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THE INFLUENCE OF PUPIL SOCIO-ECONOMIC STATUS AND TEACHER CHARACTERISTICS ON TEACHER ROLE PERFORMANCEBeezer, Bruce G. January 1970 (has links)
No description available.
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GENEALOGICAL, COMPONENTIAL, AND FUNCTIONAL ANALYSES OF TURKISH KINSHIPBusch, Ruth C., 1931- January 1970 (has links)
No description available.
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HERMENEUTICS OF ETHNIC REDISCOVERY: RHETORICAL, SOCIOLINGUISTIC ANALYSIS OF SELECTED WORKS OF TWENTIETH CENTURY AMERICAN JEWISH FICTIONEdelman, Samuel Martin January 1981 (has links)
This study examined thirty-one randomly selected novels written by American Jews about the Jewish American experience. The period covered was from 1900 to 1979. Each of these novels was analyzed as to how the central character or characters reconciled his/her individual goals and constraints against the systematic goals and constraints of family and society. The central question was how did the major character or characters use discourse to overcome exigencies. The elaborated and restricted codes discussed by Basil Bernstein and the familial control system and cosmology discussed by the anthropologist Mary Douglas formed the basis for the discourse analysis. Conclusions were that there is general trend in American Jewish fiction toward the positional-elaborated structure which suggests a reification of secular cultural Jewish values and beliefs during the latter part of the period studied.
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Relationship between student popularity and the marital status of their parentsMertens, Marjorie Marie Kuhbach, 1919- January 1965 (has links)
No description available.
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Factors in social background which influence the Mexican child in school as revealed in a study of twenty-five Mexican families in TucsonRiggins, Rachel Thompson, 1908- January 1946 (has links)
No description available.
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An investigation of the adjustment of family members involved in inter-state residential mobilitySmith, Ramona Yearsley, 1915- January 1960 (has links)
No description available.
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Variables contributing to the maintenance of the Mexican-American social structure in TucsonSpence, Allyn G. January 1968 (has links)
No description available.
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Problems of Negro youth in TucsonBreit, Amelia, 1913- January 1947 (has links)
No description available.
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Dysfunctionalities of Nigerian education, in relation to post-independence aims of social, economic, and political development.Adebisi, Ayoola. January 1965 (has links)
Since the first thesis on Nigerian education by a Nigerian was completed in 1946, several others have followed in quick succession. These studies critically examined the education system from the points of view of the qualification of its teaching staff, the effectiveness of its administration, the adequacy of its curricula and of the instructional methods used, the suitability of its facilities, the extent of its support by the Nigerian public, and the abilities and attitudes of its students. Most of these studies found that the Nigerian education system was a wholesale "export" of the types of education that enjoyed the most esteem in Europe, particularly in England, and which was only just adequate in supplying the needs of the Christian missions for teachers and preachers and of the colonial government for clerks and workers for the subordinate ranks of the administration. [...]
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Narratives of Latino-American immigrant women's experiencesLopez-Damian, Judith, University of Lethbridge. Faculty of Education January 2008 (has links)
This thesis explores the immigration experiences of five Latino-American women who reside in Lethbridge, Alberta. Rather than using interviews as a research protocol, the author used conversation as a tool to explore the narratives of these women’s experiences. Four of the five told their story in Spanish, and after transcribing the conversations, the author used critical inquiry to find common ground between the women’s narratives and her own immigration experiences. This thesis explores topics such as belonging and connections to different communities and how these women use stories of change and continuity in constructing their identities. Language, employment, recognition of previous education as well as separation from their families and support networks were the main difficulties identified. As anticipated, these women accessed federally funded and provincially delivered immigrant settlement services, such as ESL classes. While hesitant to use formal counselling, three of the women accessed these services for gendered matters such as spousal abuse. Relationships based on kinship were crucial resources and central to their narratives as was church, which provided both a familiar and significant source of community and support. This study found that when using conversation the researcher establishes relationships with the participants, other writers/academics, as well as the readers. Thus this thesis suggests that narrative research is fundamentally a relational activity. In this context stories are considered gifts, and the exchange of gifts an important aspect of research design. The narratives were shaped by, and interpreted in light of, various contextual factors such as the women’s relationships with the researcher, and their individual as well as socio-cultural and historical circumstances. The five women who participated in this research were found through community networking, and had some familiarity with counselling–either as service recipients or a professional connection–circumstances which shaped their willingness to participate as well as the stories they narrated about their immigration experiences. In constructing the narratives of their past experiences, from the vantage point of the present, the women emphasize gratitude to Canada and only subtly allude to issues such as racism or stereotyping. / viii, 170 leaves ; 29 cm. --
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