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Roblox Fun forum archived last post 2017-05-08 WonkaKid animorphs135
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Assessment8IntegratedArtsNarrativeACEI; Microsoft Word - 1.doc
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Complete Movement Acoss the Curriculum Data table; 1.tif
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SectionIProgramofStudyACEI; Microsoft Word - 1.doc
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Assessment7AttachmentBPEScoringGuideACEI; Microsoft Word - 1.doc
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Assessment7AttachmentAPEAssignmentACEI; Microsoft Word - 1.doc
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NAEYC SPA report Assessment 4; Microsoft Word - NAEYC SPA report Assessment 4.doc
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Assessment 6; Assessment 1 (required): Content Knowledge
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Assessment7PENarrativeACEI; Microsoft Word - 1.doc
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Section I faculty chart; ATTACHMENT B
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Section V; SECTION V???USE OF ASSESSMENT RESULTS TO IMPROVE
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Assessment4AttachmentCDataChartACEI; Microsoft Word - 1.doc
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Section II chart; SECTION II??? LIST OF ASSESSMENTS
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Framing Narrative-- Early Childhood Education Program
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USNH Open Education Initiative 2017-18 Student and Faculty Perceptions on OER and Open Pedagogy at Granite State College, Keene State College and Plymouth State University
The Academic Technology Steering Committee for the University System of New Hampshire (USNH) refocused the annual Academic Technology Institute (ATI) in 2015 to begin to develop the capacity of each institution within the system to undertake meaningful and complementary Open Education projects that will make student learning more effective. In the 2017 ATI, one of the four institutions, UNH, focused solely on OER while the other three institutions included both OER and Open Pedagogy projects. The results of the research presented here only includes data from those three institutions: GSC, KSC, and PSU. -
Keene State College Open Education (OE) Project, Academic Year 2016-2017 Final Dissemination Assessment Report
Ten faculty members at Keene State College (KSC) participated in the AY 2016-2017 Open Education (OE) program. Four faculty utilized open educational resources (OER), in place of traditional textbook materials, in their courses. We asked these four faculty: “If you were to use a textbook in your course, which one would you use?” We used faculty’s responses to research the costs of the textbooks. We then multiplied the textbook cost by the courses’ student enrollments to obtain the maximum potential cost savings for each course. In other courses, faculty used an increased number of OERs and engaged students in open pedagogy practices that complemented, but did not entirely replace, the use of traditional textbooks. In one course, students were never required to purchase a traditional textbook in either the prior or the assessment semesters. -
Freedom Forum II
This speech discusses the need for campaign finance reform. Granny D tells the story of her walk across the country advocating for reforms and discussing public financing with those she met along the way. Mentions the volunteer program that she has started to get people involved in creating change. -
Freedom Forum
In this speech given in Keene, New Hamshire, Granny D speaks out against the imminent war in Iraq and our values as Americans. -
Alan Fix and Temiar dancing at Kampong Tohoi
Alan Fix, Temiar, etc, dancing at Kampong Tohoi, Ulu Kelantan, July 1998. During the visit there of the post - Malacca tour group of the IPPA, July 1998 -
Adela S. Baer Collection
Adela S. Baer received a Bachelor of Science Degree in Zoology from the University of Illinois at Urbana in 1953. After receiving a Ph.D. in Genetics from the University of California in 1962, she took a professorship at San Diego State University and served as the coordinator of graduate programs in Biology in 1969-1971 and 1981-1983. She also was chair of the Biology Department between 1975-1978 and in 1982. Baer received a Fullbright Scholarship to the University of Malaya in 1967-68 and had the opportunity to make a brief visit to Mah Meri at Pulau Carey, Jah Hut in Pahang and Temuan in Bukit Manchong, Selangor. During a year's sabbatical in 1971-72 she worked with the Hooper Foundation, a cooperative Malaysian-American medical research foundation, and lived in the Temuan village of Ulu Serendah, Selangor studying human genetics and related health problems of the Temuan. Baer continued to observe Orang Asli as a short-term visitor for a decade and then made contact and began working with Malaysian colleagues working on the same issues, research that has continued through today. She has also worked in East Malaysia, particularly in 1999-2000, and has provided comparative health information on Orang Asli vs. Sarawakian rural ethnic groups. Between 1997 and 2001 she was a co-coordinator (with Kirk Endicott of Dartmouth) of the Orang Asli Assistance Fund (which was under the umbrella of Cultural Survival of Cambridge MA). Baer visited Sarawak, Malaysia under a Fullbright scholarship in 2001. She belongs to the following associations: Sigma Xi, the American Society of Human Genetics, the Indo-Pacific Prehistory Association and is a fellow of the Borneo Research Council. -
Earl of Cranbrook Collection
Gaithorne (Earl of) Cranbrook was born on June 20 in 1933. He received his Bachelor of Arts (1956) and Master of Arts (1960) degrees at Cambridge, England. He has pursued a career as an environmental biologist, initially in South East Asia and subsequently in the UK and Europe. He is a specialist in the biology and management of the cave swiftlets, the "birds-nest soup birds" and the biology of living mammals and archaeozoology of the Malaysian region. His first post-graduate appointment, 1956-58 was at the Sarawak Museum, Kuching (Borneo) where he was engaged generally in collection and curation duties and specifically in the archaeozoology and studies of cave swiftlets. After obtaining a Ph.D. at Birmingham University (1958-1960), he undertook further swiftlet studies in Indonesia (1960-61). He then joined the Zoology Department, University of Malaya, Malaysia (1961-70). In 1965 with funds granted by the Nutfield Foundation, U.K. he was instrumental in establishing the University's Field Studies Centre at Mile 26, Ulu Gombak, Selangor, alongside the road crossing the main range of the Peninsula. While living in the area he became acquainted with the Temuan people whose lands crossed both sides of the Main Range, from the Malaysian states of Selangor into Pahang. He also made friends with members of the Semai community living near Kampar, Perak from whom several men came to staff the Ulu Gombak Field Studies Centre (Pusat Penyelid ikan Kajihayat Luar) in the late 1960's. In 1970 the Earl of Cranbrook returned to his family home in Suffolk, England and became both involved in the management of the family farm and active in local, national and international public and voluntary service, and in the private sector. In 1978 he took the family title and seat in the House of Lords until 1999 when hereditary rights were abolished by the Act of 1999. He has been author (or co-author) and editor of books on the mammals, the birds, the tropical rainforest, and wonders of the natural world of the South-East Asian region, and of many scientific papers on these and related topics including Mammals of South-East Asia (1988), Wonders of Nature in South-East Asia (1997) as editor, and Swiftlets of Borneo: builders of edible nests (2002). -
Passport of Walter Singer, 1938
This is the passport of Walter Singer. It was issued September 6, 1938 by the "Deutsches Reich" or "The German Empire." Walter Singer was born in Vienna Austria on November 17, 1916. Singer fled Nazi Germany in 1939. Walter Singer was married in Vienna on July 31, 1938, the last day that Jews were allowed to marry in Austria after the Nazi invasion. This passport includes a physical description of Singer. He is described as having a medium build, with a long face, blue eyes and blond hair. His profession is listed, but indecipherable. Realizing that the Jews in Austria were in great danger, he and his wife Edith secured passports and booked passage to Latvia. The passport outlines Singer's travel plans. As is listed in the passport, Singer intended to travel to Belgium, France, The Netherlands, Australia, The United States of America, Latvia, or Great Britain. Latvia refused entrance to Singer and his wife, and they were forced to go back to German territory. There are a number of stamps in the passport showing Singer leaving Austria and returning, there is also a stamp from the Länderbank, Wien the country bank of Vienna. Singer was arrested by the Gestapo on November 9, 1938. Singer's wife, Edith, learning of his arrest, begged the officers for his release. Her request was granted on the condition that she could acquire two steamer ship tickets out of Europe. The couple went back to Vienna and received American visas on January 6, 1939. There is an Immigration Visa stamp on the final page of the passport that was processed February 13, 1939 at the American Consulate in Vienna Germany.