Word: howards
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...gender, class, race or ethnicity. ROBERT AND JANA KIELY, Adams House JAMES AND JANICE WARE, Cabot House WILLIAM AND BARBARA GRAHAM, Currier House EVERETT MENDELSOHN AND MARY ANDERSON, Dudley House KAREL AND HETTY LIEM, Dunster House STEVE MITCHELL AND KRISTINE FORSGARD, Eliot House DONALD AND CATHLEEN PFISTER, Kirkland House HOWARD GEORGI '67-'68 AND ANN GEORGI, Leverett House DIANA ECK AND DOROTHY AUSTIN, Lowell House SANDRA NADDAFF '75 AND LEIGH HAFREY '73, Mather House JAMES AND SUZANNE McCARTHY, Pforzheimer House MICHAEL SHINAGEL AND MARJORIE NORTH, Quincy House PAUL HANSON AND CYNTHIA ROSENBERGER, Winthrop House Oct. 16, 1998 The writers...
...sisters like Toys 'R' Us better, but I keep telling them Target is better. The prices are better." His father, Kirby Turnage III, observes that the Toys "R" Us lines are too long and that there is a "lack of customer service." And Denver Toys "R" Us shopper Tonya Howard says, "The people here have an attitude...
...children in Mitchell's class are among the newest initiates of the philosophy that is probably exciting more educators than any other right now. Like many schools around the country, Coyote Creek has based its instruction on Howard Gardner's theory of multiple intelligences, or MI. Gardner, a professor at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, first proposed the theory in his book Frames of Mind, which was published in 1983. Since then, Gardner's ideas have received widespread attention and acceptance among parents and have been eagerly embraced by teachers. "Multiple intelligences is clearly the biggest thing right...
Sitting in his spare office at Harvard on a recent morning, a small dugout canoe made by his son resting on a nearby table, Howard Gardner talked about his work and the use others have made of it. A slender man with a soft face and hair flopping over his forehead, Gardner looks a bit like the concert pianist he might have been if he had pursued that career. After a long discussion of the merits of his theory, he tried to sum up his views. "Here's a credo I've never stated before," he said. "I'm sure...
...Gardner's theory in schools, it is easy for people to let their emotions run away with them. The notion that a child may have important abilities that are not measured by IQ tests is immensely appealing; it also happens to be true. As Siegler said, "Howard sells hope." Yet this hope ought to be tempered by realism, and a realistic view of MI theory may not justify the enthusiasm it has engendered thus...