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THE APPLICATION OF EDWIN GORDON'S EMPIRICAL MODEL OF LEARNING SEQUENCE TO TEACHING THE RECORDER.MCDONALD, JUNE CLARKSON. January 1987 (has links)
A study was conducted with third-grade children in a university laboratory school to determine the relative effectiveness of a method for teaching recorder in which the sequential objectives are logically ordered by Edwin Gordon's empirical model of learning sequence and a traditional method which stresses note reading. The criteria used for comparison were change in the level of developmental music aptitude and performance achievement on the recorder. A review of the literature supported Edwin Gordon's theory of developmental music aptitude which proposes that until about age nine, environmental factors can affect the level of music aptitude, and, at about age nine, music aptitude stabilizes. The review of the literature also supported the use of singing activities with instrumental instruction, and the application of verbal association systems to tonal and rhythmic patterns as pedagogical techniques. Treatment for the control group involved a teaching-learning procedure in which individual fingerings, pitches, and rhythm symbols were presented in isolation and assembled in playing songs from notation. The method used with the experimental group involved a teaching-learning sequence in which children first learned to sing the song by rote. In learning to play the song on the recorder, each melodic and rhythmic pattern was isolated and initially sung or chanted. A verbal association system was then associated with the tonal and rhythmic pattern. The notation representing the pattern was introduced after extensive aural and verbal association experience, and after learning several songs. Primary sources of data included: pretest/posttest using Gordon's PMMA to measure developmental music aptitude change, and a rating scale test to measure recorder performance achievement. Results of the PMMA supported the alternative hypotheses that the experimental group had significantly higher mean composite and rhythmic increases than the control group. The mean increase in the tonal scores was greater for the experimental group, but not significantly higher at the .05 level. Results of the investigator-designed performance achievement tests supported the alternative hypotheses that the experimental method of teaching recorder was more effective in all dimensions--melodic, rhythmic, executive skills, and composite--than the traditional method.
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El delito de colusión de precios en Chile a la luz de la doctrina del delito de cuello blancoBlanch Navarro, Jean Cloude, Lara Koenig, Matías Ignacio January 2019 (has links)
Memoria (licenciado en ciencias jurídicas y sociales) / El trabajo que a continuación se desarrollará se propone describir el fenómeno de la incorporación del concepto de "White Collar Crime", introducido por Edwin Sutherland en la doctrina estadounidense de la época y que más tarde se expandiría al resto del mundo. Junto con ello se pretende revisar sus problemáticas actuales y relación con la doctrina más tradicional, para posteriormente centrar la atención en una especie de delito en particular: el de colusión de precios y especialmente la figura penal chilena. En este punto se pretende revisar la vigencia de los principales puntos de la doctrina del Delito de Cuello Blanco en las características singulares de este tipo penal. Para ello, junto con analizar la conducta descrita por la legislación nacional sobre el delito de colusión de precios, se revisarán casos de relevancia nacional relacionados con este, buscando características comunes entre ellos y contrastándola con los postulados de la doctrina del Delito de Cuello Blanco.
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Edwin S. Porter and the origins of the American narrative film, 1894-1907Lévy, David. January 1983 (has links)
This study examines the traditional claim that in 1903, while an employee of the Edison Manufacturing Company, Edwin Stanton Porter discovered the principle of editing construction which made possible the fictional motion picture narrative. It will show that Edison studio policy in the period would have discouraged such an achievement and that the crucial first step in the elaboration of the early film narrative was the development of a compositional aesthetic derived from the staged or 'fake' newsreel. Based on that aesthetic between 1904 and 1907 film directors including Edwin Porter turned out a short-lived, tableau-action narrator-dependent story film in actuality style that became the basis of the nickelodeon boom dating from 1906. The social and industrial pressures engendered by that success led to the fragmentation of the complete action tableau and the displacement of the tableau narrative by a shot-dependent, autonomous narrative constrained by the formal features of actuality composition. The final chapter analyzes a leading example, the 1907 emergence of parallel editing in the production of one-reel screen tales of last-minute rescue.
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The concept of mystery in Edwin Arlington Robinson's murder mystery poems : between knowing and not knowingRazak, Ajmal M. January 1993 (has links)
This study demonstrates that Edwin Arlington Robinson's keen interest in mystery is reflected in his poetry. However, he creates an unusual subgenre--the unresolved mystery. Definitions from the Oxford English Dictionary, religious treatises, and philosophical works, helped formulate a working definition of the word mystery. I then selected eight murder poems from The Collected Poems -- "The Tavern," "The Whip," "Stafford's Cabin," "Haunted House," "Avon's Harvest," "Cavender's House," "The Glory of the Nightingales," and "The March of the Cameron Men" and three poems from the Uncollected Poems and Prose of Edwin Arlington Robinson --"The Miracle," "For Calderon," and "The Night Before." In these murder mystery poems, Robinson fails to provide definite motives or conclusive evidence or reliable narrators--all necessary components to solve a mystery. These violations of mystery writing rules appear both in his long and short poems.In the short poems, without exception, Robinson provides no motives. Dead bodies indicate that crimes have been committed, but none of the perpetrators is brought to justice, and in some cases, not even identified. Hence, the presence of relevant, but skimpy details disallow solving the mystery with any degree of certainty. In addition, the long poems exclude clear motives, hard evidence or reliable narrators--all of which prevent the reader from reaching a sound conclusion. Other poems suggest the involvement of supernatural beings. Consistently, all his murder mystery poems conclude with the mystery either partially or completely unresolved. / Department of English
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Winter foods of the white-tailed deer on the Edwin S. George Reserve a thesis submitted in partial fulfillment ... for the degree of Master of Science ... /Adler, Max Eugene. January 1959 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Michigan, 1959.
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Edwin Atlee Barber collecting Pennsylvania, defining America /Schwartz, Rachel. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Delaware, 2007. / Principal faculty advisors: Monica Dominguez Torres and Bernard L. Herman, Dept. of Art History. Includes bibliographical references.
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An English architect in Spain : five projects by Edwin LutyensBasarrate, Iñigo January 2017 (has links)
Although the work of Edwin Lutyens has received much careful scholarly study since the 1980s his important projects in Spain remain very little known. Presently, only a brief article by Gavin Stamp and Margaret Richardson is devoted solely to Lutyens' work, and they are merely touched on in his published biographies, especially that by Christopher Hussey. Unfortunately, Lutyens was unable to complete his Spanish commissions, mostly because of the deterioration of Spain’s economy and social order in the 1930s, and this has played a major role in keeping these projects in the dark. Furthermore, the devastation caused by the Civil War obliterated most of the evidence once held in Spanish archives. Some of the projects of Edwin Lutyens in Spain are remarkable and unique for their use of what may loosely be termed a ‘Spanish style’. The identification of this characteristic can be understood as demonstrating a growing knowledge of and appreciation for Spanish architectural heritage on the part of British architects and architectural historians by the end of the nineteenth century. At the same time, the fact that the design of important private residences in Spain were commissioned to an English architect shows the growing anglophilia of Spanish economic and political elites under Alfonso XIII's reign. During these years, the economic and political ties between Britain and Spain became closer than ever before, which also had an impact on the architecture of the time. Ultimately, this dissertation is predicated on the assumption that it is important to study further, and understand better, the Spanish projects of Edwin Lutyens in order to gain fuller and further insight into his methods as a designer. The first three of them (the first project of the Palace of El Guadalperal, the Palace of La Ventosilla and the Palace for the Count de la Cimera) cast light on Lutyens´s work during the Great War years, a relatively obscure period of his career which was, however, extraordinarily fruitful. The second project for the Palace of El Guadalperal is even larger than his previous Spanish projects, approaching the grandeur and magnificence of the Viceroy’s House in Delhi. In this respect there may be seen to be a correspondence between these otherwise discrete and apparently un-related projects, running from Britain, through Spain, all the way to India. Moreover, given their scale, along with the design input required to make them successful and coherent buildings, they must be appreciated as pivotal moments in the design development, if not built oeuvre, of Edwin Lutyens as an architect. Finally, the Reconstruction of Liria Palace, is not only his last commission in Spain but it can also be considered as the last building he designed. Only when these projects are brought to the fore and analysed properly can a full understanding of Lutyens as an architect be reached.
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Architecture and landscape design : an investigation into the harmonising of these two aspects of design as exemplified by the collaboration of Gertrude Jekyll and Sir Edwin Landseer LutyensJudge, Stephen Michael January 1996 (has links)
Sir Edwin Lutyens and Miss Gertrude Jekyll were part of the 'Art's and Crafts' movement, which advocated the use of local techniques and materials. They grew up separately, both in the Surrey country-side and both among creative people. Jekyll later worked with Edward Hudson (the author of 'Country Life') who persuaded her to be a garden designer . Lutyens was inspired first by the architecture of Surrey (mostly that of Norman Shaw), then by his friend, Herbert Baker, at architectural school, and lastly, by his long - time partner Jekyll. Munstead Wood, Surrey, England, was the partners' first project and it embodies nearly all of their ideals; the natural and indigenous use of flowers and plants, with an ordered colour scheme ; graded colour schemes without discord; the use of entirely local materials ; the sole use of local craftsmen and local techniques; a garden of 'rooms'; the intergration of architecture and garden design. A revival of interest in the partners work has helped to recreate some of the lost gardens of Jekyll. This interest has in turn put a spotlight on the ideals employed by the partners. Their wide influence has also produced many great buildings and gardens, most notably through the work of Sir Herbert Baker in South Africa. The Union Buildings are a perfect example of Baker's work, and much of it has the stamp of Lutyens' style and ideals. Through my own interest in Lutyens and Jekyll I have created my own Jekyll-style border in Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, to try and prove that her ideals can be translated into climates other than that of England. In this experiment, I succeeded in using indigenous South African plants and flowers with a colour scheme in the style of Jekyll, proving that the ideals to which she aspired could be applied in other countries.
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El delito de cuello blanco como resultado de la formación entregada en los colegios de la élite social capitalinaAravena Bendeck, Javiera January 2017 (has links)
Memoria (licenciado en ciencias jurídicas y sociales)
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Creating a Maine railroad landscape, 1890-1897: architecture of the Portland & Rumford Falls Railway and the Rumford Falls & Rangeley Lakes RailroadStevenson, Charles Ian 22 January 2016 (has links)
In 1890, paper magnate Hugh Chisholm chartered the Portland & Rumford Falls Railway to provide service between Maine's largest city and the nascent industrial community of Rumford Falls. From 1890 to 1897, directors of that railroad embarked upon a cohesive building program to distinguish its stations from competitors and to attract traffic to Rumford Falls. This railroad's program represents a seminal moment in small town railroad station architecture because it was an early manifestation of a planned, replicated design. Civil engineer Frederic Danforth implemented the comprehensive landscape developed by architect Edwin Lewis. This pattern of architect-driven designs would be developed in the early twentieth century by railroad companies nationwide as they more aggressively created corporate branding, while also balancing community relations.
In 1894, Chisholm and associates chartered a second rail line, the Rumford Falls & Rangeley Lakes Railroad, to service nearby timberlands and outdoor sporting locales. This line would further increase the prowess of Rumford Falls and the profitability of the Portland & Rumford Falls Railway. Lewis was not associated with this project, but its directors maintained a complementary architectural program almost indistinguishable from the earlier campaign.
This thesis examines the initial development of the two rail lines based on photographs, architectural drawings, and documentary research. It explores how these building programs fit into the greater schema of corporate railroad architectural development. It elucidates the national trends toward an interconnected industrial landscape and early attempts at corporate branding through vernacular architecture.
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