After Graduation

1911 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 70-76
Author(s):  
Adelia M. Hoyt

The story opens on a June afternoon as Mabel Forrester, a young blind girl, is traveling homeward from the State School for the Blind. She graduated with honors, and while she regrets leaving school and being separated from her friends, she is looking forward to a bright and hopeful future. When she is met at the station by her father and they drive to the farm which is their home, and where, since her mother's death, her aunt has been mistress; she is disappointed at the slight interest which her father manifests in her graduation and the discouraging way in which he speaks of her home life. It is no less disheartening when she talks with her aunt and sister, and she realizes that they have no confidence in her ability. She endeavors to help with the household duties, always against their wishes, but the climax is reached when she accidentally upsets a dishpan of water. After this she is not permitted to assist in any way. She wanders around aimlessly, becoming almost distracted at times because of her great disappointment. Finally, realizing that something must be done, she decides to write to Miss Lane, her former teacher, knowing that from her she will receive sympathy and assistance. Miss Lane, to whom Mabel appeals for advice, responds instantly with a very helpful letter. She herself is blind, and so can enter fully into Mabel's difficulties and point the best way out of them. She advises Mabel, instead of despairing over being shut out of the household tasks, to set about finding little unobtrusive ways of helping without asking leave. Mabel acts upon this advice, and though there are many discouraging days, she perseveres, and in time she has the comfort of feeling that little sister Lizzie is finding in the blind sister the nearest approach to a mother's love that she has ever known. Out of this companionship comes one of Mabel's sweetest rewards, for little Lizzie falls into a delightful habit of reading aloud to Mabel, who is hungry for books. Next Mabel finds herself assisting her fifteen-year-old brother Rob with his lessons. Mary, the older sister, too, begins to find in Mabel a very sympathetic companion, and in her turn tries to share her little social pleasures with Mabel. Even the aunt begins to see that this niece is a help to her in many ways. Most of all, Mabel rejoices when her father shows an appreciation of her thoughtfulness toward him, and she feels that she has at last won the confidence and respect of all her family. Almost from the first of her home-coming it has been apparent to Mabel that it was only by strictest economy the father has been able to maintain his large family. Now comes Mabel's hardest trial. She sees Mary ready to help by teaching; Rob, at the close of school, is to work for a neighboring farmer. What can Mabel do to help ? She works and waits and hopes, and of course her opportunity arrives. She has but to act — and act she does.

2008 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 168-186 ◽  
Author(s):  
BJÖRN SUNDMARK

Recently past its centenary, The Wonderful Adventures of Nils (1906–7), by Selma Lagerlöf, has remained an international children's classic, famous for its charm and magical elements. This article returns to read the book in its original contexts, and sets out to demonstrate that it was also published as a work of instruction, a work of geography, calculated to build character and nation. Arguing that it represents the vested interests of the state school system, and the national ideology of modern Sweden, the article analyses Nils's journey as the production of a Swedish ‘space’. With a focus on representations of power and nationhood in the text, it points to the way Lagerlöf takes stock of the nation's natural resources, characterises its inhabitants, draws upon legends and history, and ultimately constructs a ‘folkhem’, where social classes, ethnic groups and linguistic differences are all made to contribute to a sense of Swedish belonging and destiny.


2012 ◽  
Vol os-55 (1) ◽  
pp. 21-27 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian V. Hill
Keyword(s):  

2019 ◽  
Vol 13 (46) ◽  
pp. 332-358
Author(s):  
Ana Karyna Régis Feitosa ◽  
Márcia Cristina Moraes Cotas Videira
Keyword(s):  

O tema dessa pesquisa é o ensino da geografia, tendo como foco o uso da cartografia no processo de ensino e aprendizagem. É uma pesquisa de abordagem quantitativa. O principal objetivo trazer uma reflexão sobre a importância da linguagem cartográfica presente no cotidiano para o ensino da Geografia. Com o propósito de verificar como os professores utilizam os recursos cartográficos no Ensino Fundamental, Médio e Normal Médio da escola. O universo de pesquisa foi a Escola Estadual Padre Luiz Gonzaga, em Araripina - PE. A amostra foi composta de 215 sujeitos, sendo eles: 15 professores e 200 alunos. Para alcançar os objetivos propostos, aplicou-se a técnica da entrevista com utilização do instrumento o questionário dirigido aos professores e alunos, e realizou-se a análise dos instrumentos. Concluiu-se que o ensino da Geografia associado a uma prática pedagógica com ênfase na Cartografia encontra-se muito comprometido, ao ponto dos alunos do Ensino Médio e do Normal Médio em séries finais, especificadamente nos terceiros e quartos anos, manifestarem expectativas de aprendizagens iguais aos dos anos finais, especificadamente nonos anos do Ensino Fundamental, não consolidando as expectativas propostas para cada ano de escolaridade, ou seja, a proficiência não avança do básico para o desejável.   


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 15-23
Author(s):  
Rachel E. Silverman

Since 2016, the city of Orlando, FL, has remembered the Pulse nightclub massacre through memorial projects honoring the victims and survivors. The process of remembering and memorializing trauma is contentious; debates over how, where, who, and what to remember are about emotions, economics, and politics. Knowing that meaning making and memory are ongoing processes, I use the circuit of culture model to navigate my city’s processes and places of memorializing by visiting and interpreting different sites of memory. I argue for the power of the vernacular memorial, rather than the state-sanctioned, as a more inclusive, living form of memory.


Author(s):  
Leonard Rogoff

The Women's Club movement became the platform for Weil's social activism. Following her mother and aunt's footsteps as a leader of the Goldsboro Woman's Club, she rose in the hierarchy of the state organization, earning the sobriquet “Federation Gertie.” Eschewing marriage, she bonded with other women and remained loyal to her family while working to expand women's role beyond domesticity. An advocate of municipal housekeeping, she urged the women's movement to advocate for children and women exploited in the textile mills. Increasingly, she saw that reform would not progress without women achieving legal rights and pushed the federation to adopt suffrage resolutions.


Author(s):  
Dawn Davies ◽  
Justin Baker

Caring for a child and his or her family during the last hours and days of the child’s life is emotionally charged, with inherent pressure to ‘get things right.’ Anticipation and treatment of the patient’s changing symptoms are essential to stave off emergency situations or, at least, to be optimally prepared to deal with them. Parents must be actively supported during this time, regardless of the setting, and the availability of professional assistance must be continuous, even if this can be only by telephone in some circumstances. Access to emergency medications must be anticipated in this context. Communication must be seamless, and care providers must be prepared for sudden changes in the desired setting of care. It is much easier to plan for every contingency, knowing that some plans will go unused, than to have to cobble together suboptimal arrangements at the last minute.


2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 591-602 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anthony Bruton

AbstractThis response to Pérez-Cañado’s (2017) disappointing defence of CLIL interests insists on the need for a clear definition of CLIL not only so that it can be characterised for comparative purposes, but also so that the fundamentals underlying it can be scrutinised, instead of the continued hedging of bets on a moving target, justified for its contextual flexibility. As an example, whether CLIL classes are accompanied by FL classes on the curriculum or not is not a minor issue, both practically and theoretically. In addition other questions are reconsidered such as the communicative nature of CLIL, especially when it comes to whether the content is likely to be more motivating, and the supposed egalitarianism of CLIL initiatives. Finally, two research issues are discussed. Firstly, an example demonstrates how it is perfectly legitimate to critique empirical CLIL research which argues apparently beneficial results from a ‘due to’ stance by countering it with ‘despite’ arguments, while leaving much of the flawed CLIL research aside. Secondly, there is a reiterated demand that disinterested research at a curricular level confront outcomes in both the FLs and the content covered in CLIL programmes for all the state-school students affected both directly or indirectly, and in comparable terms.


1994 ◽  
Vol 23 (6) ◽  
pp. 855
Author(s):  
William K. Cummings ◽  
Bruce Fuller ◽  
Richard Rubinson

1995 ◽  
Vol 77 (3_suppl) ◽  
pp. 1331-1337 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. Andrew Harrell

A survey of 138 husbands in dual-earner households examined factors influencing participation in two household tasks, cleaning and cooking. Path analyses showed that husbands were more involved in these tasks if they had a nontraditional view of masculinity and if they perceived little conflict between their work and family life. Also, the greater the wives' contribution to family income, the greater the husbands' participation in cleaning and cooking. Finally, a traditional view of masculinity tended to decrease involvement in household tasks by increasing the perception of conflict between work and home life.


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