Rogue Scholar Beiträge

language
Sin CategoríaGeisteswissenschaftenSpanisch
Veröffentlicht in BLOG ATARRAYA
Autor Atarraya

por Lorena Torres Salmerón Dos crónicas noveladas de reciente publicación exploran distintas manifestaciones de las consecuencias sociales de la violencia que día con día atraviesa nuestro país. Por un lado, Fear is Just a Word, escrita por Azam Ahmed, y publicada a finales del 2023.

Appalachian HistoryGeschichte und ArchäologieEnglisch
Veröffentlicht in Appalachianhistorian.org
Autor Alex Hall

Appalachian History Series Kentucky on a Knife-edge In May 1861 Kentucky declared neutrality. That fragile stance crumbled in early September when Confederate forces seized crossings on the Mississippi at Columbus and moved through Cumberland Gap into the southeastern mountains.

Appalachian HistoryGeschichte und ArchäologieEnglisch
Veröffentlicht in Appalachianhistorian.org
Autor Alex Hall

Appalachian History Series Kentucky on a knife-edge In the summer and fall of 1861, neutrality in Kentucky faltered while both sides maneuvered for the mountain roads that led into the Bluegrass. Confederate Brigadier General Felix Zollicoffer pushed north from Tennessee after a small success at Barbourville, hoping to pry open eastern Kentucky.

BlogAsciidoctorDiveintosystemsKevin C. WebbLeanpubInformatikEnglisch
Veröffentlicht in UK ACM SIGCSE

The textbook has long been a mainstay of education. Although online textbooks can give students easy (and sometimes free) access to increasingly interactive resources, authors have a bewildering array of tools and publishing models to select from.

BlogJoseph MaguireSteve DraperTOCEInformatikEnglisch
Veröffentlicht in UK ACM SIGCSE

“Science is a broad church, full of narrow minds, trained to know ever more about even less”. That’s according to Steve Jones, but in Computing Education Research (CER) are we being too narrow-minded about what counts (and what doesn’t count) as a contribution?

Appalachian HistoryGeschichte und ArchäologieEnglisch
Veröffentlicht in Appalachianhistorian.org
Autor Alex Hall

Appalachian History Series Setting the Scene On the South Fork Holston River just southeast of Bristol, Tennessee, the Tennessee Valley Authority built South Holston Dam to curb destructive flooding and to supply hydropower in the mid-twentieth century. The project impounded a long, slender reservoir that reaches about 24 miles into Virginia, and it became the upstream anchor of TVA’s Holston River system.

InformatikEnglisch
Veröffentlicht in Posts | Sven Lieber

In the old days, research was done by famous individuals. Nowadays, research is a team effort! Working together requires making agreements about how to collaborate and using common tools. These kinds of agreements (or standards) and tools are especially crucial given the amount of data nowadays.

ChemieEnglisch
Veröffentlicht in Corin Wagen

I don’t write about my non-working life much on the Internet; my online presence has been pretty closely tied to Rowan and I try to adhere to some level of what Mary Harrington calls “digital modesty” regarding my family. Still, some basic demographics are helpful for context. I have two kids (aged 2 and 4) and one more due in December.

Appalachian HistoryGeschichte und ArchäologieEnglisch
Veröffentlicht in Appalachianhistorian.org
Autor Alex Hall

Appalachian History Series Introduction Martins Fork Lake is a small mountain reservoir tucked into the Smith community of Harlan County, Kentucky. Completed in 1979 by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the 340-acre lake sits at river mile 15.6 on Martins Fork, just southeast of the town of Harlan.