- Apr 2023
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pressbooks.online.ucf.edu pressbooks.online.ucf.edu
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1
Leave your notes here. While anyone can read "public" annotations, you'll have to "sign in" to Hypothes.is (top right corner) to add your own.
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- Nov 2021
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pressbooks.online.ucf.edu pressbooks.online.ucf.edu
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the figure below
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pressbooks.online.ucf.edu pressbooks.online.ucf.edu
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Below are some reflection questions.
This is ......
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- Oct 2021
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pressbooks.online.ucf.edu pressbooks.online.ucf.edu
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Select this highlighted text to see the tool in action.
Learn more about the Hypothes.is annotation tool.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FRy85ZL17Tc
Back to School with Annotation: 10 Ways to Annotate with Students
Use-cases for groups in Hypothesis: Using Hypothesis Groups in the Classroom
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- Sep 2020
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pressbooks.online.ucf.edu pressbooks.online.ucf.edu
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here you can write your introduction.
Commentary
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- Jun 2020
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pressbooks.online.ucf.edu pressbooks.online.ucf.edu
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You do you!
In other words...
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- May 2020
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pressbooks.online.ucf.edu pressbooks.online.ucf.edu
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his is the first chapter in the main body of the text
This is referring to
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- Oct 2019
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pressbooks.online.ucf.edu pressbooks.online.ucf.edu
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ewfhewfeweijbfjfwjiviwvijwvijrwbvrwbiuvw weviuwrvhuirwvihwviuwv
This is lalala...
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pressbooks.online.ucf.edu pressbooks.online.ucf.edu
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: “constable” to preserve pea ce and order (in S and W), not exactly fighting crime but preserving order
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very rapid demobilization–return to traditionally small army and navy but send army troops west
The "Wild West" and the American Frontier Go to PBS.org for a visual tour of their documentary series called The West. View the following episodes: Episode 5: The Grandest Enterprise Under God, Episode 6: Fight No More Forever, Episode 7: The Geography of Hope, and Episode 8: One Sky Above Us (Introduction through Lachryma Montis required, you may complete it if you wish). Each starts with an introduction and then has links for the remainder of the episode which are broken into various headings/subjects. It appears as narrative text with document excerpts and numerous photographs/visuals. Note: For my audio-visual learners out there, the main UCF campus Library has this series on video. You may view it in full but please do so at viewing stations in the library so that you may return the videos for others to use.
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- Sep 2019
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www.tandfonline.com www.tandfonline.com
- Aug 2019
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pressbooks.online.ucf.edu pressbooks.online.ucf.edu
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This is where you can write your introduction.
This is important.
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- Jul 2019
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pressbooks.online.ucf.edu pressbooks.online.ucf.edu
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ing both the additive and multiplicative principles.
jfhqeiuhfqe
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f(x)=x2
This math is important https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0u8pBjcTd-s
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pressbooks.online.ucf.edu pressbooks.online.ucf.edu
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How is “Reading Like a Writer” similar to and/or different from the way(s) you read for other classes?
Post your reply here!
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pressbooks.online.ucf.edu pressbooks.online.ucf.edu
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We
Again, the student acknowledges the importance of conscious thought.
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human
Student rejects Dillard’s ideas but only after explaining why it is important to reject them.
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consequences
The writer sums up his argument while once again reminding us of the problem with Dillard’s ideas.
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choice
Once again the student demonstrates why the logic of Dillard’s argument falls short when applied to her own writing.
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lives
This is another thoughtful question that makes the reader think along with the writer.
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because
The student brings two ideas together very smoothly here.
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memories
The student asks what seems like a rhetorical question but it is one he will answer in the rest of his essay. It is also a question that forces the reader to think about a key term from the text— “choices.”
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victory
The student makes a historical reference here that serves as strong evidence for his own argument.
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consequence
While the student does not include a personal experience in the essay, this section gives us a sense of his personal view of life.
Also note how he introduces the term “morals” here to point out the significance of the consequences of our actions. The point is that not only do we need to act but we also need to be aware of the result of our actions.
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my comments
Find Gita DasBender's comments by clicking on the light colored highlights in the essay below.
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animal
This final paragraph sums up the writer's perspective in a thoughtful and mature way. It moves away from Dillard’s argument and establishes the notion of human responsibility, an idea highly worth thinking about.
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future
This question represents excellent critical thinking. The student acknowledges that theoretically “remembering nothing’ may have some merits but then ponders on the larger socio-political problem it presents.
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actions
This is a strong statement that captures the student’s appreciation of Dillard’s suggestion to live freely but also the ability to recognize why most people cannot live this way. This is a good example of critical thinking.
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place
Student dismantles Dillard’s entire premise by telling us how the very act of writing the essay negates her argument. He has not only interpreted the essay but figured out how its premise is logically flawed.
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to
Even as the writer starts with a general introduction, he makes a claim here that is related to Dillard’s essay.
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210
Up until this point the student has introduced Dillard’s essay and summarized some of its ideas. In the section that follows, he continues to think critically about Dillard’s ideas and argument.
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act
Student summarizes Dillard’s essay by explaining the ideas of the essay in fresh words.
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- Apr 2019
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ucf.pb.unizin.org ucf.pb.unizin.org
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Chicano art murals
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ucf.pb.unizin.org ucf.pb.unizin.org
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Dolores Huerta
"Dolores Clara Fernández Huerta (born April 10, 1930) is an American labor leader and civil rights activist who, with Cesar Chavez, is a co-founder of the National Farmworkers Association, which later became the United Farm Workers (UFW)" (cited from Dolores Huerta - National Women's History Museum).
https://www.biography.com/news/dolores-huerta-documentary-interview
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ucf.pb.unizin.org ucf.pb.unizin.org
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This is the first chapter in the main body of the text. You can change the text, rename the chapter, add new chapters, and add new parts.
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ucf.pb.unizin.org ucf.pb.unizin.org
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tegy for the organization to gain and maintain success. The executives leading the organization can simply create a plan and execute it, and they can be confident that their plan will not be undermined by changes over time. But as the consultant’s experience shows, only a few executives—such as the manager of the Panama Canal—enjoy a stable and predictable situation. Because change affects the strategies of almost all org
note
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ucf.pb.unizin.org ucf.pb.unizin.org
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Chicana Art Theory
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- Mar 2019
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ucf.pb.unizin.org ucf.pb.unizin.org
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Effective inventory control can be broken down into a few important steps: Set up systems to track and record inventory Develop specifications and procedures for ordering and purchasing Develop standards and procedures to efficiently receive deliveries Determine the frequency and processes for reconciling inventory
This is impotant!
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- Feb 2019
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ucf.pb.unizin.org ucf.pb.unizin.org
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Formal tools exist for understanding these relationships, and many of these tools are explained and applied in this book. But formal tools are not enough; creativity is just as important to strategic management. Mastering strategy is therefore part art and part
This is for the midterm.
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- Jan 2019
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ucf.pb.unizin.org ucf.pb.unizin.org
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Even worse, might a company create a new type of device that would make Apple’s tablets obsolete?
Check this out here: https://youtu.be/O3ukHC3fyuc
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Local file Local file
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We argue that in culturesthat provide less support, individuals will useautobiographical memory more frequently. Forexample, in a context with low support formaintaining social bonds, individuals may drawmore frequently on autobiographical memory forsocial-bonding purposes.
not clear as to why at this point...?
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pegasus.cc.ucf.edu pegasus.cc.ucf.eduChapter3.pdf15
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CytoarchiteC:ture
cyto = cell // form follows function // brodmann
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The Cell Theory
Idea that -- All living things are made up of cells.
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rodmann's most important tool in mapping the cortex was cytoarchitectonics
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One of the more influential localization schemes of this period was phrenology, developed by Gall and Spurzheim in the early 1800s (this movement is well known, so will only be summarized here)
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reticular theory.
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gap junttion
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Electrical synapses
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synaptic cleft
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chemical synapse,
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Dendrites receive incoming signals and carry them to the cell body
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Axons carry signals (action potentials) away from the cell body and toward the synapse
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A synapse is a junction between two neurons, that is, between the axon terminal of the presynaptic cell and the dendrite (or sometimes, the cell body itself) of the postsynaptic cell.
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Basic Neuron Anatomy
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Neurons, or nerve cells, consist of three major parts: cell body (soma), axon, and dendrites.
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the neuron doctrine
related articles:
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clients1.ibisworld.com clients1.ibisworld.com
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Over the five years to 2018, despite rising external competition from conventional grocery and natural food stores that sell similar items, the industry’s average profit margin has risen amid growing focus on marketing higher-margin premium food products, such as local milk, artisan cheeses, gluten-free baked goods and loose-leaf teas. While competition from other industries is likely to increase significantly over the next few years, efforts by industry operators to minimize labor costs and stock a greater share of higher-margin products will prevent any significant losses. IBISWorld expects profit margins to decline only slightly over the five years to 2023.
ihdihiefd
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www.nytimes.com www.nytimes.com
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The metro area has about 360,000 federal workers, representing 11.5 percent of the region’s full-time work force, according to Stephen Fuller, an economist at George Mason University who focuses on the Washington area. Of that group, about 145,000 have been furloughed, he said. This does not account for the many federal contractors whose pay is dependent on the government and who, unlike those in the Civil Service, do not expect any back pay.
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ucf.pb.unizin.org ucf.pb.unizin.org
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my comments
Find Gita DasBender's comments by clicking on the light colored highlights in the essay below.
-
animal
This final paragraph sums up the writer's perspective in a thoughtful and mature way. It moves away from Dillard’s argument and establishes the notion of human responsibility, an idea highly worth thinking about.
-
victory
The student makes a historical reference here that serves as strong evidence for his own argument.
-
lives
This is another thoughtful question that makes the reader think along with the writer.
-
consequences
The writer sums up his argument while once again reminding us of the problem with Dillard’s ideas.
-
because
The student brings two ideas together very smoothly here.
-
future
This question represents excellent critical thinking. The student acknowledges that theoretically “remembering nothing’ may have some merits but then ponders on the larger socio-political problem it presents.
-
choice
Once again the student demonstrates why the logic of Dillard’s argument falls short when applied to her own writing.
-
place
Student dismantles Dillard’s entire premise by telling us how the very act of writing the essay negates her argument. He has not only interpreted the essay but figured out how its premise is logically flawed.
-
human
Student rejects Dillard’s ideas but only after explaining why it is important to reject them.
-
consequence
While the student does not include a personal experience in the essay, this section gives us a sense of his personal view of life.
Also note how he introduces the term “morals” here to point out the significance of the consequences of our actions. The point is that not only do we need to act but we also need to be aware of the result of our actions.
-
We
Again, the student acknowledges the importance of conscious thought.
-
actions
This is a strong statement that captures the student’s appreciation of Dillard’s suggestion to live freely but also the ability to recognize why most people cannot live this way. This is a good example of critical thinking.
-
210
Up until this point the student has introduced Dillard’s essay and summarized some of its ideas. In the section that follows, he continues to think critically about Dillard’s ideas and argument.
-
act
Student summarizes Dillard’s essay by explaining the ideas of the essay in fresh words.
-
memories
The student asks what seems like a rhetorical question but it is one he will answer in the rest of his essay. It is also a question that forces the reader to think about a key term from the text— “choices.”
-
to
Even as the writer starts with a general introduction, he makes a claim here that is related to Dillard’s essay.
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- Dec 2018
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ucf.pb.unizin.org ucf.pb.unizin.org
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How is “Reading Like a Writer” similar to and/or different from the way(s) you read for other classes?
Post your reply below!
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- Mar 2018
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www.insidehighered.com www.insidehighered.com
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Going all the way back to the Hermann Ebbinghaus “forgetting curve” experiments of the 1880s, we have known -- and replicated in dozens if not hundreds of experiments -- that no matter how serious, responsible and dedicated we professors are to “covering” our “topic,” students retain and apply subsequently only what is meaningful to them. I like to call this “haunted by the 8 percent.” In experiment after experiment, if you test students with basically matched backgrounds (say, from the same educational institution and major) who took a big introductory course on a topic (say, Psychology 101) six months in the past and compare their results with those of other students who never took the course, the differential in test scores is only about 8 percent. Here’s a variation: recently, at one of the nation’s elite private prep schools, students were given, with no warning, the exact same exams one September that they had taken as final exams the previous May. The average grade on finals was about A-minus/B-plus. On the September retests: F.
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As professors, we have it drilled into us that testable content is the most important thing we do and that we are not responsible and respectable teachers if we don’t offer full coverage of the topic. We brag about a 25-page syllabus or about “too much reading.” Stop! Everything we know about learning shows us that, when we overassign, we inspire skimming and cheating, not learning.
CIP_Point 4 (+link)
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Because so much of active learning is front-loaded and continual, with feedback being constant and formative, the “finals” (papers, exams, turning in grades) aren’t much different than what one has been doing all term. Because summative exams and papers are anathema in active learning -- because learning is a process, with lots of opportunities to repeat and improve (a friend says all of his active learning classes are “pass/try again”) -- by the end of the term, a student has a full, rich, carefully evaluated portfolio of work. The final should be really just an affirmation or confirmation of a process mastered throughout the term.
CIP_Point 3 (+link)
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Active learning takes lots of scaffolding. You need to take a lot of time thinking deeply and carefully before you then have the right setting where students can take the lead. You must know not just the content but also how to design challenging readings, learning experiments, maker exercises, interactive experiments -- all kinds of ways that students can step in and take responsibility for the course. Will they be designing the syllabus? Some of it or all? Will they be contributing to assessment and helping to determine standards for the course? Will they be publishing their work on a public website? Each of those takes serious planning and design before the course begins.
CIP_Point 2 (+link)
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Active learning means shifting some of the leadership of the course to the students and creating a situation where they will be responsible, in a significant measure, for their own learning.
CIP_Point 1 (+link)
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- Jan 2018
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eds.a.ebscohost.com eds.a.ebscohost.com
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The origins of America’s separate juvenile justice system go back to 1899, when the state of Illinois created the first juvenile courts in Cook County, which includes Chicago. That first system had a special juvenile court and associated clinics staffed with experts in social services. Compared to traditional adult courts, that juvenile court was informal. Focusing on rehabilitating minors, it operated under the philosophy of parens patriae, which means the state playing the role of parent. That principle gave Illinois’s court the power to intervene in the lives of any juvenile under the age of sixteen who committed delinquent or criminal acts or was thought to be in need of state help. Since then, parens patriae has been the cornerstone of the juvenile justice system in the United States.
yes
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eds.b.ebscohost.com eds.b.ebscohost.com
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Since the turn of the twentieth century, one of the most significant developments in the American justice system has been a trend away from treating juvenile offenders in the adult justice system by developing a largely autonomous system of justice designed for the special needs of adolescents.The origins of America’s separate juvenile justice system go back to 1899, when the state of Illinois created the first juvenile courts in Cook County, which includes Chicago. That first system had a special juvenile court and associated clinics staffed with experts in social services. Compared to traditional adult courts, that juvenile court was informal. Focusing on rehabilitating minors, it operated under the philosophy of parens patriae, which means the state playing the role of parent. That principle gave Illinois’s court the power to intervene in the lives of any juvenile under the age of sixteen who committed delinquent or criminal acts or was thought to be in need of state help. Since then, parens patriae has been the cornerstone of the juvenile justice system in the United States.
test
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eds.b.ebscohost.com eds.b.ebscohost.com
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most significant developments
yes
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- Nov 2017
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files.eric.ed.gov files.eric.ed.gov
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distance.fsu.edu distance.fsu.edu
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Gaining the students' attention and establishing expectations. Reviewing relevant, previously-learned material. Presenting the new information by linking it to previous learning. Providing learning guidance or elaboration. Providing time for practice and feedback. Providing for spaced practice to enhance retention.
These six items are key to "mastering the art of teaching."
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answers.microsoft.com answers.microsoft.com
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eric.ed.gov eric.ed.gov
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This article examined a unique collaborative initiative between a team
test
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webcourses.ucf.edu webcourses.ucf.edu
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Introduction
Fun
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www.google.com www.google.com
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T 2.0 was used to measure stu
egfeqigeiqfieyq
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www.pewresearch.org www.pewresearch.org
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President Barack Obama.
Hmmm...
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ucf-my.sharepoint.com ucf-my.sharepoint.com
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NTRODUCTIONt has long been known that the advancement of Thailanguage processing technology is mainly delayed,comparing to many other languages.
test!
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files.eric.ed.gov files.eric.ed.gov
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The comments above, one from an international teaching assistant (ITA) in chemistry from Russia and the other from an ITA in computer science from China, indicate the kinds of challenges that ITAs face on a daily basis in the U.S. classroom
Great point! You can also read about this in your textbook, Chapter 3.
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hypothesis-h5p.s3.us-east-2.amazonaws.com hypothesis-h5p.s3.us-east-2.amazonaws.com
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<iframe allowfullscreen="allowfullscreen" frameborder="0" height="214" src="https://h5p.org/h5p/embed/138441" width="1090"></iframe><script charset="UTF-8" src="https://h5p.org/sites/all/modules/h5p/library/js/h5p-resizer.js"></script>
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