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lectures and section
Bernstein also briefly discusses this section along with the opening bars of the 2nd movement in his Charles Eliot Norton lectures from 1973.
Her lectures on the theme Fear and Public Policy have since been published as a book titled Fear and Politics ( listed in Publications section, below ).
This section covers the school's many achievements in the fields of robotics, computer science, biology, physics, and other fields, as well as lectures and events with a technology or science slant.
The largest section of Bligh's book is devoted to lecturing technique, particularly the organisation of lectures, how to make a point, the effectiveness of taking notes, the use of handouts and ways of obtaining feedback.
This research showed that the section on alternative teaching methods within lectures was the most highly praised.
The AES British section, which is the largest outside the US, issues a monthly newsletter and holds regular lectures, usually in London, with occasional visits to studios and other places of interest.
This course will help you to learn all components of the body and is almost always accompanied with a lab section to reinforce the lectures.
When Dr. James Webster, the anatomy professor, got to the reproduction section of his lectures, he asked Blackwell to absent herself, arguing that it would be too vulgar for her delicate mind.
The Electronic Library section has a collection of databases, video lectures and miscellaneous other resources.

lectures and mainly
His rallies and lectures attracted thousands of listeners in the early 30s, mainly in the upper Midwest, but by the late 30s the crowds had dwindled.
He was educated mainly at the village school, although he sometimes walked to Cambridge with the older Loammi Baldwin to attend lectures by Professor John Winthrop of Harvard College.
He owes his reputation mainly to the lectures on dogmatic theology, known as the conferences of Saint Sulpice, delivered in the church of Saint Sulpice, Paris, from 1803 to 1809, to which admiring crowds were attracted by his lucid exposition and by his graceful oratory.
The lectures have been done mainly at the employees ' former universities.
The means used to promote these objects are mainly ( I ) the formation of local branch associations throughout the country, the duty of which is by lectures, meetings and the distribution of suitable literature to make known and advocate its principles, and ( 2 ) the holding of great annual or biennial meetings of the whole association, at which its objects and principles are expounded and applied to the circumstances of the Church at the moment.
1890 ; new series, 1895 ), consisting mainly of lectures delivered before the Gesellschaft der Freunde for the benefit of the Lehranstalt für die Wissenschaft des Judenthums.
Initially the station's purpose was to broadcast lectures and educational material as well as popular music, however the output is now mainly entertainment-based, with additional specialist arts and speech programming.
Their subject matter, mainly that of miners and their living and working conditions, suggest that they may have been used to illustrate the lectures that Daintree gave across Britain to attract immigrants.
LBL consists of information delivered mainly through large lectures or seminars.
This work consists of Webb's travel journals and lectures in Asia ( mainly India during the Fall of 1892 ) and includes an extensive biographical introduction and supplemental appendices.
In addition to her lectures, she also wrote articles, mainly for the Anti-Slavery Bugle.
Students in the 1st and 2nd years as well as those on the BSc courses attend lectures and labs mainly at the main campuses.
He gave lectures for leftist groups, mainly communists, about colonialism and racial discrimination.
The master excelled in exposition of the Sacred Scriptures, and to this fact must be mainly attributed the extraordinary popularity which his lectures enjoyed.
These writings, mainly collections of articles and lectures intended for the general public, display enlightened views and wide information.

lectures and explain
In contrast to conventional classroom learning, in which a teacher lectures to the student and the student repeats the information back in tests, chavruta-style learning challenges the student to analyze and explain the material, point out the errors in his partner's reasoning, and question and sharpen each other's ideas, often arriving at entirely new insights of the meaning of the text.
Weinberg talked in two lectures about the Grand Unified Theory ( GUT ) that had been developed since 1974, and how it could explain the huge amount of matter in the universe compared to the amount of antimatter.
Hegel's lectures on the philosophy of world history are often used to introduce students to Hegel's philosophy, in part because Hegel's sometimes difficult style is muted in the lectures, and he discourses on accessible themes such as world events in order to explain his philosophy.
In order to further explain the understanding of Abdullah Sungkar concerning tauhid ( monotheism ), it is better when some of the various books he often used as pillars within his lectures are examined.
Eduardo Matos Moctezuma has worked to explain archaeology and Aztec civilization to the public through lectures, writings, and museum exhibits.
As if to defend himself from these criticisms, in the following months after the trial, Orfila had conducted well-attended public lectures, often in the presence of members of the Academy of Medicine of Paris, to explain his views on the Marsh test.
The lectures take great lengths to define and explain the terms " sincerity " and " authenticity ," though no clear, concise definition is ever really postulated, and Trilling even considers the possibility that such terms are best not totally defined.

lectures and words
It remained in use for the ' readings ' ( lectures ) and ' moots ' ( academic debates ), held in the Inns of Court as part of the education of young lawyers, but essentially it quickly became a written language alone ; it ceased to acquire new words, its grammar degenerated ( by about 1500 gender was often neglected, giving rise to such absurdities as une home (' a ( feminine ) man ') or un feme (' a ( masculine ) woman '), and its vocabulary became increasingly English, as it was used solely by English lawyers and judges who often spoke no real French.
He is remembered for delivering lectures in Russian while using as many words in Croatian as he could ; the students were able to understand him well.
" Post 9 / 11, the words of Rabbi Hillel are frequently quoted in public lectures and interviews around the world by the prominent writer on comparative religion Karen Armstrong.
In fact, it was not coined by uniting words " gouvernement " and " mentalité ", but simply by making gouvernement into gouvernementalité just like musical into musicalité government +-al-adjective +-ité abstract noun ( see " Course Context " in Foucault's " Security " lectures ).
In the earliest editions, William Gaskell added the footnotes explaining some of the words specific to the Lancashire dialect, and after the fifth edition ( 1854 ), two lectures of his on the subject were added as appendices.
The words inscribed on the monument of Dr. Jose Rizal read: " PROF. JOSE DAVID LAPUZ whose contributions to the spread and dissemination of Dr. Rizal's heroism and legacy have been his priceless and valuable lectures on the life of Rizal which he had been giving annually since 1973 up to 2008 ( a continuous period of 35 years ) and still counting ".
He has organized more than 180 lectures, visited by more than 12, 000 people ( according to his own words ).

lectures and `
There is disagreement over the amount of time Sayyid Mírzá ` Alí-Muhammad stayed in Karbila ' and the frequency of him attending Sayyid Káz &# 803 ; im's lectures ; Bahá ' í sources state that the Báb only occasionally attended the meetings, while sources more critical to the Bahá ' í Faith state that he stayed in Karbila for a year or two and learned the Shayki teachings.
* In James A. Michener ` s novel The Drifters, the narrator mentions in a digression that he learns foreign languages by listening to lectures by tutors.
Sha ` arawi resented such restrictions on women's dress and movements, and started organising lectures for women on topics of interest to them.
Da ` wah ( inviting people towards Islam ) became the dominant factor of his life, with audiences at his lectures often reaching in excess of forty thousand.
Even after resigning from Jama ` at, he continued to give Quranic lectures in different cities of Pakistan, and especially after 1965 spent a great deal of time studying the Quran. He also worked with the tablighi jamaat but then left the organization due to some methodological differences.

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