Spelling suggestions: "subject:"then other"" "subject:"then ether""
141 |
Streamflow Forecast of Bear River at Harer, IdahoCrook, J. M. 01 May 1956 (has links)
The primary objective of this thesis is to make an accurate stream flow forecast for the Bear River at Harer, Idaho in order to provide helpful information for the operation of the largest reservoir in the Bear River System and in guiding cropping programs in the watershed.
|
142 |
An Historical Survey of the Growth of Education in Prince George County, Virginia.Copeland, Richard Watson 01 January 1940 (has links)
No description available.
|
143 |
A Journey from West Africa to Slavery: African-American Life During the Eighteenth-Century.Broyles, Teresa Ann 01 January 1993 (has links)
No description available.
|
144 |
Varina School, Henrico County, 1909-1957.Morton, Vera Palmore 01 January 1957 (has links)
No description available.
|
145 |
Education Reform in the New American Republic/education and the Charity of Edward HopkinsBeck, Christina L. 13 July 2018 (has links)
Education Reform in the New American Republic: Bancroft, Cogswell, and the German Model in 1815, the first American students to seek advanced degrees at Europe's famed University of Göttingen arrived in Germany. This trickle of American intellectuals into German universities continued through the 1840s, and included some of the foremost American minds – George Ticknor, Edward Everett, William Emerson, Joseph Cogswell, and George Bancroft. Through networks of correspondence with family and friends at home and abroad, and above all, with one another, Bancroft and Cogswell developed ideas about the importance of American education. Upon their return home, they chose to found the Round Hill School in 1823. Employing principles of the German gymnasium and the experimental educational institutions they visited on their travels through Europe, Bancroft and Cogswell sought to marry American values with European ideas in an attempt to educate the next generation of intellectuals. While wide-reaching reform attempts did not begin until the 1840s with Horace Mann, the correspondence and writings of these two men indicate that Americans were formulating ideas about education, democracy, and identity long before education reform became mainstream in America. Education and The Charity of Edward Hopkins: The Institutionalization of Charity in Pre-Revolutionary New England When former Connecticut Governor and merchant Edward Hopkins died in 1657, his estate devolved not upon his children, for he had none, but largely upon the charitable causes he had supported so well in his lifetime. Hopkins' legacy for the purpose of education at the grammar and university levels in New England came to support multiple grammar schools as well as Harvard College. Although previous scholars have argued that charity in pre-Revolutionary New England was a largely individualized, often unrealized ideal, the creation of a strong administrative body to administer the Hopkins bequest in the early eighteenth century is indicative of an existing tradition of institutionalization of charity in pre-Revolutionary New England, if not voluntary association. The increasing involvement of Massachusetts' most prominent citizens in interlocking charitable and public service responsibilities, including the Hopkins Trust, in the early eighteenth century, reveals a societal expectation of civic service that paralleled larger cultural and religious trends, including ministerial rhetoric about wealth and the responsibilities of well-to-do individuals.
|
146 |
The Evolution of Education in Gloucester County, Virginia.Thomas, Norris Linwood 01 January 1934 (has links)
No description available.
|
147 |
History of Woodrow Wilson Parent Teacher Association.Wheeler, Lucille 01 January 1954 (has links)
No description available.
|
148 |
A Historical Narrative On The Formative Years And Organizational Culture Of Ave Maria University: 2003 To 2011Moran, Patricia Lourdes 01 January 2021 (has links)
In this study, I focused on the history of Ave Maria University during its formative years in Florida from 2003 to 2011 to answer the research question: How did a new, conservative Catholic university emerge in the United States at the beginning of the 21st century? Understanding the history and culture of Ave Maria informs how the institution came about and is still operational today, even when other small institutions are closing their doors. The study utilized a historical narrative approach to uncover and document Ave Maria’s early history, the physical transition of moving campus locations twice, the accreditation process, and the university’s organizational culture. The study applied Edgar Schein’s model of organizational culture to discover institutional insights from artifacts, espoused values, and basic underlying assumptions. The results yielded recommendations on the importance of long-term financial stability, the significance of a values-based mission, the importance of faculty and staff fit, and alignment of the curriculum with the mission.
|
149 |
Roanoke, Virginia, as a Social Science Study in the Public SchoolsBrown, Bessie Myers 01 January 1926 (has links)
No description available.
|
150 |
The Higher Education of Virginians in Colonial DaysHornsby, Virginia Ruth 01 January 1936 (has links)
No description available.
|
Page generated in 0.0811 seconds