Bilbro, Jeffrey. “This Day: New and Collected Sabbath Poems.” Christianity & Literature 65, no. 4 (September 2016): 524-528.
Abstract: The article reviews the book, “This Day: Collected & New Sabbath Poems” by Wendell Berry.
Bilbro, Jeffrey. “This Day: New and Collected Sabbath Poems.” Christianity & Literature 65, no. 4 (September 2016): 524-528.
Abstract: The article reviews the book, “This Day: Collected & New Sabbath Poems” by Wendell Berry.
Rinck, Jonathan. “Seventeenth-Century European Drawings in Midwestern Collections: The Age of Bernini, Rembrandt, and Poussin.” Sixteenth Century Journal 47, no. 2 (Summer 2016): 522-524.
Abstract: The article reviews the book, “Seventeenth-Century European Drawings in Midwestern Collections: The Age of Bernini, Rembrandt, and Poussin” edited by Shelley Perlove and George S. Keyes.
Rinck, Jonathan. “The mushroom houses of Earl Young.” Michigan History Magazine no. 4 (2016): 17-22.
Abstract: The word most often used to describe the unique designs of self-taught architect Earl Young is “organic.” His Charlevoix structures — often integrating stone walls, rolling roofs, cedar shingles, and squat profiles — look like they rose up out of the ground. And would be equally home in Middle-earth.
Rinck, Jonathan. “The Richard and Helen DeVos Japanese Garden: A Haven for Sculpture, Body, and Soul.” Sculpture 35, no. 5 (June 2016): 20-21.
Abstract: A review is offered for the Richard and Helen DeVos Japanese Garden opened at the Frederik Meijer Gardens and Sculpture Park which is considered suitable for sculptures.
Bilbro, Jeffrey. “The ecology of memory: Augustine, Eliot, and the form of Wendell Berry’s fiction.” Christianity & Literature 65, no. 3 (June 2016): 327-342.
Abstract:Berry’s notion of memory has rich theological and literary roots, which reach to Augustine and T. S. Eliot. After a brief tour through Augustine’s theological view of memory and Eliot’s development of this in The Four Quartets, I examine Berry’s short story “Pray without Ceasing” to demonstrate how this theology works out in the form of his story, enabling his characters to understand and love the whole pattern of which they are a part. By understanding how Berry incorporates this ancient Christian view of memory in the structure of his narration, we can see how memory comprises an integral part of his culturally embattled agrarian and ecological vision.
Woods, Robert H., Kelly Skarritt-Williams, Caleb Chan, Ken Waters, and Divine Agodzo. “Motivations for Reading the Left Behind Book Series: A Uses and Gratifications Analysis.” Journal Of Media & Religion 15, no. 2 (April 2016): 63-77.
Abstract: This uses and gratifications study investigates motivations for reading theLeft Behindbook series and their correlation to media use patterns; religious commitments; and the Conservative Protestant, Mainline, or Catholic Christian background of readers. The survey of 1,188 readers found that sanctified entertainment and “end times” teaching were the top reasons for reading the series. There was a significant positive relationship between religious media use and spiritual growth/development, content reaction, and accuracy. A significant positive relationship was found between religious commitment and content reaction, and religious commitment and biblical accuracy reading motivations. The study revealed different reading motivations among the various denominations, especially Catholics.
Cline, Brent Walter and Robert Bolton. “The Need for the Disabled Body in The Moviegoer.” In Walker Percy’s The Moviegoer at Fifty: New Takes on an Iconic American Novel edited by Jennifer Levasseur and Mary A. McCay, 135-146. Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 2016.
Brent Walter Cline and Robert Bolton… present a roadmap for Bolling’s inward journey, exploring a variety of the book’s elements from the role of the broken body to various spiritual connections.
Cheslock, John J., Justin C. Ortagus, Mark R. Umbricht, and Josh Wymore “The Cost of Producing Higher Education: An Exploration of Theory, Evidence, and Institutional Policy, Volume XXXI.” In Higher Education: Handbook of Theory and Research, edited by Michael B. Paulsen, 349-392. New York: Springer, 2016.
Researchers face multiple challenges when studying the cost of producing higher education, which has led many to avoid the topic altogether. As a result, higher education scholarship provides little guidance to institutional leaders aiming to reduce costs in response to financial difficulties. To encourage greater research in this area, we review prominent cost theories, examine empirical research into costs, and explore specific policies that alter costs within colleges and universities. Our theoretical overview focuses on the cost disease, the revenue theory of costs, positional arms races, and the principal-agent problem to explain cost increases within higher education. Our discussion of empirical research is organized around Brinkman’s (Higher education cost functions. In: Hoenack SA, Collins EL (eds) The economics of American universities: management, operations, and fiscal environment. State University of New York Press, Albany, pp. 107–128, 1990) five major determinants of costs: size, scope, level of instruction, discipline, and revenues. When examining institutional policies, we discuss instructional activities and non-instructional activities separately. For instructional costs, we focus our attention on how faculty composition and instructional technology alter costs in higher education. The discussion of non-instructional costs examines how costs can be decreased through reducing scope, increasing economies of scale, eliminating the cost disease, and altering incentives. We conclude the chapter by describing several promising areas for future research.
Widstrom, Laura. “Hopecasting.” Journal Of Youth Ministry 14, no. 2 (Spring 2016): 116-118.
Abstract: The article reviews the book, “Hopecasting: Finding, Keeping and Sharing the Things Unseen” b Mark Oestreicher.
Hall, Johnathon M., John R. Amend, and Thomas S. Kuntzleman. “Experiments to illustrate the chemistry and bouncing ability of fresh and spent zinc-manganese oxide alkaline batteries.” Journal Of Chemical Education no. 4 (2016): 676-680.
Abstract:Why do dead batteries bounce considerably higher than fresh batteries? This phenomenon has a chemical explanation that can be used to teach students about the chemistry of alkaline Zn/MnO2 cells. Batteries discharged to various extents can be tested for bounciness and conversion of Zn to ZnO. These measurements allow students to connect the chemistry that powers these batteries with the increased bouncing effect. The experiments can be presented as a teacher-led demonstration or hands-on laboratory for students.
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