Page 178 • (2,074 results in 0.103 seconds)

  • Volume 1 (2013) CP Hidden Treasures Volume 2 (2014) CP Treasures, Volume III: Colored Pencil Masterworks from Around the Globe (2014) And her work has been published in: Creating Textures in Colored Pencil by Gary Greene (chapter artist) Creative Colored Pencil, The American Society of Portrait Artists’ Signature Magazine (Summer, 1996) Best of Colored Pencil II, III and IV And so she did. She made her first sale to her kid brother, and this “set a course for her life,” she said. Within a year, she

  • ; – and what to look for to ensure the credibility of online information. The class culminated in a final “Critical Making” project, where students built, designed, or mocked up a media literacy tool. The goal of the assignment was to envision a web that prioritized the circulation of credible information. Critical making is a process where students apply theories and concepts to a creative project or artifact, and where imaginative design – focusing more on engagement with theory and concepts, rather

  • adopt special rule(s) of order, as permitted by its governing authority, Robert’s Rules of Order, Newly Revised. The following Special Rules of Order, while not themselves part of the Bylaws, have been adopted by the Faculty Assembly. A motion for an informal discussion, with a specified time limit, is in order when no other motion is pending. Questions for the president must be submitted in writing to the president. Once the president has the floor, they may choose to take additional questions from

  • probably be categorized as generalizable knowledge thus requiring IRB review and approval. Note that if a task is involved in addition to the survey or interview, this makes a study ineligible for Category 2. Activities that are simply part of answering the survey or interview, such as writing responses, will not be considered tasks. Examples of tasks include: asking participants to physically manipulate an object (not including asking subjects to click through survey or use a pencil to write survey

  • probably be categorized as generalizable knowledge thus requiring HPRB review and approval. Note that if a task is involved in addition to the survey or interview, this makes a study ineligible for Category 2. Activities that are simply part of answering the survey or interview, such as writing responses, will not be considered tasks. Examples of tasks include: asking participants to physically manipulate an object (not including asking subjects to click through survey or use a pencil to write survey

  • . The English requirement is intended to demonstrate competency in grammar and composition as well as comprehension and analysis of written work. In general, the English requirement is met by taking courses that schools would recognize as writing or literature courses.Behavioral Sciences: The following course is recommended for anyone entering into the Optometry field. Some programs require one or more social or behavioral science courses while others only recommend they be taken. Please check with

  • English requirement is met by taking courses that veterinary schools would recognize as writing or literature courses. Courses in the Humanities, Social Sciences and Arts The majority of veterinary schools have formal requirements for courses in social sciences, humanities and arts. However, often these requirements are waived if the applicant has or will be earning a BA/BS degree. A course in oral communication, either interpersonal or group communication or public speaking, is often

  • . The English requirement is intended to demonstrate competency in grammar and composition as well as comprehension and analysis of written work. In general, the English requirement is met by taking courses that schools would recognize as writing or literature courses.Behavioral Sciences: The following course is recommended for anyone entering into the Optometry field. Some programs require one or more social or behavioral science courses while others only recommend they be taken. Please check with

  • English requirement is met by taking courses that veterinary schools would recognize as writing or literature courses. Courses in the Humanities, Social Sciences and Arts The majority of veterinary schools have formal requirements for courses in social sciences, humanities and arts. However, often these requirements are waived if the applicant has or will be earning a BA/BS degree. A course in oral communication, either interpersonal or group communication or public speaking, is often

  • .”  A student of History may focus on the “continuity in human society over time” by “evaluating evidence, organizing information, clarifying and structuring concepts, and writing narratives and expositions,” or a student of Physics may study the material universe in a specific time and place (say, atoms, black holes, or super-conductors). Classics, however, rather than covering a single discipline at a single time and place covers all human activity in the Mediterranean world from the Bronze Age