Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Jones & Bartlett Learning, a division of Ascend Learning, [1] is a scholarly publisher. The name comes from Donald W. Jones, the company's founder, and Arthur Bartlett, the first editor. The name comes from Donald W. Jones, the company's founder, and Arthur Bartlett, the first editor.
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Jones_and_Bartlett_Learning&oldid=407635813"
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Donate; Pages for logged out editors learn more
However, the dodo's meat was stated to be inedible by historical accounts, as one of its early names given by the Dutch was Walghvoghel (Tasteless bird). The dodo's decline was caused more by predation of their eggs from invasive species as opposed to direct predation from humans like the passenger pigeon or woolly mammoth .
The Individual Learning Accounts scheme was announced in the 1997 Labour Party manifesto [1] [2] to support adult education in Britain with a system of tax incentives from employers, as well as a cash contribution of £150 to each of a million individuals.
Hands are shown typing on a backlit keyboard to communicate with a computer. Cyberethics is "a branch of ethics concerned with behavior in an online environment". [1] In another definition, it is the "exploration of the entire range of ethical and moral issues that arise in cyberspace" while cyberspace is understood to be "the electronic worlds made visible by the Internet."
The use of the word proactive (or pro-active) was limited to the domain of experimental psychology in the 1930s, and used with a different meaning. [3] Oxford English Dictionary (OED) [4] credits Paul Whiteley and Gerald Blankfort, citing their 1933 paper discussing proactive inhibition as the "impairment or retardation of learning or of the remembering of what is learned by effects that ...
One common account has it that he was murdered after a dance contest through broken glass hidden in his food, but no death certificate was ever filed and the location of his grave is unknown. Frances Smith (18), was an American female teenage college student who disappeared on 13 January 1928 from Smith College in Massachusetts [ 73 ] and was ...