McCurdyChristenEBSCO_AspBitch Magazine: Feminist Response to Pop CultureMcCurdy, C. (2014). What Happened to Home Economics? Bitch magazine, (62). Retrieved from
51happened;it?llcontinuetohappen,andisn?titgreatthatwe?resolinguisticallyflexibleandcreative?”( )5.WhydoesthetextbeginwithKatherine?sconflictwithherson?A.Toleadintheuseofperiodintexting.B.Toemphasizethegreatpowerofwords.C.Toshowyoungsters?attitudestowardstexting.D.Tosuggesttherightuseofpunctuationmarks.( ...
happenedwhentheadultcoveredherownmouth: 11 childrensaidthattheycouldn?t 12 toher. Anumberof 13 ruledoutthatthechildren misunderstoodwhattheywerebeingasked.Theresultswereclear:Ouryoungsubjects 14 the questionsandknew 15 whatwasaskedofthem. Their 16 tothequestionsreflectedtheirtrue 17 that“Icanseeyouonlyif...
What happened to the global economy and what we can do about it Search A Few Quick Announcements By James As I wrotea couple of years ago, I don’t post here anymore. I just have a couple of updates for people who subscribe and may be interested in my work. ...
Our Home Economics Have Turned What Was a Joke into Common Practice as Dads Become 'Mr Mam' Ten Years Ago They Were as Rare as Hen's Teeth. Today, Go to Any Local Playgroup across Wales and You'll Find at Least One Stay-at-Home Dad, Playing Happily with His Kids before Heading off...
See this post by Joe Romm for a more integrated approach to the year’s events. Also, see what Jeff Masters did here. We only included one non-climate (but related) item to illustrate the larger number of social, cultural, and political things that happened this year. For instance, ...
Values are ratcheted up in a series of financings—ideally a rising value is based on actual progress, but sometimes existing investors will put in more money at a higher valuation as a way to signal confidence to additional later investors. As more money floods in, as happened ...
Ran into the Grey Ceiling as a new grad, could not relate to the Boomer - Yuppie thing, ended up not getting married until the mid 90s, first home purchase late 90s on the eve of the Dot Bomb. Like any typical Xer I'll be lucky if I ever get to retire in the sense that "...
those estimates signal interest rates could remain historically high for the time being, decisions that could greatly impact consumers’ finances. High rates are what boostyields on savings accountsand keep borrowing costs on almost any type of product expensive, from a credit card to a home equity...
that they would pay off in higher returns. Of course, if those returns didn’t materialize, it would be taxpayers [through theFederal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation(FSLIC)]—not the banks or S&Ls officials—who would be left holding the bag. That's exactly what eventually happened...