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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
41

Equipping the active deacons of Holiday Hill Baptist Church, Jacksonville, Florida, to minister to church families using deacon ministry teams

Byrd, William Albert, January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (D. Min.)--New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary, 2006. / Includes abstract and vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 186-190).
42

Promoting Success in Developmental English: Student Life Skills Courses A Mixed-Methods Case Study

Greene, Richard Anthony 01 January 2012 (has links)
The purpose of this study was threefold: (a) to describe the impact the SLS courses had on the retention and success rates of students who were taking developmental English courses at FSCJ-Kent Campus, (b) to explain how students taking developmental English felt the SLS courses impacted them, and (c) to find out what elements of the SLS program were most and least valued by students. In order to understand how the SLS program impacted students in the developmental English program at FSCJ-Kent Campus, I conducted a mixed methods case study using FSCJ–Kent Campus as the research site. The case study included a quantitative stage, during which I examined archival data from fall 2008 to summer 2010 to determine the impact of the SLS program on student success and retention, and a qualitative stage, during which I conducted a survey and two focus groups to get an understanding of participants’ perspectives. The evidence that the SLS program affected the success and retention rates of students in the developmental English classes at FSCJ-Kent Campus was not conclusive. However, students reported that the program was extremely beneficial to them and provided insight into why they thought the program contributed to their success. The study was significant because I was able to get a deeper understanding of students’ perspectives and provide a framework for understanding those perspectives. I concluded that the SLS program was a mechanism to transition and integrate students into the institution. This study may affect the way leaders in educational institutions approach developmental English, the SLS program, and all other developmental programs.
43

An Analysis of the Problem of the Insecurity of Children

Little, Edith 06 1900 (has links)
This study is an attempt to find causes and indications of insecurity in elementary school children. Possible solutions and ways to increase security are also explored.
44

In Search of David Paul Davis

Kite-Powell, Rodney 21 November 2003 (has links)
The 1920s land boom in Florida produced a wide variety of characters. Among the most important, but lesser known, of those was David Paul Davis. Davis was born in November 1885 in Green Cove Springs, Florida. His family moved to Tampa in 1895, where he attended school and held a number of different jobs. He left Tampa in 1908 and reappeared in Jacksonville in 1915. That same year, in Jacksonville, he married Marjorie H. Merritt. The young couple moved to Miami in 1920, where Davis began to sell real estate. He became quite adept, developing a number of subdivisions in the Buena Vista section of the city. He made a considerable fortune in Miami, but lost his wife, who died while giving birth to their second child. Davis moved back to Tampa in 1924 and began work on the largest development on Florida's west coast. That development, Davis Islands, made him wildly rich and nationally famous. He followed up Davis Islands with Davis Shores, a subdivision in St. Augustine that Davis envisioned as being twice the size of Davis Islands. The Florida land boom collapsed before Davis could complete Davis Shores. In an attempt to keep the St. Augustine project afloat, Davis sold his Tampa development in August 1926. The effort was in vain and Davis slipped further into debt. He died under mysterious circumstances while en route to Europe aboard a luxury liner on October 12, 1926.
45

In search of David Paul Davis [electronic resource] / by Rodney Kite-Powell.

Kite-Powell, Rodney. January 2003 (has links)
Title from PDF of title page. / Document formatted into pages; contains 89 pages. / Thesis (M.A.)--University of South Florida, 2003. / Includes bibliographical references. / Text (Electronic thesis) in PDF format. / ABSTRACT: The 1920s land boom in Florida produced a wide variety of characters. Among the most important, but lesser known, of those was David Paul Davis. Davis was born in November 1885 in Green Cove Springs, Florida. His family moved to Tampa in 1895, where he attended school and held a number of different jobs. He left Tampa in 1908 and reappeared in Jacksonville in 1915. That same year, in Jacksonville, he married Marjorie H. Merritt. The young couple moved to Miami in 1920, where Davis began to sell real estate. He became quite adept, developing a number of subdivisions in the Buena Vista section of the city. He made a considerable fortune in Miami, but lost his wife, who died while giving birth to their second child. Davis moved back to Tampa in 1924 and began work on the largest development on Florida's west coast. That development, Davis Islands, made him wildly rich and nationally famous. / ABSTRACT: He followed up Davis Islands with Davis Shores, a subdivision in St. Augustine that Davis envisioned as being twice the size of Davis Islands. The Florida land boom collapsed before Davis could complete Davis Shores. In an attempt to keep the St. Augustine project afloat, Davis sold his Tampa development in August 1926. The effort was in vain and Davis slipped further into debt. He died under mysterious circumstances while en route to Europe aboard a luxury liner on October 12, 1926. / System requirements: World Wide Web browser and PDF reader. / Mode of access: World Wide Web.
46

Adoption of new technologies in instructional design: a case study of communications faculty at Florida Community College at Jacksonville integrating an instructional web-based writing tool, my ACCESS into communications courses

Moore, Mable J. 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
47

Equipping selected parents of Normandy Park Baptist Church in Jacksonville, Florida, to develop selected spiritual disciplines in their children grades one through three

Taylor, Steven C., January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (D. Min.)--New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary, 2006. / Includes abstract and vita. Includes proposed project report. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 155-161, 57-62).
48

Equipping selected parents of Normandy Park Baptist Church in Jacksonville, Florida, to develop selected spiritual disciplines in their children grades one through three

Taylor, Steven C., January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (D. Min.)--New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary, 2006. / Includes abstract and vita. Includes proposed project report. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 155-161, 57-62).
49

An Inquiry Into Micro Marketing Strategy as Implemented by the Coffee Industry: Is the Industry Fracturing the Market?

Edwards, Keith D 01 January 1990 (has links)
The diversity created in our society during the eighties has brought forth many new challenges for marketers. During that time established market segments subdivided themselves into micro segments. This has forced marketers to further target their marketing programs to reach the ever elusive consumer. Micro Marketing brings with it an abundance of product choices, especially in coffee. Currently, there exists a great deal of uncertainty as to the benefits of this wave of product proliferation. In this study, first, an attempt is made to identify and define Micro Marketing and the events which lead to its evolution. Substantial support is given which identifies the foundation of Micro Marketing as a natural extension of Market Segmentation. However, a review of current product offerings by the coffee industry may lead toward a return to product orientation. Which could imply further problems for a industry with flat or declining volumes. In order to access the condition of Micro Marketing, as it applies to the coffee industry, a questionnaire was developed. The primary information was gathered in grocery stores in the Jacksonville area. Data was gathered on the coffee drinking habits, brand awareness, brand loyalty, purchase influences, purchase patterns, psycographic and demographic data of consumers. This data is used to establish if any segments exist which identify with specific coffee brands. Market fracturing Consumers seems Jacksonville. show patterns to specific brands, evident, at least in hardly any segmentation while the level of brand awareness dissipates as the number of brands increase. Furthermore, the level of brand switching is extremely high indicating that market segmentation, for the most part, is non existent. Continuing to pursue market negative long term gains to the fracturing may provide firm due to its cost ineffectiveness. However, fracturing may be reversed with proper segmentation strategy. Further studies will indicate proper marketing strategies as well as provide possible avenues for growth in coffee consumption.
50

LaVilla, Florida, 1866-1887 :reconstruction dreams and the formation of a black community

Kenney, Patricia Drozd 01 January 1990 (has links)
Several factors which influenced the formation of an urban black community following the Civil War are examined in this study. Prior to the war, LaVilla, a suburb of Jacksonville, Florida, was sparsely populated by wealthy white families. At war's end, freedmen seeking shelter and work took advantage of the inexpensive housing and proximity to employment LaVilla offered and, by 1870, became the majority population. The years 1866 through 1887 have been chosen for this study because they demarcate LaVilla's inception on the one hand and, on the other, its disappearance as an independent entity. Local, state, and federal records have been utilized to better understand the freedmen's decision on where to settle, finding work, securing a home, and political participation. Although an integrated community, the focus of this study is on the role of blacks in community formation. During the first twenty years of freedom, the blacks who lived in LaVilla came to organize their community along two separate and distinct paths: the social and the political. The social dimension was segregated and articulated through social networks created by family, kinship, and friendship anchored in and strengthened by the church, school, and voluntary associations. In the context of urban growth and development, these social networks would mitigate the harsh realities of poverty, unemployment, and inadequate housing. The political dimension was integrated and afforded black males power and influence concerning the civic decisions of their community. Following annexation to Jacksonville in 1887, LaVilla's blacks were removed from the political arena and disjoined from the decision-making process. As a result, the freedmen came to rely solely on the social dimension of their community.

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