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Continuity and Change in Etruscan Domestic Architecture
Continuity and Change in Etruscan Domestic Architecture
Autore Miller Paul M
Pubbl/distr/stampa Oxford : , : Archaeopress, , 2017
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (XV, 272 p. : ill.)
Disciplina 722.6209375
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
Soggetto non controllato E-books
ISBN 1784915815
9781784915810
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Cover -- Copyright Information -- Contents -- Abstract -- Acknowledgments -- Chapter 1: Introduction -- 1.1 Book outline -- Chapter 2: Theory, methods and a review of the literature -- 2.1 Theory -- 2.1.1 Amos Rapoport and Environment-Behaviour Relations -- 2.1.2 Behaviour -- 2.1.3 Traditional, habitually innovative and actively innovative behaviours -- the process of changing behaviour -- 2.1.4 Conclusions -- 2.2 Methods -- 2.2.1 Identifying Techniques -- 2.2.2 Working from concept to abandonment -- chaîne opératoire and architecture -- 2.2.3 Conclusions -- 2.3 Domestic architectural change in context -- 2.3.1 Socio-cultural changes in the broader historical context -- 2.3.1.1 Changing society in Early Iron Age Etruria -- 2.3.1.2 Changing society in Orientalising and early Archaic period Etruria -- 2.3.2 Socio-cultural changes in relation to architecture -- 2.4 A review of the literature on four key sites -- 2.4.1 San Giovenale -- 2.4.2 Acquarossa -- 2.4.3 Lago dell'Accesa -- 2.4.4 Poggio Civitate (Murlo) -- 2.4.5 Conclusions -- 2.5 Conclusion -- Chapter 3: The foundations of early Etruscan buildings, 800-625 BC -- 3.1 Foundation Type 1 -- 3.1.1 Ground preparation -- 3.1.2 Wall footings -- 3.1.3 Flooring -- 3.1.4 Roof supports -- 3.1.5 Rectangular Foundation Type 1 buildings -- 3.2 Foundation Type 2 -- 3.2.1 Ground preparation -- 3.2.2 Wall footings -- 3.2.2.1 Robust and refined socles: a sign of technological sophistication? -- 3.2.3 Flooring -- 3.2.4 Roof supports -- 3.3 Foundation Type 3 -- 3.3.1 Wall footings -- 3.3.1.1 The interaction between bedrock and rubble in the Large Iron Age Building -- 3.3.1.2 The shelf wall footings of San Giovenale Area F East's House I -- 3.3.2 Flooring -- 3.3.3 Roof supports -- 3.3.4 Élite residence or communal building? A discussion of function and social stratification -- 3.4 Conclusions.
Chapter 4: The foundations of Orientalising and early Archaic period Etruscan buildings, 625-500 BC -- 4.1 Foundation Type 4 -- 4.1.1 Ground preparation -- 4.1.2 Wall footings -- 4.1.3 Flooring -- 4.1.4 Roof supports -- 4.1.5 The importance of the courtyard and the appearance of the building unit -- 4.2 Foundation Type 5 -- 4.2.1 Ground preparation -- 4.2.2 Wall footings -- 4.2.3 Flooring -- 4.2.4 Roof supports -- 4.2.5 Variability in Type 5 foundations -- 4.3 Conclusions -- 4.3.1 The traditional and innovative techniques of Foundation Type 4 -- 4.3.2 The traditional and innovative techniques of Foundation Type 5 -- 4.3.3 Is there a discernable difference in the foundations between a 'hut' and a 'house'? -- Chapter 5: The walls and roofs of Etruscan domestic structures, 800-500 BC -- 5.1 Walls -- 5.1.1 Defining non-stone walling techniques -- 5.1.1.1 Wattle -- 5.1.1.2 Wattle vs. graticcio -- 5.1.1.3 Pisé -- 5.1.1.4 Wall footings and the identification of non-stone walling -- 5.1.1.5 Mud brick -- 5.1.2 Defining stone walling techniques and the debate over the timber-to-stone transition in Etruscan architecture -- 5.1.3 Evidence of wall types -- 5.1.3.1 Direct evidence of wall techniques -- 5.1.3.2 Circumstantial evidence of walling techniques -- 5.1.3.3 Stone walling techniques and circumstantial evidence -- 5.1.4 Conclusions on walls -- 5.2 Roofs -- 5.2.1 Ö. Wikander's typology and C. Wikander's model: The established concepts of seventh- and sixth-century tile roofing -- 5.2.2 The transition between hipped and saddle roofing types -- 5.2.3 Conclusions on roofs -- 5.3 Conclusions -- Chapter 6: Material Procurement, Production and Use -- 6.1 The difference between building materials and building techniques -- 6.2 Was there a transition in raw material procurement, composition or use from 800-500 BC? -- 6.2.1 Stone -- 6.2.2 Timber.
6.2.2.1 The environmental impact of timber procurement and its effect on Etruscan domestic architecture -- 6.2.3 Clay and cane -- 6.2.4 Conclusions -- 6.3 How did the production and use of manufactured building materials change from 800-500 BC? -- 6.3.1 800-700 BC -- 6.3.2 699-600 BC -- 6.3.2.1 Clay-revetted thatch and the early manufacture of terracotta tiles -- 6.3.2.2 Why does ashlar tufa stone production and use stand out? -- 6.3.3 599-500 BC -- 6.4 Were changes in architecture a result of new materials? -- 6.5 Conclusions -- Chapter 7: Conclusions -- 7.1 Reasons for change -- building techniques in Etruscan domestic architecture from 800-500 BC -- 7.1.1 What instigated the innovations in foundation techniques? -- 7.1.2 Is there evidence for innovation in walling techniques? -- 7.1.3 What triggered the transitions in the construction of Etruscan roofs? -- 7.1.4 Summary of primary results -- 7.2 The broader implications and limitations of this book -- 7.2.1 The place of this book within the scholarly literature -- The broader implications of research on building techniques -- 7.2.2 Limitations of this study -- 7.2.2.1 Limits of the evidence -- 7.2.2.2 Other weaknesses in the evidence -- Glossary -- Bibliography -- Figure 2.1. The "model of evaluative process", used in EBR studies (Rapoport 2000: 146). -- Figure 2.2. This sequence of morphogenesis in cognitive structures (e.g. habitus) outlines how the individual or the group alter the established habitus. 'Relation (a)' is the social conditioning on the agent and 'Relation (b)' is the unconscious or consc -- Figure 2.3. Tomba della Campana at Veii based on Canina's (1847: pl. 31) inscription (Leighton 2005: 376). -- Figure 2.4. Map of Etruria (after Catalli 2001: 89).
Figure 2.5. Plan of San Giovenale Area F East (after Karlsson 2006), courtesy of the Editorial Committee of the Swedish Institutes at Athens and Rome. -- Figure 2.6. Plan of the Borgo quarter at San Giovenale (Pohl 2009: pl. 114), courtesy of the Editorial Committee of the Swedish Institutes at Athens and Rome. -- Figure 2.7. Plan of San Giovenale Area E at the end of excavation (Pohl 1977: fig. 1, p. 14), courtesy of the Editorial Committee of the Swedish Institutes at Athens and Rome. -- Figure 2.8. Plan 3 of Capanna I at San Giovenale Area D (Malcus 1984: fig. 21, p. 50), courtesy of the Editorial Committee of the Swedish Institutes at Athens and Rome. -- Figure 2.9. Plan of Acquarossa Zones C and F (Persson 1994: fig. 6, p. 297), courtesy of the Editorial Committee of the Swedish Institutes at Athens and Rome. -- Figure 2.10. Plan of Lago dell'Accesa Area A (after Camporeale 1985: 132-133). -- Figure 2.11. Plan of Poggio Civitate (Berkin 2003: 9), courtesy of J. Berkin. -- Figure 2.12. Section of the agger at Poggio Civitate (Phillips 1967: fig. 20), courtesy of American Journal of Archaeology and Archaeological Institute of America. -- Figure 3.1. Plan of Capanna I at San Giovenale Area D (Malcus 1984: fig. 21, p. 50), courtesy of the Editorial Committee of the Swedish Institutes at Athens and Rome. -- Figure 3.2. Plan of the Rectangular Timber Building under the fifth century BC rampart at Veii (Ward-Perkins 1959: 51). -- Figure 3.3. Plan of San Giovenale Area E at the end of excavation (Pohl 1977: fig. 1, p. 14), courtesy of the Editorial Committee of the Swedish Institutes at Athens and Rome. -- Figure 3.4. Plan of San Giovenale Area F East during the Iron Age (prehistoric remains) (Karlsson 2006: fig. 264, p. 139), courtesy of the Editorial Committee of the Swedish Institutes at Athens and Rome.
Figure 3.5. Site map of Sorgenti della Nova with Section III encircled (Dolfini 2013: 136). -- Figure 3.6. Plan of the so-called "Timber Structure from the Earliest Age" (Ward-Perkins 1959: 52). -- Figure 3.7. Section (top) and plan (bottom) of Sorgenti della Nova Section III (Negroni Catacchio 1995: 96) -- courtesy of Istituto Italiano di Preistoria e Protostoria. -- Figure 3.8. Plan of Calvario sui Monterozzi at Tarquinia (after Linington 1982: 252). -- Figure 3.9. Channels of the southern end of Abitazione 2 from Sorgenti della Nova Section III, including several postholes and exterior channels of uncertain function (Dolfini 2002: 21), courtesy of Centro Studi di Preistoria e Archeologia. -- Figure 3.10. Section of San Giovenale Area E's Oval Hut I (Pohl 1977: fig. 7, p. 18), courtesy of the Editorial Committee of the Swedish Institutes at Athens and Rome. -- Figure 3.11. Abitazione 6 from Section IX at Sorgenti della Nova during excavation (Negroni Catacchio and Cardosa 2007: 111), courtesy of Centro Studi di Preistoria e Archeologia. Note the erosion on the bedrock at the right side of the picture. -- Figure 3.12. Plan of the Iron Age capanna at Fidene. Areas marked with the number 1 on the plan indicate the presence of the tufa bench/bank (Bietti Sestieri and de Santis 2001: fig. 3, p. 213), courtesy of the Editorial Committee of the Swedish Institute -- Figure 3.13. Modern reconstruction of an Iron Age capanna at Fidene (Bietti Sestieri and de Santis 2001: fig. 2, p. 212), courtesy of the Editorial Committee of the Swedish Institutes at Athens and Rome. -- Figure 3.14. Site plan of Montereggioni-Campassini (Bartoloni 2001: fig. 7, p. 364), courtesy of the Editorial Committee of the Swedish Institutes at Athens and Rome.
Figure 3.15. Diagram of four different types of roof supports (after Büchsenschütz 2001: fig. 6, p. 226), courtesy of the Editorial Committee of the Swedish Institutes at Athens and Rome.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910511341703321
Miller Paul M  
Oxford : , : Archaeopress, , 2017
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Doing qualitative research : the craft of naturalistic inquiry / / Joost Beuving and Geert de Vries [[electronic resource]]
Doing qualitative research : the craft of naturalistic inquiry / / Joost Beuving and Geert de Vries [[electronic resource]]
Autore Beuving Joost
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam : , : Amsterdam University Press, , 2015
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (220 pages) : digital, PDF file(s)
Disciplina 300.72
Soggetto topico Qualitative research
Sociology - Methodology
Soggetto non controllato E-books
ISBN 90-485-2552-7
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Front matter -- Contents -- List of boxes -- List of figures -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction: The arc of naturalistic inquiry -- 1. On naturalistic inquiry: Key issues and practices -- 2. Theorizing society: Grounded theory in naturalistic inquiry -- 3. Looking at society: Observing, participating, interpreting -- 4. Talking about society: Interviewing and casual conversation -- 5. Reading society: Texts, images, things -- 6. Disentangling society: The analysis of social networks -- 7. Not getting lost in society: On qualitative analysis -- 8. Telling about society: On writing -- Epilogue: Present and future of naturalistic inquiry -- References -- Index of names -- Index of subjects.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910460929103321
Beuving Joost  
Amsterdam : , : Amsterdam University Press, , 2015
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Objects of the Past in the Past
Objects of the Past in the Past
Autore Knight Matthew G
Pubbl/distr/stampa Summertown : , : Archaeopress, , 2019
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (77 fig., 11 tables)
Disciplina 930.1
Altri autori (Persone) BoughtonDot
WilkinsonRachel E
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
Soggetto non controllato E-books
ISBN 1-78969-249-0
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Cover -- Copyright Information -- Contents -- Contributors -- Chapter 1 -- Objects of the Past in the Past -- Figure 1.1: The Hammer of St Martin (image courtesy of Museum Catharijneconvent, Utrecht / Ruben de Heer) -- Figure 1.2: Two Late Bronze Age amber beads used as charms against blindness by the Macdonalds of Glencoe, Scotland, in the 19th century (NMS Acc. Nos H.NO 4-5). © National Museums Scotland. -- Figure 1.3: A prehistoric flint arrowhead mounted in a gold pendant to be worn as an amulet (NMS Acc. No. H.NO 75). © National Museums Scotland. -- Chapter 2 -- Doubtful associations? Assessing Bronze Age 'multi-period' hoards from northern England, Scotland and Wales -- Matthew G. Knight -- Figure 2.1: Frequency of different out-of-time object types found in Late Bronze Age multi-period hoards from northern England, Scotland and Wales. -- Figure 2.2: A map of Britain and Ireland showing the distribution of the case studies described in this paper (numbers correlate with Table 1 and the appendix). Case studies are plotted according to the likelihood of truly representing an out-of-time depo -- Figure 2.3: The Callander hoard. Illustration: Alan Braby © National Museums Scotland -- Figure 2.4: The Kincardine hoard. Photo: M. Knight, courtesy of the Highland Folk Museum -- Figure 2.5: The Corsbie Moss spearhead and sword. Photo: M. Knight © National Museums Scotland -- Figure 2.6: A selection of worn and fragmentary blades from Duddingston Loch. The Middle Bronze Age rapier is illustrated bottom right. Illustration: Marion O'Neil © National Museums Scotland -- Figure 2.7: The expected typological durations of the objects in the Kincardine and Callander hoards (following information in Burgess and Gerloff 1981 -- Davis 2012 -- Schmidt and Burgess 1981) -- Chapter 3 -- Connecting with the past: Earliest Iron Age multi-period hoards in Wessex.
Dot Boughton -- Figure 3.1: Melksham Hoard (Wiltshire). Image used with kind permission of Devizes Museum. -- Figure 3.2: Stockbury Hoard (Kent). Treasure Number 2011T110. Image courtesy of the Portable Antiquities Scheme, licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. -- Figure 3.3: Distribution of Earliest Iron Age socketed axeheads in South England, South West England and South Wales. Key: 1 = Hindon, Wiltshire (WILT-9439A7) -- 2 = Hindon II, Wiltshire (WILT-A74356) -- 3 = Tisbury, Wiltshire (WILT-0594F7) -- 4 = Vale of War -- Figure 3.4: Examples of Portland-type axes from the Portland Hoard (Dorset). Image used with kind permission of The Salisbury Museum (Pitt Rivers Collection). -- Figure 3.5: Top (left to right): socketed axeheads from Salisbury Hoard (1, 2), socketed axehead from Blandford Hoard (3). Bottom: socketed gouges from Blandford Hoard, (Dorset). Illustration: D. Boughton. -- Figure 3.6: The Vale of Wardour Hoard (Wiltshire). Treasure Number 2011T684. Image used with kind permission of The Salisbury Museum. -- Figure 3.7: Part of Figheldean Down Hoard (Wiltshire). Image used with kind permission of The Salisbury Museum. -- Figure 3.8: Comparison of two socketed axeheads from the Salisbury Hoard (left) and Figheldean Down Hoard (right), (Wiltshire). Illustration: D. Boughton. -- Figure 3.9: Socketed axehead from Rookley Farm, Stockbridge (Hampshire). Portable Antiquities Number: HAMP1871. Image courtesy of the Portable Antiquities Scheme, licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. -- Figure 3.10: Danebury Hoard (Hampshire). Andover Museum (Hampshire Cultural Trust). -- Figure 3.11: Razors, socketed leather-working knives and chape from Salisbury Hoard. Illustration: D. Boughton. -- Figure 3.12: One of over five hundred socketed axehead of Portland type from Langton Matravers Hoard (Dorset). Image used with kind permission of Dorset County Museum, Dorchester.
Chapter 4 -- The Devil or the Divine? Supernatural objects and multi-period hoards in later prehistory -- Alex Davies -- Figure 4.1: Part of the Minster hoard, showing a palstave belonging to the Penard stage, and other later objects of the Ewart Park stage (adapted from Turner 2010: Illustrations 108, 113 and 115) Reproduced with kind permission of BAR Publishing www.barpu -- Figure 4.2: Six axes from the Crooksbury Hill hoard (Anon 1854, except palstave on right is from Needham 1980: fig. 5.4). Courtesy of Surrey Archaeological Society -- Figure 4.3: Part of the Shoebury 1 hoard, showing a palstave belonging to the Taunton stage, a large decorated bracelet from the Alps, and a selection of Ewart Park objects (adapted from Smith 1958). © Trustees of the British Museum -- Figure 4.4: Earliest and Early Iron Age exotic objects from the continent. -- Chapter 5 -- Iron Age antiques: Assessing the functions of old objects in Britain from 400 BC to AD 100 -- Helen Chittock -- Figure 5.1: A sketch of RF40 from the South Cave Hoard, and a close-up of its replacement chape. H. Chittock, with kind permission from David Marchant, Beverley Treasure House. -- Figure 5.2: The Grotesque Torc, Snettisham (British Museum 1991,0407.37) ©Trustees of the British Museum, with kind permission. -- Figure 5.3: An x-ray of the Kirkburn sword, showing repair to its front plate (British Museum, 1987,0404.2) ©Trustees of the British Museum, with kind permission. -- Figure 5.4: The Grimthorpe shield (British Museum 1876,0208.1) ©Trustees of the British Museum, with kind permission. -- Figure 5.5: Sketches showing the varied patterns observed on the fittings of the Grimthorpe Shield. Top left: central boss. Top right: small disc. Bottom: border of crescentic plaque. See Figure 5.4 for scale. Illustration: H. Chittock. -- Chapter 6 -- The Antique Antique? -- Mark Lewis.
Figure 6.1: The Museum of Antiquities, Caerleon, 1850, by James Flewitt Mullock (1818-1892). By permission of Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru / National Library of Wales. TIRLUN CYMRU Monmouthshire Top. B10/1 B024 -- Figure 6.2: (a) The tombstone of Tadia Vallaunius from Caerleon with Latin capital letters cut at Caerleon during the second or third centuries AD (AC-NMW Acc. No. 31.78, RIB I 369). (b) Silver finger ring bezel from the Caerleon Fortress Baths (AC-NMW Ac -- Figure 6.3: (a) and (b) Glass and nicolo paste ring settings imitating gem stones from the Caerleon Fortress Baths excavations (AC-NMW Acc. No. 81.79H/4.52 (3a) and 81.79H/4.34 (3b)). (c) and (d) Contemporary forgeries from the Llanvaches Coin Hoard (AC-N -- Figure 6.4: Caerleon Prysg Field Nereid gem and iron finger ring (AC-NMW Acc. No. 32.60/4. (stolen)). © Amgueddfa Cymru-National Museum Wales -- Figure 6.5: Glass counters from the Praetorium deposit (AC-NMW Acc. No. 31.78, Caerleon Number 6.1). © Amgueddfa Cymru - National Museum Wales -- Figure 6.6: Repurposed Roman ceramic antefixa from Caerleon (AC-NMW Acc. Nos left to right (a): 63.228B F37b, (b): 81.79H/55.1 and (c): 56.214B F47 73). © Amgueddfa Cymru - National Museum Wales -- Figure 6.7: The Caerleon 'Roman Gates' excavation 'Celtic Horse stud' (AC-NMW Acc. No. 88.165H/71). © Amgueddfa Cymru - National Museum Wales -- Figure 6.8: (a) An epoxy resin cast from a pewter replica of the Caerleon 'Roman Gates' genius togatus figurine made at the time of its discovery and owned by Graham Oxlade. (b) The replica figure during mould making for making the epoxy resin replica sho -- Figure 6.9: Published illustration and photograph of geological fossils from excavations at (a) Roman Caerleon and (b) Roman Usk (AC-NMW Acc. Nos (a): 81.79H/44.23 -- (b): 82.11H). © Amgueddfa Cymru - National Museum Wales -- Chapter 7.
Rethinking heirlooms in early medieval graves -- Chapter 7 -- Rethinking heirlooms in early medieval graves -- Brian Costello and Howard Williams -- Figure 7.1: Map of east Kent showing the Mill Hill, Deal, and Saltwood Tunnel, Saltwood, cemeteries in relation to the overall distribution of known early Anglo-Saxon cemeteries (Base map of historic coastline re-drawn after Brookes and Harrington (2010: -- Figure 7.2: Schematic annotated grave-plans of the four early Anglo-Saxon inhumation graves that form the focus of this study. Top-left: grave 61, Mill Hill, Deal (after Parfitt and Brugmann 1997: 201) -- top-right: grave 102, Mill Hill, Deal (after Parfitt -- Chapter 8 -- Medieval engagements with the material past: some evidence from European coin hoards, AD c. 1000-1500 -- Murray Andrews -- Figure 8.1: Pierced gold aureus of Numerian (RIC V Carus 443), issued in AD 283-284, from the late fourteenth-century Erfurt hoard (Weissenborn 1878: 211) -- Figure 8.2: Impression of a medieval silver signet ring, incorporating a Roman carnelian intaglio, from the Evesham Abbey Gardens hoard (Cuming 1876: 116) -- Chapter 9 -- Deep Time in the ruins of a Tudor Palace? - Fossils from the Palace of Placentia, Greenwich -- Peter J. Leeming -- Figure 9.1: A variety of fossil belemnites, showing the ends of two larger examples (A and B) -- the cross section of one specimen showing the concentric growth-rings and the siphuncle (C) -- a specimen where the siphuncle is not preserved -- the join of the gu -- Figure 9.2: A fossil belemnite in cross section in a slab of polished Jura Limestone now used decoratively in the Arndale Centre, Manchester. This specimen has the usual hard bullet-like rostrum surviving, but also has the rarer survival of the phragmocon -- Figure 9.3: (a) Belemnite from Greenwich, BM Acc. No. 1954,1102.60.
(b) Piece of stone with cast of fossil, BM Acc. No. 1954,1102.59. Sketches by the author.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910511369103321
Knight Matthew G  
Summertown : , : Archaeopress, , 2019
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The power of play in higher education : creativity in tertiary learning / / editors, Alison James and Chrissi Nerantzi
The power of play in higher education : creativity in tertiary learning / / editors, Alison James and Chrissi Nerantzi
Edizione [1st ed. 2019.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Cham, : Imprint : Palgrave Macmillan, , 2019
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (liv, 359 pages) : illustrations
Soggetto topico Higher education
Art education
Learning
Instruction
Alternative Education
Higher Education
Creativity and Arts Education
Learning & Instruction
Soggetto non controllato E-books
ISBN 3-319-95780-5
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Chapter 1. Making a case for the playful university; Alison James -- PART I. Trainers and Developers -- Chapter 2. Exploration: Becoming playful: the power of a ludic module; Sandra Sinfield, Tom Burns, Sandra Abegglen -- Chapter 3. Exploration: ESCAPE! Puzzling out learning theories through play; Jennie Mills and Emma King -- Chapter 4. Exploration: "I learned to play again" The integration of active play as a learning experience for Sports Coaching Undergraduates; Richard Cheetham -- Chapter 5. Sketch: The Training Game; Scott Roberts -- Chapter 6. Exploration: Play in Practice - innovation through play in the postgraduate curriculum; Sophy Smith -- Chapter 7. Exploration: Experiences of running a 'Play and Creativity' module in a School of Art and Design; Gareth Loudon -- PART II. Wanderers and Wonderers -- Chapter 8. The Dark Would, higher education, play, and playfulness -- Chapter 9. Exploration: Playing with Place: responding to invitations; Helen Clarke and Sharon Witt -- Chapter 10. Exploration: Cabinets of Curiosities: Playing with artefacts in professional teacher education; Sarah Williamson -- Chapter 11. Sketch: playful pedagogies: collaborations between undergraduates and school pupils in the outdoor learning centre and the pop up 'playscape'; Chantelle Haughton and Sian Sarwar -- Chapter 12. Sketch: Teaching and Learning inside the Culture Shoe Box; Hoda Wassif and Maged Zakher -- PART III. Experimenters and Engagers -- Chapter 13. Exploration: Dopamine and the Hard Work of Learning Science; Lindsay Wheeler and Michael Palmer -- Chapter 14. Exploration: Play in Engineering Education; Bruce D. Kothmann -- Chapter 15. Sketch: Experiencing the necessity of Project Management through the egg-dropping challenge; Tobias Seidl -- Chapter 16. Exploration: Public engagement activities for chemistry students; Dudley Shallcross and Tim Harrison -- Chapter 17. Sketch: Playful Maths; Chris Budd -- Chapter 18. Sketch: Connecting people and places using worms and waste; Sharon Boyd and Andrea Roe -- Chapter 19. Sketch: Maths, Meccano and Motivation; Judith McCullouch -- Chapter 20. Exploration: Playful Urban Learning Space - An Interdisciplinary Collaboration; Clive Holtham and Tine Bech -- Chapter 21. Sketch: Novelty shakes things up in the history classroom; Carey Fleiner -- PART IV. Wordsmiths and Communicators -- Chapter 22. Exploration: Don't Write on Walls! Playing with cityscapes in a foreign language course; Melanie Peron -- Chapter 23. Sketch: Poetry as Play: Using Riskless Poetry Writing to Support Instruction; Ann-Marie Klein -- Chapter 24. Sketch: On word play in support of academic development; Daphne Loads -- Chapter 25. Sketch: The Communications Factory; Suzanne Rankin-Dia and Rob Lakin -- Chapter 26. Sketch: Playful Writing with Writing PAD; Julia Reeve and Kaye Towlson -- PART V. Builders and Simulators -- Chapter 27. Exploration: Wigs, brown source and theatrical dames: clinical simulation as play; Caroline Pelletier and Roger Kneebone -- Chapter 29. Exploration: Building the abstract: metaphorical Play-Doh modelling in Health Sciences; Rachel Stead -- Chapter 30. Sketch: Our learning journey with LEGO; Alison James and Chrissi Nerantzi -- Chapter 31. Using LEGO to explore 'professional love' as an element of Youth Work practice: opportunities and obstacles; Martin Purcell -- Chapter 32. Sketch: Creating LEGO Representations of Theory; Nicola Simmons -- PART VI. Gamers and Puzzlers -- Chapter 33. Exploration: A dancer and a writer walk into a classroom; Seth Hudson and Boris Willis -- Chapter 34. Exploration: From the Players Point of View; Maxwell Hartt and Hadi Hosseini -- Chapter 35. Exploration: Wardopoly: Game-based Experiential Learning in Nurse Leadership Education; Bernadette Henderson, Andrew Clements, Melanie Webb and Alexander Kofinas -- Chapter 36. Exploration: Using Play to Design Play: Gamification and Student involvement in the production of Games-Based Learning resources for Research Methods Teaching; Natalie Gerodetti and Darren Nixon -- Chapter 37. Sketch: Table top gaming in Wildlife Conservation: 'Park Life'; Louise Robinson and Ian Turner -- Chapter 28. Sketch: 'Frogger it, I'd rather be playing computer games than referencing my assignment': a Harvard Referencing Game; Tracy Dix -- Chapter 39. Sketch: Using play to facilitate faculty-student partnership: how can you co-design a module?; Sarah Dyer and Tanya Lubicz-Nawrocka -- Chapter 40. Sketch: Imagination needs moodling; Debra Abrams -- Chapter 41. Exploration: It's a serious business learning how to reference - playfully; Juliette Smeed -- Chapter 42. The playground model revisited. A proposition for playfulness to boost creativity in academic development; Chrissi Nerantzi.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910337746303321
Cham, : Imprint : Palgrave Macmillan, , 2019
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Thrive online : a new approach to building expertise and confidence as an online educator
Thrive online : a new approach to building expertise and confidence as an online educator
Pubbl/distr/stampa Sterling, Virginia : , : Stylus, , 2019
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (302 pages)
Soggetto topico Web-based instruction
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
Soggetto non controllato E-books
ISBN 1620367459
9781620367452
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Record Nr. UNINA-9910493661203321
Sterling, Virginia : , : Stylus, , 2019
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Towards a Natural Social Contract : Transformative Social-Ecological Innovation for a Sustainable, Healthy and Just Society
Towards a Natural Social Contract : Transformative Social-Ecological Innovation for a Sustainable, Healthy and Just Society
Autore Huntjens Patrick
Pubbl/distr/stampa Cham, : Springer International Publishing AG, 2021
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (212 pages) : ill
Soggetto topico 211 Politieke filosofie
468 Innovatie
520 Milieubeleid
658 Maatschappij. Overige aspecten
Duurzaamheid
Ecologie
Sociaal beleid
Soggetto non controllato E-books
ISBN 9783030671297
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Intro -- Foreword by Prof. Dr. René Kemp -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- About the Author -- Part I: The Quest for a Natural Social Contract -- 1: Introduction -- 1.1 Reader´s Guide -- 2: Sustainability Transition: Quest for a New Social Contract -- 2.1 Paradox of Prosperity -- 2.2 Ecological Limits of Our Planet -- 2.3 Emerging Security and Justice Challenges -- 2.4 The Sustainability Transition: Humankind´s Quest for a New Social Contract -- 2.5 What´s Beyond the Sustainable Development Goals? -- 3: Towards a Natural Social Contract -- 3.1 What Is a Social Contract? -- 3.2 Human Progress Without Economic Growth? -- 3.3 Redesigning Economics Based on Ecology -- 3.4 Debate on Role and Scope of the Free Market -- 3.5 Anglo-Saxon Model Versus Rhineland Model -- 3.6 Looking for a New Social Contract -- 3.7 A Natural Social Contract -- 3.8 Dimensions and Crossovers Within a Natural Social Contract -- Social Dimension -- Nature Connects -- Ecological Dimension -- Economic Dimension -- Institutional Dimension -- 3.9 TSEI-Framework for Understanding and Advancing the Process Towards a Natural Social Contract -- 3.10 Development of a Natural Social Contract at Multiple Governance Levels -- Part II: Theories and Concepts -- 4: Conceptual Background of Transformative Social-Ecological Innovation -- 4.1 Definition of Transformative Social-Ecological Innovation (TSEI) -- 4.2 Transition Studies -- 4.3 Institutional Design Principles for Governing the Commons -- 4.4 Design Principles from Nature: Benchmarks for a Natural Social Contract -- 4.5 Complex (Adaptive) Systems -- 4.6 Adaptive, Reflexive, and Deliberative Approaches to Governance -- 4.7 Social Learning, Policy Learning, and Transformational Learning -- 4.8 Shared Value, Multiple Value Creation, and Mutual Gains -- 4.9 Effective Cooperation. AUTHOR
4.10 Transdisciplinary Approach, Living Labs, and Citizen Science -- 4.11 The Art of Co-creation: Approaches, Principles, and Pitfalls -- Part III: A Research and Innovation Agenda -- 5: Analytical Instruments for Studying TSEI -- 5.1 Analytical Framework for Transformative Social-Ecological Innovation (TSEI) -- 5.2 Power and Network Analysis -- 5.3 Framework for Analysing Different Levels of Collective Learning -- 5.4 Collaborative Action Research -- 6: Transition to a Sustainable and Healthy Agri-Food System -- 6.1 Challenges and Developments -- 6.2 NWA Programme `Transition to a Sustainable Food System´ -- 6.3 Nature-Inclusive and Regenerative Agriculture -- 6.4 Closing the Gaps Between Citizens, Farmers, and Nature -- 6.5 Measuring Sustainability and Health Aspects of Our Food Chains -- 6.6 South Holland Food Family: Transition Towards a Sustainable and Self-Sufficient Food System -- 7: Governance of Urban Sustainability Transitions -- 7.1 Urban Challenges and Developments -- 7.2 Climate-Resilient and Healthy Cities -- 7.3 Feeding and Greening Megacities -- 7.4 From Linear to Circular and Regenerative Cities -- 7.5 Collaboration for the City of the Future -- 8: Conclusion -- Correction to: Conceptual Background of Transformative Social-Ecological Innovation -- Correction to: Chapter 4 in: P. Huntjens, Towards a Natural Social Contract, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-67130-3_4 -- References.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910473446803321
Huntjens Patrick  
Cham, : Springer International Publishing AG, 2021
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