Editors\u27 Message Surrounded by the dead he had caused through his wanton murder of an albatross, the tortured mariner of Samuel Taylor Coleridge fame watches the water snakes beyond the shadow of his ghost ship and “blessed them unaware./The selfsame moment I could pray; And from my neck so free/The Albatross fell off, and sank/Like lead into the sea” (ll. 287-291). Without deliberately looking, he suddenly recognizes the beauty of all creatures and blesses them “unaware.” The sailor experiences a serendipitous moment, and through that accidental wisdom frees himself from his self-created purgatory. Serendipity: Teaching for Accidental Wisdom serves as the theme for our ninth volume of JAEPL. The essays in this volume reflect in various ...
As long ago as 1968 Dwight Waldo of the UC Berkeley Institute of Government Studies drew attention t...
Presentation at National Youth-at-Risk Conference Relevance The goal of this collaboration was to a...
Message from President: Academe is not immune to the new epidemic of affiliation. Often enough, thin...
Editors\u27 Message Whitman writes in Reconciliation : For my enemy is dead, a man divine as myse...
DE Oracle @ UMUC An Online Learning Magazine for UMUC Faculty Center for Support of Instruction Writ...
“Truly, I live in dark times!”. In the poetry of Bertolt Brecht, reviewed in the fifth article of th...
Message from President: Visiting the web sites, social media pages, or similar mass-distribution ven...
Using the epistolary genre, this editorial is embedded in a fictional letter written to a teacher. T...
Message from President: Christmas, as it was called before it became a generic all-purpose “holiday,...
Dear TOJDE Readers, Welcome to the Volume 13 Number: 4 of TOJDE! In this issue, one book review an...
Message from President: Among the axioms endorsed by literary people is the assumption that comedy c...
15 Years of Predictions and Realities With this issue we begin our fifteenth year of publication. T...
It is generally accepted among scholars and educators that literacy is critical to positive educatio...
LEARNING COMES TOGETHER 1. The Age of Discovery and the Age of Transition: Discovery and Research in...
Introduction This is a book about people - a group of people who lived in Bengal during the end of ...
As long ago as 1968 Dwight Waldo of the UC Berkeley Institute of Government Studies drew attention t...
Presentation at National Youth-at-Risk Conference Relevance The goal of this collaboration was to a...
Message from President: Academe is not immune to the new epidemic of affiliation. Often enough, thin...
Editors\u27 Message Whitman writes in Reconciliation : For my enemy is dead, a man divine as myse...
DE Oracle @ UMUC An Online Learning Magazine for UMUC Faculty Center for Support of Instruction Writ...
“Truly, I live in dark times!”. In the poetry of Bertolt Brecht, reviewed in the fifth article of th...
Message from President: Visiting the web sites, social media pages, or similar mass-distribution ven...
Using the epistolary genre, this editorial is embedded in a fictional letter written to a teacher. T...
Message from President: Christmas, as it was called before it became a generic all-purpose “holiday,...
Dear TOJDE Readers, Welcome to the Volume 13 Number: 4 of TOJDE! In this issue, one book review an...
Message from President: Among the axioms endorsed by literary people is the assumption that comedy c...
15 Years of Predictions and Realities With this issue we begin our fifteenth year of publication. T...
It is generally accepted among scholars and educators that literacy is critical to positive educatio...
LEARNING COMES TOGETHER 1. The Age of Discovery and the Age of Transition: Discovery and Research in...
Introduction This is a book about people - a group of people who lived in Bengal during the end of ...
As long ago as 1968 Dwight Waldo of the UC Berkeley Institute of Government Studies drew attention t...
Presentation at National Youth-at-Risk Conference Relevance The goal of this collaboration was to a...
Message from President: Academe is not immune to the new epidemic of affiliation. Often enough, thin...