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         Autumn Teach:     more detail
  1. Somerset Apprentice Magazine (New projects that will teach & delight, Autumn 2010) by various, 2010
  2. Shrink Teach Yourself Autumn 1995
  3. What's that smell? It's fall: the perfect time for planting garlic: Gwen Croft teaches you how to head up your own garlic patch.(digging in): An article from: New Life Journal by Gwen Croft, 2007-09-01
  4. N.C. man teaches inmates how to start up businesses.(tracking trends): An article from: Community College Week by John Murawski, 2010-01-25

61. AUTUMN 2002
autumn 2002. This form of study requires considerable practice and it is best donein settings where individuals can work together to coach, teach, and learn
http://www.fcs.utah.edu/syllabi/herrin-5370-f02.htm
AUTUMN 2002 FAMILY VIOLENCE Family and Consumer Studies 5370, Section 60 10:45 a.m. to 12:05 p.m., Tuesdays and Thursdays, 214 ST Don Herrin, Ph.D. Department of Family and Consumer Studies Office: 236 AEB Office Hours: Mondays and Wednesdays 3:00 - 4:00 p.m. and/or by appointment Tuesdays and Thursdays 9:00 - 10:00 p.m. and/or by appointment Office Phone: 581-3497 E-Mail: don.herrin@fcs.utah.edu Web site: http://www.fcs.utah.edu/faculty/herrin/ ON-LINE COPY OF COURSE SYLLABUS WILL BE AVAILABLE AT: http://www.fcs.utah.edu/undergrad/courses/ Linda Kieter , Marriott Librarian for FCS Department Consultation Hours: 10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m., Thursdays, 233 AEB Office Phone: 585-5056 E-mail: lkeiter@library.utah.edu COURSE FOCUS AND CONTENT OBJECTIVES This course develops your capacity to think critically actively , and deeply about one of the most damaging (if not the most damaging) family problems prevalent in our society today family violence and abuse . Our interest is in studying and understanding the ways family violence is perceived, explained, and studied by different parts of the academic and professional community and within some of the more influential and important belief systems in our society. We study how family studies, psychology, sociology, feminism, and related disciplines generally view family violence and how it could be prevented, reduced, or eliminated. We consider how different professionals such as researchers, therapists, educators, policy makers, law enforcers, medical doctors, nurses contribute different perspectives and considerations to our understanding of family violence and what can be done about it. Given this focus, the following

62. Wanaka Autumn Arts School
The Wanaka autumn Art School is a not for profit activity He is author of two bookson the sport, 'How to teach Yourself Flycasting' and 'Ten of the Best Trout
http://www.cleangreen.co.nz/wanakaartschool/

WANAKA AUTUMN ARTS SCHOOL 2003
April 22nd to 26th
gilbert van Reenen www.cleangreen.co.nz
Upper Clutha Community Arts Council
P.O.Box 216
WANAKA Organiser:
Robyn van Reenen,
Ballantyne Road,
R.D.2 WANAKA
Phone: 03 443 1810
Fax: 03 443 7889
vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv email: rvr@cleangreen.co.nz For this, our 14th annual school, we're delighted to offer you an exciting programme with highly talented tutors from throughout New Zealand and Australia and the United States. Some are new to us, others are returning from previous years. The school is based at the modern Mt Aspiring College campus with practical classes exploring the district. We look forward to a stimulating week in the stunning autumn environs of Wanaka - an opportunity for learning and exchanging ideas and techniques as well as meeting a variety of people with diverse interests. Classes are limited so please register early to avoid disappointment. Waiting lists are likely to apply to several of the classes once maximum numbers are reached. We may take bookings after the closing date, but classes may also have to be cancelled if there are insufficient numbers by that date.

63. Autumn 1993
Issue 13 autumn 1993. off to Sendai for six days to visit friends, the girls werestill in day care, and of course I had dozens of English classes to teach.
http://www.asahi-net.or.jp/~xs3d-bull/hyaku-nin-issho/1993/autumn/13.html
'Hyaku-nin Issho' Newsletter for fans of the 'Hyaku-nin Isshu' woodblock print series Issue #13 - Autumn 1993
Contents of this Issue:
Jump directly to the story you wish to read, or simply scroll down through the entire issue ...
Introduction
It's certainly been a mixed-up summer this year. The weather has been upside-down for most of the time, and my life here has been matching that ... I wasn't able to take the girls up to the mountains for a vacation, and the three of us had to stay here in our Tokyo apartment. It's been years since I've stayed here all through August ... and I don't like it! This issue's main feature though, isn't a summer story, but one that I prepared last January. I made a visit to the people who prepare the mulberry each winter for papermaking, and I hope you find the photos and description of the process interesting. We'll also see what possible connection Tanzania and Kenya could have with traditional woodblock printmaking, and we're almost at the end of the '... origin of the project ...' column.

64. INFORMATION SCIENCE
University of Washington Time Schedule autumn Quarter 2002. INSC 565 teach PRAC1 4695 A 3 TO BE ARRANGED * * % Credit/No Credit Display textbooks.
http://www.washington.edu/students/timeschd/AUT2002/insc.html
Search Directories Reference Tools UW Home ... Time Schedule
University of Washington Time Schedule
Autumn Quarter 2002
THE INFORMATION SCHOOL
INFORMATION SCIENCE
  • To see the Course Catalog description for a course, click on the course title.
  • To see the current status of a section, click its four-digit Schedule Line Number.
  • To see the detailed Instructor Class Description, click on the underlined instructor name.
  • To see the building on the campus map, click on the building abbreviation.
  • For a summary of each section's current enrollment and status, select the Enrollment Summary
INSC 500 FACULTY SEMINAR A 2 M 300-450 MGH 420 FIDEL,R % Credit/No Credit Display textbooks INSC 510 HUMAN INFO BEHAVIOR A 4 TTh 930-1120 MGH 293 BRUCE,H % Display textbooks INSC 565 TEACH PRAC 1 A 3 TO BE ARRANGED * * % Credit/No Credit Display textbooks INSC 566 TEACH PRAC 2 A 3 TO BE ARRANGED * * % Credit/No Credit Display textbooks INSC 570 RESEARCH DESIGN A 5 TTh 1230-250 MGH Display textbooks INSC 575 RESEARCH PRAC I A 3 TO BE ARRANGED * * % Credit/No Credit Display textbooks INSC 576 RESEARCH PRAC 2 Display textbooks INSC 600 INDEPENDENT STUDY A 1-10 TO BE ARRANGED * * % Credit/No Credit

65. JPR Newsletter, Autumn 1999
jpr / news autumn 1999. 'Jews dilemma. The Bible stories were gritty sothat they could deal with human problems and teach moral lessons.
http://www.jpr.org.uk/Newsletter/Autumn_1999.htm
jpr news Autumn 1999 'Jews feel comfortable and not paranoid in the new South Africa' Since the end of apartheid, South Africa has undergone enormous transformations. Its sizeable, highly skilled and vibrant Jewish community has had to adapt to a minority position in a country where political power is held by black Africans. The community is analysed in depth in a new and pioneering study undertaken by JPR in association with the Kaplan Centre of the University of Cape Town, whose Director, Milton Shain, is quoted above. Based on interviews with a nationally representative sample of 1,000 adults, the study makes a fascinating comparison with JPR's 1995 Survey of the social and political attitudes of British Jews. Most respondents felt strongly about their Jewishness and were by and large more Orthodox and more Zionist in their outlook and behaviour than was found to be the case in comparative samples in Britain and the United States. However, only one in eight respondents agreed with the optimistic statement, 'the quality of my life in South Africa will improve over the next five years', whereas a resounding 65 per cent disagreed. Few want to leave Nevertheless, when asked about their own personal emigration plans, only 12 per cent said they were very likely to leave over the next five years. Half of these cited fears of crime and personal safety as the prime reason. For most respondents, personal safety ranked high on their list of concerns.

66. WNA TODAY - AUTUMN 99
Director of the Middle School, Betty Heiney, hopes to attract upper school studentsand teachers, as well as parents and alumni, to teach short courses such as
http://www.wna.org/pubs/Today/winter00/Middleschool.htm

WNA's Home Page
Winter 2000
Volume 13
Number 2
Web Edition
A Tribute to Richard R. Hallock

From the Head of School

Student Profile: Crissy Serio

Reunion 2000 Just Around the Corner
...
Stevenson Honored for Decades of Service
DISCIPULI IN MEDIA ACADEMICA
Pictured left to right are: Nicole Long, Elizabeth Derr (Middle School Secretary), Betty Heiney and Bill Malesh. Betty Heiney is a graduate of Berea College, and an experienced teacher whose last work assignment was home-schooling two of her children. Nicole Long received her master's degree from Boston University where she worked as a staff writer while helping to start up an internet publishing company. Bill Malesh holds a master's degree from Johns Hopkins University and likes to do a lot of outdoor exploring with his wife and children. Together, they are changing West Nottingham's future. A recently identified group of new bioforms is bubbling, bumbling and tumbling around campus . Discipuli in Media Academica have set foot on campus—and intend to stay! In case your Latin’s a bit rusty, that means that sixth, seventh and eighth graders are gathering daily in a building behind Rush dormitory to learn about readin’, writin’, and ‘rithmetic.

67. "Early Autumn" - Novel Info
Paul and Spenser counters with for Paul, autumn has come early. With Paul growingup fast, he has indeed reached an Early autumn. 'And you plan to teach him
http://www.mindspring.com/~boba4/Autumn.html
Early Autumn
Archived by Mike on 13 June, 1996
Latest Update 18 August, 2001 by Bob Ames
Publication Information
Hardcover Edition Published by: Delacorte Press Publication Date: ISBN: Paperback Edition Published by:: Dell Publishing Co., Inc. ISBN Large Print Edition Published by ISBN Audio Cassette Edition Published by: Books on Tape Read By: Michael Prichard Length 6 cassettes, 540 min. The above information is from the online catalog of the Minuteman Library Network and my own collection.-Bob
Cover Information
"For David Parker and Daniel Parker,
with the respect and admiration of their father,
who grew up with them." Taken from the back of the paperback edition "A bitter divorce is only the beginning. First the father hires thugs to kidnap his son. Then the mother hires Spenser to get the boy back. But as soon as Spenser senses the lay of the land, he decides to do some kidnapping of his own. With a contract out on his life, he heads for the Maine woods, determined to give a puny fifteen-year-old a crash course in survival and to beat his dangerous opponents at their own brutal game."
Recurring Characters
  • This is our first meeting with Paul Giacomin, who is the fifteen-year-old boy Spenser is trying to save. At first he is a whiny little brat, but Spenser's influences quickly take hold. By the end of the story Paul is his own man and fast approaching adulthood. You might also say that Paul is Spenser's protégé, since Spenser teaches him how to lift, fight, cook, in short, everything Spenser does himself.

68. NZARH Journal - Autumn 2000
SCIENCE . RELIGION . SOCIETY autumn 2000. Contents. Editorial credulity. Thisis why Rationalism and Humanism in India has so much to teach the west.
http://www.nzarh.org.nz/journal/autumn00.htm
THE NEW ZEALAND
A JOURNAL ON
PHILOSOPY . SCIENCE . RELIGION . SOCIETY
Autumn 2000
Contents
Editorial
Bill Cooke
Rationalism in the Third Millennium

India Leads the Way
Bill Cooke
No more "holy ash"

Sai Baba exposed by Rationalists
K Vasudevan Adam's Rib Anne Ferguson Humanist Manifesto 2000 A Call for a new Planetary Humanism The Millennium Awards Bill Cooke Bishop's trial puts Church in dock Chris McGreal Stranger Than Fiction Elizabeth McKenzie Southern Lights Russell Dear Current Comments Book Reviews Letters to Editor Oddities In order to obtain maximum objectivity, we must entertain only a minimum of preconceptions. Edward O Wilson
Editorial
The decline and fall of agnosticism
For more than a century the term "agnostic" has been one of the most widely used descriptions thoughtful people have used to describe their view of the universe. But it is becoming ever more apparent that agnosticism has had its day. This is because the central contention of agnosticism is no longer valid. It was once held as axiomatic that because we couldn’t be certain about the non-existence of any god, it was foolish to use the term "atheist", which implied such a certainty. This notion lingers on in those people who, with a certain smugness, declare that they "don’t have enough faith to be an atheist". We all know that the word agnostic was coined by Thomas Henry Huxley. What is less well known is that the English writer Sir Leslie Stephen (1832-1904) was just as influential in popularising the term as Huxley himself. Stephen began his influential essay

69. REC - EMTC: Insight, Autumn 1997
FOR ENVIRONMENTAL TRAINING PROFESSIONALS IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPEAUTUMN 1997 * VOLUME 2 * NUMBER 2. The fun way to teach and learn.
http://www.rec.org/REC/Programs/EMTC/Insight/vol22/Insight22.html
FOR ENVIRONMENTAL TRAINING PROFESSIONALS
IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE

AUTUMN 1997 * VOLUME 2 * NUMBER 2
Credits Address Book EMTC Network
Download the Acrobat (.pdf) version
... INSIGHT * AUTUMN 1997

70. What To Teach - Online Poetry Classroom
Home What To teach Committed to Memory Meditations Printer Friendly Addto a Notebook Spring and Fall by Gerard Manley Hopkins; To autumn by John
http://www.onlinepoetryclassroom.org/what/index.cfm?prmPageID=221

71. Yale Medicine Autumn 2002: "A Steam Engine In Pants"
Yale Medicine autumn 2002 “A steam engine in pants The members of the facultywere to be Yale University faculty, designated to teach where their talents
http://info.med.yale.edu/external/pubs/ym_au02/winternitz.html
Yale Medicine Autumn 2002
Milton Charles Winternitz looks up from his papers in a photograph dated 1939, four years after he stepped down as dean. During his 15 years leading the school, Winternitz reorganized the medical school departments, recruited a legendary faculty and established the Yale System of medical education.
In 1920, Milton Winternitz became dean and ushered in a new era in medicine at Yale, creating the Yale System in the process. For much of his 15 years at the top, what Winternitz wanted, Winternitz got. Winternitz, who served as dean from 1920 to 1935, occupies a central chapter in the book, online in PDF format.
Gerard N. Burrow, M.D.
Winternitz used a cartoon to appeal to Flexner and the General Education Board for funds. It worked.
Read excerpt from Read the full chapter from
(Requires Adobe Acrobat Reader)
Download PDF of Reports to the President and Fellows and The Reports Made to the President and Fellows of Yale University for the Academic Year

Collected Studies on the Pathology of War Gas Poisoning . That same year he published The Pathology of Influenza , which he had co-written in the wake of the postwar pandemic. Although he had been at Yale for only three years and had been heavily involved in the war effort, the faculty elected him the fifth dean of the medical school in 1920.

72. Education At The Ocean Physics Department, Applied Physics Laboratory, Universit
Courses OPD Faculty teach undergraduate core courses graduate core courses graduatespecial GPHYS 404, Geophysics, Fluids ESS 414 as of autumn Quarter 02
http://opd.apl.washington.edu/education/courses.html
1013 NE 40th St
Seattle, WA 98105
phone: 206-543-1272
fax: 206-543-6785
email us
visitor information site map active projects ... Faculty Appointments Courses OPD Faculty Teach
undergraduate core courses
graduate core courses graduate special topics courses
Undergraduate Core Courses
OCEAN 460, Physical Oceanography Project
Structure of ocean basins; physical properties of seawater and the equation of state; heat, salt, freshwater budgets; tidal potentials; Coriolis effect and geostrophic balance; major current systems and water masses; mixing, stirring in the ocean; simple waves, modern experimental methods.
GPHYS 404, Geophysics, Fluids
ESS 414 as of Autumn Quarter 02 Introduction to geophysical fluid dynamics. An overview of fluids in geophysics with emphasis on the oceans. A non-rigorous development of the equations of motion with examples drawn from oceanography and solid earth geophysics. Graduate Core Courses OCEAN 510, Physics of Ocean Circulation Structure of ocean basins; physical properties of seawater and the equation of state; heat, salt, freshwater budgets; tidal potentials; Coriolis effect and geostrophic balance; major current systems and water masses; mixing, stirring in the ocean; simple waves, modern experimental methods. OCEAN 514, Waves

73. I'll Try Being Nicer If You'll Try Being Smarter [Angstlust.com]
I'll teach you a game, autumn said. Tyler hadn't gone home afterschool. Instead I'll teach you how to watch, autumn said. They
http://angstlust.com/autumn/1chaptertwo5.html

74. University Of Southampton - Hartley News - Autumn 2002 - Volume 4 No.2 - Graduat
com. Obituaries autumn 2002. Headmaster. He also met his wife Marjorieat BGS when she joined the school to teach Domestic Science.
http://www.hartleynews.soton.ac.uk/Autumn2002/graduates.html
Welcome from the Alumni Office Professor appointed Chief Executive of ESRC £8 million project to extend Hartley Library Prestigious award for Professor ... Archive Graduate News - Autumn 2002
John Dodridge (BA General Arts 1955, PGCE 1956) ended his teaching career as Senior County Mathematics Adviser in Cheshire. After a period of Ofsted Inspection of Schools, John is currently painting as much as possible in many parts of the world. While at Southampton he illustrated 'Wessex News', Ragmags and SU operatic society programmes. He has just returned from Brazil and can be contacted through one of his two art websites www.dodridge.biz . He would love to hear from 1955 graduates/1956 teachers. Penelope Manners Noyce (BA English 1950, PGCE 1951) taught English in England and Finland and then worked for the British Council in Nottingham. She then went into further education and spent one and a half years at a college in Sydney on a teacher swap programme. Since retiring she has taken her painting more seriously, concentrating on painting portraits and still life in oils. She has exhibited in Chelsea, and with the Royal Society of Portrait Painters at the Mall Gallery. Penelope has married and divorced and has two sons. Michael Roberts (BA General Arts 1958) taught history and geography for a number of years getting to the top of the greasy pole as head of Queens School, Newport, Monmouthshire. He achieved a PGCE from Sussex University and an M Ed from Birmingham University. After three years as an IT Consultant to the Gwent LEA he retired but has worked as an Ofsted team inspector since 1993. He is married to Anne who is about to retire from her career as a history teacher. They have three sons, Simon (28), Gareth (26) and Jonathan (23). Mike and Anne live in Monmouth.

75. ISTC Teach Yourself XML In 21 Days
teach yourself XML in 21 Days. Simon North FISTC and Paul Hermans. teach YourselfXML in 21 Days. SAMS, a division of MacMillan Computer Publishing, 1999.
http://www.istc.org.uk/site/xml21day.asp

76. CanTeach: Songs & Poems - Fall
autumn Wind. When autumn wind goes running It does some magic things. October. October'sthe month When the smallest breeze Gives us a shower Of autumn leaves.
http://www.canteach.ca/elementary/songspoems1.html
Resources Links Discuss Submit ... Elementary Resources
Fall
Down! Down! Down, down!
Yellow and brown
The leaves are falling
Over the town. September is a time
Of beginning for all,
Beginning of school
Beginning of fall. The sunflower children
Nod to the sun.
Summer is over,
Fall has begun! The leaves are falling
One by one. Summer's over School's begun. Off to school We go together In September's Sunny weather. "Come, little leaves," said the wind one day, "Come o'er the meadows with me and play: Put on your dresses of red and gold - For summer is gone and the days grow cold." A Little Elf A little elf Sat in a tree Painting leaves To throw at me. Leaves of yellow And leaves of red Came tumbling down About my head. Cornflake leaves Upon the trees - Are they a breakfast For the breeze? I Love Fall I love fall! Fall is exciting. It's apples and cider. It's an airborne spider. It's pumpkins in bins. It's burrs on dog's chins. It's wind blowing leaves. It's chilly red knees. It's nuts on the ground. It's a crisp dry sound. It's green leaves turning And the smell of them burning.

77. Autumn 2002 Newsletter
Center for SelfDetermination logo NEWSLETTER autumn 2002 Increased capacity to teachothers about self-determination; Increased knowledge about implementation
http://www.self-determination.com/publications/newsAu2002.html
NEWSLETTER AUTUMN 2002
Contents: (Links to the Stories)
Aranya's Story
Clear Path For Self-Determination

Center Recieves Report

For Immersion Training 2002
...
Join Us
ARANYA’S STORY
By Kris Copeland
A conference is like a temporary community. People gather from all parts of the country and for a few days at least, they work together, play together and learn from each other. Sometimes certain people and their stories rise up and touch others very deeply. These moments are often unplanned and magical. The word for these sort of ‘happy co-incidences’ is ‘serendipity’. This is what happened when Immersion Learning participants got to meet Aranya Williams and hear some of her stories.
Many people said afterward that hearing and meeting Aranya was the highlight of the conference. For those of you who weren’t there, here is a story that Aranya shared with us all, with the help of her friend Doreen Rosimos. It is about standing up for yourself and a very good example of what self-determination means.
SPEECH THERAPY
A dozen years ago, when Aranya was around 20 years old, she decided she needed and wanted to have speech therapy. Aranya knew it was very hard for her to speak and that it was very hard for people to understand her. Aranya went through all the proper channels. With the help of her social worker, she wrote a letter to the Medicaid administration asking for them to pay for speech therapy and then she waited for a reply. A letter finally came and it said, No, Aranya could not have speech therapy. So Aranya wrote and mailed a second letter. This also was answered with a letter of denial. Aranya did not give up. She sent a third letter. A third letter of denial was sent to Aranya. She still would not take No for an answer.

78. News Report Vol.11 No2 - Summer/Autumn 1999
MECC NEWS REPORT Vol. 11 n o 2 Summer/autumn 1999. May God teachus true peace”. Pax Christi meets in Amman, Jerusalem. Pax
http://www.mecchurches.org/newsreport/vol11_2/paxchristi.asp
The Middle East Council of Churches
M.E.C.C.
MECC NEWS REPORT - Vol. 11 n o
Summer/Autumn 1999
“May God teach us true peace”
Pax Christi meets in Amman, Jerusalem
Pax Christi International, the International Catholic Peace movement, held its biennial International Council in Amman, Jordan June 27-30, and in Jerusalem July 1-3. More than 100 participants from 33 countries took part. For the first time in its fifty-five year history, Pax Christi, which was founded to seek reconciliation between Germany and France in the wake of World War II, elected a non-European as its President. His Beatitude Patriarch Michel Sabbah of Jerusalem was unanimously elected, and will serve the movement for the coming four years. He succeeds Cardinal Godfried Danneels from Belgium, who served the movement since 1990. The Council also issued a declaration, which states that “During their meetings in this region, participants have become convinced that the majority of people in the Israeli, Palestinian and surrounding Arab communities long for a just lasting peace. They [the participants] express their solidarity with all the victims of this conflict.” The document goes on to call for “the international community to exert its influence to bring the leaders of communities in conflict to listen to the people. Only by listening to the voices of all those among their people who cry out for justice will true peace be established.” In addition to Israel-Palestine, the conference addressed other areas of concern in the Middle East. In the same statement, it called for an end to the embargo on Iraq and for continued efforts by charitable organizations to alleviate the suffering caused by the sanctions. In a separate statement, entitled “Stop the cycle of violence in Lebanon”, it condemned “all violent means in the resolution of this conflict, both the Hezbollah attacks and the disproportionate airstrikes decided by the outgoing government of Israel, of which civilians are the main victims,” and called for the implementation of the existing UN Resolutions concerning peace in the region, most notably resolution 425, which requires the withdrawal of the Israeli troops from Lebanon.

79. Plant Science Bulletin - Volume 47 Number 3 - Autumn 2001
Since 1998, over 300 teachers have attended workshops on FireWorks, learning toteach from the curriculum and trunk, and the program has reached more than
http://www.botany.org/bsa/psb/2001/psb47-3.html
BULLETIN
F Plant Science Bulletin ISSN 0032-0919
Volume 47(3) Contents Published quarterly by Botanical Society of America, Inc., 1735 Neil Ave., Columbus, OH 43210 The yearly subscription rate of $15 is included in the membership dues of the Botanical Society of America, Inc. Periodical postage paid at Columbus, OH and additional mailing office. Address Editorial Matters (only) to:
Marsh Sundberg, Editor
Dept. Biol. Sci., Emporia State Univ.
1200 Commercial St.
Emporia, KS 66801-5057
phone 620-341-5605
email: sundberm@emporia.edu POSTMASTER: Send address changes to:
Kim Hiser, Business Manager
Botanical Society of America 1735 Neil Ave. Columbus OH 43210-1293 Phone/Fax: 614/292-3519 email: bsa-manager@botany.org ALL 2001 VOLUME 47 NUMBER 3 The Botanical Society of America: The Society for ALL Plant Biologists P Plant Science Bulletin Editorial Committee for Volume 47 Norman C. Ellstrand (2003) Department of Botany and Plant Science University of California Riverside CA 92521-0124 ellstrand@ucracl.ucr.edu Vicki A. Funk (2001) Department of Botany Smithsonian Institution Washington, D.C. 20560

80. In Trust Magazine - Autumn 1999
autumn 1999 Vol. As seminary “distance education”—that is, programs that teachstudents individually away from an institutional campus—grows ever more
http://www.intrust.org/magazine/autumn99/autumn99.htm
Autumn
Vol. 11, No. 1 Featured Articles Soundings
Our readers write... Field Notes
by Carole Anne Nelson Limitless Horizons
by Bob Bettson On Line or On Campus
by Melinda R. Heppe Catalyst for Collaboroation
by Jeremy Langford Changing Scenes
News you need to know... Toolbox
by Rebecca Burch Basinger Innovation
by Melinda R. Heppe

Focal Point From the editor's chair... Another Kind of Educational Community by William R. MacKaye As seminary “distance education”—that is, programs that teach students individually away from an institutional campus—grows ever more common, some in the world of theological education grow ever more nervous about whether theological students can be adequately “formed” away from the academic community. Is the learner’s immersion among a group of peers essential to the educational process? Educators being almost by nature disputants, others counter unhesitatingly that community is not necessary among mature students. Or that off-campus students find community in the “virtual” world they discover as soon as they begin to explore the resources of the internet. Or that they find community in other human groupings they encounter where they are.

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