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· 1984
This book gives you all the information you need to complete 11 original quilts and wall hangings. Shows you how to mix fabrics, prints and etc. for beautiful quilts.
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· 1920
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No author available
· 1984
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· 2004
This study explored the descriptions offered by five Ontario educators of their experiences while assuming the role of secondary school vice-principal within the same school district, focusing specifically on the nature of the transition in job role within schools. A review of the literature was used to formulate a three-phase socio-dramatic framework for analysis of role transition processes. These phases, preparation, assumption and reflection encompassed a number of role transition processes. These processes were found to involve a perception of role and its context, the negotiation of a role, and an evaluation of role. Philosophically, this framework places the individual at the centre of role process as this research was undertaken to investigate the interaction between an individual and their assumed job. While most participants had completed identical technical and organizational training, the experience of assuming the vice-principal role presented disparate realities between their imagined and actual vice-principal role. Findings suggest that assuming a new organizational role is a dynamic learning experience which contained common influences within the social setting of secondary schools. In this study, the personal change and turmoil of assuming the vice-principalship seems to be a result of a dissonance between an individual's image of the role and their professional agency within an organization to enact that role. The agency of new vice-principals was strongly influenced by each school's principal, staff, and community. Participants demonstrated an entry into the ranks of educational administration that was stressful, emotionally charged and subject to many influences of a sociological, an organizational and a contextual nature. The vice-principal role was found to be one in which the individual and their school community negotiate a contextually tailored administrative job role.