conceptual review, noting the importance of mid‐20th century developments such ...
Sharon Hunter, Claire Cassidy
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Three categories of explanations exist for why we age: mechanistic theories, which omit reference to evolutionary forces; weakening force of selection theories, which posit that barriers exist that prevent evolutionary forces from optimising fitness in ageing; and optimisation theories, which posit that evolutionary forces actually select for ...
Michael S. Ringel
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Human life history is derived compared to that of our closest living relatives, the great apes. It has been suggested that these derived traits are causally related to aspects of our ecology, social behaviour and cognitive abilities. However, resolving this requires that we know the evolutionary trajectory of our distinctive pattern of growth,
Paola Cerrito +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Correction to: Undecidability of First-Order Modal and Intuitionistic Logics with Two Variables and One Monadic Predicate Letter [PDF]
Mikhail Rybakov, Dmitry Shkatov
openalex +1 more source
A Connectionist System for Rule Based Reasoning with Multi-Place Predicates and Variables
Abstract : McCarthy has observed that the representational power of most connectionist systems is restricted to unary predicates applied to a fixed object. More recently, Fodor and Pylyshyn have made a sweeping claim the connectionist systems cannot incorporate systematicity and compositionality.
Shastri, Lokendra, Ajjanagadde, Venkat
openaire +3 more sources
Can Hybrid Organisations Solve the Paradox of the Triple Bottom Line, and Does It Need Solving?
ABSTRACT This study investigates how B Corp certification enables hybrid organisations to integrate competing institutional logics of market and social purpose. Through a two‐stage qualitative design combining cross‐sector interviews with B Corps and an in‐depth case study, with a total of 30 participants, we analyse how certification supports hybrid ...
Ruth Cherrington +3 more
wiley +1 more source

