Results for 'Karen Larsen Maloley'

992 found
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  1.  9
    Teaching a balanced view of Germany to K-6 teacher candidates: Dispelling negative stereotypes and internationalizing the curriculum.Janie D. Hubbard & Karen Larsen Maloley - 2013 - Journal of Social Studies Research 37 (4):209-219.
    National character stereotyping often hinders teachers’ responses to an important 21st century educational theme, global awareness. While recognizing that educators have a responsibility to teach history, in remembrance of the people and events of the past and to help prevent societies from making the mistakes of their predecessors, it is also essential that teachers prepare our new generation of young students for global citizenship in a 21st century world. This research studied 114 teacher candidates in K-6 social studies methods classes (...)
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  2. Fear of Paedophilia: consequences of moral panic for childcare personnel in Denmark.Karen Munk, Per Lindsø Larsen, Else-Marie Buch Leander & Kurt Sørensen - forthcoming - Paideia.
     
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  3.  14
    Beyond the insider/outsider debate in “at‐home” ethnographies: Diffractive methodology and the onto‐epistemic entanglement of knowledge production.Trine S. Larsen & Nete Schwennesen - 2024 - Nursing Inquiry 31 (1):e12611.
    In this article, we discuss the practice of conducting research in one's own field, in this case, from a position as a researcher with a nursing background doing fieldwork in a hospital and in one's own organization, an orthopedic surgical department. We show how an “insider” researcher position paves the way for analytical insights about sleep as an institutional phenomenon in the orthopedic surgical infrastructure and how acute and elective patient trajectories differ but build on the same logic, creating the (...)
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  4.  10
    Beyond the Aesthetic and the Anti-Aesthetic.James Elkins & Harper Montgomery (eds.) - 2013 - University Park, Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania State University Press.
    Each of the five volumes in the Stone Art Theory Institutes series—and the seminars on which they are based—brings together a range of scholars who are not always directly familiar with one another’s work. The outcome of each of these convergences is an extensive and “unpredictable conversation” on knotty and provocative issues about art. This fourth volume in the series, _Beyond the Aesthetic and the Anti-Aesthetic_, focuses on questions revolving around the concepts of the aesthetic, the anti-aesthetic, and the political. (...)
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  5.  11
    The Neurotic Personality of Our Time.Karen Horney - 1999 - Routledge.
    First Published in 1999. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
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  6.  30
    Avoiders vs. Amenders: Implications for the investigation of guilt and shame during Toddlerhood?Karen Caplovitz Barrett, Carolyn Zahn-Waxler & Pamela M. Cole - 1993 - Cognition and Emotion 7 (6):481-505.
  7. Introduction to Ethics.Karen L. Rich - forthcoming - Nursing Ethics: Across the Curriculum and Into Practice.
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  8.  15
    Measuring Teachers’ Social-Emotional Competence: Development and Validation of a Situational Judgment Test.Karen Aldrup, Bastian Carstensen, Michaela M. Köller & Uta Klusmann - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11:519912.
    Teachers’ social-emotional competence is considered important to master the social and emotional challenges inherent in their profession and to build positive teacher-student relationships. In turn, this is key to both teachers’ occupational well-being and positive student development. Nonetheless, an instrument assessing the profession-specific knowledge and skills that teachers need to master the social and emotional demands in the classroom is still lacking. Therefore, we developed the Test of Regulation in and Understanding of Social Situations in Teaching (TRUST), which is a (...)
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  9.  55
    A History of Women's Political Thought in Europe, 1700–1800.Karen Green - 2014 - Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
    During the eighteenth century, elite women participated in the philosophical, scientific, and political controversies that resulted in the overthrow of monarchy, the reconceptualisation of marriage, and the emergence of modern, democratic institutions. In this comprehensive study, Karen Green outlines and discusses the ideas and arguments of these women, exploring the development of their distinctive and contrasting political positions, and their engagement with the works of political thinkers such as Hobbes, Locke, Mandeville and Rousseau. Her exploration ranges across Europe from (...)
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  10.  7
    Neurosis and Human Growth: The Struggle Toward Self-Realization.Karen Horney - 1999 - Routledge.
    First Published in 1999. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
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  11.  5
    New Ways in Psychoanalysis.Karen Horney - 1999 - Routledge.
    First Published in 1999. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
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  12.  17
    Alexander Hollaender’s Postwar Vision for Biology: Oak Ridge and Beyond.Karen A. Rader - 2006 - Journal of the History of Biology 39 (4):685-706.
    Experimental radiobiology represented a long-standing priority for the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, but organizational issues initially impeded the laboratory progress of this government-funded work: who would direct such interdisciplinary investigations and how? And should the AEC support basic research or only mission-oriented projects? Alexander Hollaender's vision for biology in the post-war world guided AEC initiatives at Oak Ridge, where he created and presided over the Division of Biology for nearly two decades. Hollaender's scheme, at once entrepreneurial and system-oriented, made good (...)
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  13.  16
    Values, Relationships, and Virtues.Karen L. Rich & Janie B. Butts - forthcoming - Nursing Ethics: Across the Curriculum and Into Practice.
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  14.  10
    " A Toilet in the Middle of the Court House Square": The Summer Teaching Institute of 1915 and the Influence of Booker T. Washington on Negro Teacher Education in Alabama.Karen L. Riley - 2002 - Education and Culture 18 (1):3.
  15.  18
    Curriculum Wars and Cold War Politics: The Struggle for Academic Freedom in Higher Education.Karen Lea Riley & Barbara Slater Stern - 2000 - Education and Culture 16 (2):4.
  16. Kroon on identity statements.Karen Riley - manuscript
    This theory of identity statements is extremely implausible. However, I hope to show that it is in fact Fred Kroon’s theory, and that he has some interesting arguments for it. On the other hand, I do not think the arguments succeed, and I think the theory really is as implausible as it sounds. In this paper I argue that Kroon is wrong about the evidence he claims supports his view, and that as an account of what is conveyed by speakers (...)
     
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  17. The problem of negative existentials.Karen Riley - manuscript
    One way to solve the problem of negative existentials is to posit a realm of non–existent objects. Then the name ‘Sherlock Holmes’ could refer to a non–existent object, and a statement of (1).
     
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  18.  36
    Purposiveness in nature: Hegel and Spinoza on anthropomorphism and backward causation.Karen Koch - 2021 - Intellectual History Review 31 (3):463-478.
    My aim in this paper is to investigate Hegel’s relation to Spinoza’s account of teleology by discussing Spinoza and Hegel’s stance to two straightforward objections against teleological views of reality: the anthropomorphism objection and the backward causation objection. I show that both argue against a teleological account that would be committed to the anthropomorphism objection by raising the same argument: such a divine intelligence would lack what it desires to realize. I then argue that their dealing with the backward causation (...)
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  19.  21
    Performing Platform Governance: Facebook and the Stage Management of Data Relations.Karen Huang & P. M. Krafft - 2024 - Science and Engineering Ethics 30 (2):1-28.
    Controversies surrounding social media platforms have provided opportunities for institutional reflexivity amongst users and regulators on how to understand and govern platforms. Amidst contestation, platform companies have continued to enact projects that draw upon existing modes of privatized governance. We investigate how social media companies have attempted to achieve closure by continuing to set the terms around platform governance. We investigate two projects implemented by Facebook (Meta)—authenticity regulation and privacy controls—in response to the Russian Interference and Cambridge Analytica controversies surrounding (...)
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  20.  7
    Our Inner Conflicts: A Constructive Theory of Neurosis.Karen Horney - 1999 - Routledge.
    First Published in 1999. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
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  21.  21
    Hegel and Deleuze: Together Again for the First Time.Karen Houle, Jim Vernon & Jean-Clet Martin (eds.) - 2013 - Northwestern University Press.
    _Hegel and Deleuze_ cannily examines the various resonances and dissonances between these two major philosophers. The collection represents the best in contemporary international scholarship on G. W. F. Hegel and Gilles Deleuze, and the contributing authors inhabit the as-yet uncharted space between the two thinkers, collectively addressing most of the major tensions and resonances between their ideas and laying a solid ground for future scholarship. The essays are organized thematically into two groups: those that maintain a firm but nuanced disjunction (...)
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  22.  93
    Forces impacting the production of organic foods.Karen Klonsky - 2000 - Agriculture and Human Values 17 (3):233-243.
    Roughly 20 percent of organic cropland wasdevoted to produce compared to only 3 percent forconventional agriculture in 1995. At the otherextreme, only 6 percent of organic cropland was incorn production while 25 percent of all croplandproduced corn. Only 30 percent of all organicfarmland was in pasture and rangeland compared to 66percent of all farmland. Clearly, these differencesreflect the greater importance of meat and dairyproduction in agriculture overall than in the organicsubsector. In recent years, the organic industry hasgrown not only in (...)
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  23.  41
    Renaissance humanism and botany.Karen Meier Reeds - 1976 - Annals of Science 33 (6):519-542.
    Summary The enthusiasm of Renaissance humanists for classical learning greatly influenced the development of botany in the late fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. Humanist scholars restored the treatises of Theophrastus, Pliny, Galen and Dioscorides on botany and materia medica to general circulation and argued for their use as textbooks in Renaissance universities. Renaissance botanists' respect for classical precepts and models of the proper methods for studying plants temporarily discouraged the use of naturalistic botanical illustration, but encouraged other techniques for collecting and (...)
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  24.  4
    The ethics of tainted legacies: human flourishing after traumatic pasts.Karen V. Guth - 2022 - New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press.
    What do we do when a beloved comedian known as "America's Dad" is convicted of sexual assault? Or when we discover that the man who wrote "all men are created equal" also enslaved hundreds of people? Or when priests are exposed as pedophiles? From the popular to the political to the profound, each day brings new revelations that respected people, traditions, and institutions are not what we thought they were. Despite the shock that these disclosures produce, this state of affairs (...)
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  25. Beyond the canon: Feminists, postmodernism, and the history of art.Karen-Edis Barzman - 1994 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 52 (3):327-339.
  26.  12
    Appreciating the ‘work’ of discourse: occupational identity and difference as organizing mechanisms in the case of commercial airline pilots.Karen Lee Ashcraft - 2007 - Discourse and Communication 1 (1):9-36.
    This article pursues two central goals. First, I seek to advance the sustained study of occupational identity as a pivotal mechanism for organizing work and, thus, as a productive means of integrating the aims of two scholarly movements: 1) the ‘dislocation’ of organization and 2) the renewed emphasis on work in organization studies. Specifically, I propose the study of evolving relations between occupational image discourse and role communication, and my analysis of US commercial airline pilots enacts the potential of such (...)
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  27. Pinholes and images: children's conceptions of light and vision. I.Karen Rice & Elsa Feher - 1987 - Science Education 71 (4):629-639.
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  28.  18
    Into the heart of whiteness.Karen Anijar - 2003 - American Journal of Bioethics 3 (2):29 – 31.
  29.  42
    Are false beliefs representative mental states?Karen Bartsch & David Estes - 1993 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16 (1):30-31.
  30. Does Current Social Philosophy Develop Progressively?Karen Momdjan - 2013 - Metaphilosophy 44 (1-2):19-23.
    This article begins with clarification of the notion of progress. The author believes that it is possible to consider progress objectively, if by progress we understand a positive change in the effectiveness of something. He mentions two types of progress: progress of improvement and progress of augmentation. He then distinguishes evaluative from reflective philosophy. Evaluative philosophy gives answers to the second and third of Kant's famous three questions; reflective philosophy answers the first, dealing with the limits of human knowledge. Progress (...)
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  31.  32
    Legitimacy and Lawmaking: A Tale of Three International Courts.Karen J. Alter & Laurence R. Helfer - 2013 - Theoretical Inquiries in Law 14 (2):479-504.
    This Article explores the relationship between the legitimacy of international courts and expansive judicial lawmaking. We compare lawmaking by three regional integration courts - the Court of Justice of the European Union, the Andean Tribunal of Justice, and the ECOWAS Community Court of Justice. These courts have similar jurisdictional grants and access rules, yet each has behaved in a strikingly different way when faced with opportunities to engage in expansive judicial lawmaking. The CJEU is the most activist, but its audacious (...)
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  32. Welfare Economics and the Welfare State in Historical Perspective.Karen Knight - manuscript
    Although the economic thought of Marshall and Pigou was united by ethical positions broadly considered utilitarian, differences in their intellectual milieu led to degrees of difference between their respective philosophical visions. This change in milieu includes the influence of the little understood period of transition from the early idealist period in Great Britain, which provided the context to Marshall’s intellectual formation, and the late British Idealist period, which provided the context to Pigou’s intellectual formation. During this latter period, the pervading (...)
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  33.  43
    The Pedagogical Imperative.Karen L. Hornsby - 2016 - Teaching Philosophy 39 (1):51-68.
    This article is a commentary response to the study results outlined in “The State of Teacher Training in Philosophy.” In recognition of the study’s determination that 70 percent of the jobs new philosophers will apply for are non-tenure track, our graduate programs must provide training in teaching excellence and the fostering of student learning, or what I call pedagogical areté. I will argue that achieving this teaching excellence requires 1) Familiarity with cognitive neuroscience advancements on how people learn, 2) Knowledge (...)
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  34.  5
    Representation.Karen Alexander - 1994 - Paragraph 17 (3):260-265.
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  35.  21
    Authentic Faux Diamonds and Attention Deficit Disorder.Karen Anijar & David Gabbard - 2005 - American Journal of Bioethics 5 (3):67-70.
    Fascism should more properly be called corporatism because it is the merger of state and corporate power.—Benito Mussolini. The whole [school] system should be blown up … I feel like a prophet toda...
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  36.  5
    Inn-Between.Karen Kuehne Annesen - 1999 - Feminist Review 62 (1):91-91.
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  37.  91
    Problems of powerlessness: psychological explanations of social inequality and civil unrest in post-war America.Karen Baistow - 2000 - History of the Human Sciences 13 (3):95-116.
    This article concerns the emergence of psychological constructs of personal power and control in the United States during the 1960s and 1970s and the ways in which they contributed to contemporary political explanations of social unrest. While social scientists and politicians at the time saw this unrest as a social problem that posed threats to social cohesion and stability, they located its cause not in the power structure of society but in the individual’s sense of his or her own powerlessness. (...)
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  38.  23
    Survival after breast cancer treatment: the impact of provider volume.Karen Bailie, Iain Dobie, Stephen Kirk & Michael Donnelly - 2007 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 13 (5):749-757.
  39.  54
    Articulating the role of experience in mental state understanding: A challenge for theory-theory and other theories.Karen Bartsch & David Estes - 2004 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 27 (1):99-100.
    Carpendale & Lewis's (C&L's) proposal of a social interaction account makes clear the need for researchers of all theoretical orientations to get specific about how social experience influences children's developing understanding of mind, but it is premature to reject other theories, such as theory-theory, which also attribute a major role to experience.
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  40.  11
    Beyond autism: Challenging unexamined assumptions about social motivation in typical development.Karen Bartsch & David Estes - 2019 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 42.
    In challenging the assumption of autistic social uninterest, Jaswal & Akhtar have opened the door to scrutinizing similar unexamined assumptions embedded in other literatures, such as those on children's typically developing behaviors regarding others’ minds and morals. Extending skeptical analysis to other areas may reveal new approaches for evaluating competing claims regarding social interest in autistic individuals.
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  41.  10
    Brief report selective processing and fear of spiders: Use of the stroop task to assess interference for spider-related, movement, and disgust information.Karen Barker & Noelle Robertson - 1997 - Cognition and Emotion 11 (3):331-336.
  42.  11
    Children's everyday moral conversation speaks to the emergence of obligation.Karen Bartsch - 2020 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 43.
    For Tomasello's proposed ontology of the human sense of moral obligation, observations of early moral language may provide useful evidence complementary to that afforded by experimental research. Extant reports of children's everyday moral talk reveal patterns of participation and content that accord with the proposal and hint at extensions addressing individual differences.
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  43.  9
    Trappings of technology: casting palliative care nursing as legal relations.Ann-Claire Larsen - 2012 - Nursing Inquiry 19 (4):334-344.
    LARSEN A‐C. Nursing Inquiry 2012; 19: 334–344 Trappings of technology: casting palliative care nursing as legal relationsCommunity palliative care nurses in Perth have joined the throng of healthcare workers relying on personal digital assistants (PDAs) to store, access and send client information in ‘real time’. This paper is guided by Heidegger’s approach to technologies and Habermas’ insights into the role of law in administering social welfare programs to reveal how new ethical and legal understandings regarding patient information add to (...)
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  44.  41
    Commentary on “Ethics Education and the Practice of Wisdom”.Karen Mizell - 2009 - Teaching Ethics 9 (2):131-134.
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  45.  7
    Gareth B. Matthews: The Child’s Philosopher, by Maughn Gregory and Megan Laverty.Karen Mizell - 2022 - Teaching Ethics 22 (2):294-302.
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  46.  22
    Mechanism, External Purposiveness, and Object Individuation: from Mechanism to Teleology in Hegel's Science of Logic.Karen Koch - 2023 - Hegel Bulletin 44 (1):148-170.
    This article is an investigation into Hegel's claim that teleology is the truth of mechanism, which Hegel puts forward in the objectivity section in the Science of Logic. Contrary to most accounts of this section of the Logic, I make a case for a reading of Hegel's conception of external purposiveness according to which the latter makes a positive contribution to the structural development of the concepts of the Logic. I argue that external purposiveness plays a major role in understanding (...)
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  47. Introduction to Bioethics and Ethical Decision Making.Karen L. Rich - forthcoming - Nursing Ethics: Across the Curriculum and Into Practice.
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  48.  15
    Professional codes of ethics and ongoing moral problems in psychology.Karen Strohm Kitchener - 1996 - In William T. O'Donohue & Richard F. Kitchener (eds.), The Philosophy of Psychology. Sage Publications.
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  49.  4
    The Book of Peace.Karen Green, Constant Mews & Janice Pinder (eds.) - 2008 - University Park: Pennsylvania University Press.
    Christine de Pizan, one of the earliest known women authors, wrote the Livre de paix (Book of Peace) between 1412 and 1414, a period of severe corruption and civil unrest in her native France. The book offered Pizan a platform from which to expound her views on contemporary politics and to put forth a strict moral code to which she believed all governments should aspire. The text's intended recipient was the dauphin, Louis of Guyenne; Christine felt that Louis had the (...)
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  50.  10
    Responsibility, Complexity, and Abortion: Toward a New Image of Ethical Thought.Karen Houle - 2013 - Lanham, Md.: Lexington Books.
    Responsibility, Complexity, and Abortion: Toward a New Image of Ethical Thought draws from feminist theory, post-structuralist theory, and complexity theory to develop a new set of ethical concepts for broaching the thinking challenges that attend the experience of unwanted pregnancy.
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