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RA for All is a blog aiming to help library workers provide readers' advisory services. [54] Reading Rants is a booklist for teens written by middle school librarian Jennifer Hubert Swan and designed by Andrew Mutch. The blog stopped posting in November 2023, and in February 2024 became moved its activity to an Instagram page. [55]
An RA has many roles and responsibilities, including building a residential community through programming, acting as a mentor for students, being a familiar first resource for students with academic or institutional questions, and enforcing residence policies. RAs assist residents with problem solving or refer them to counseling resources. [2]
Facilitated Social Activities (also called Programming [3]): Hosted by professional staff or student staff, social activities are aimed to promote a sense of community and belonging in residence. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] This is important for residence students because of the ability to ensure students are able to effectively integrate to a post-secondary ...
American Book Review is a literary journal edited at the University of Houston-Victoria and published by the University of Nebraska Press. [1] Its mission is to "specialize in reviews of frequently neglected published works of fiction, poetry, and literary and cultural criticism from small, regional, university, ethnic, avant-garde, and women's presses."
Resident Advisors is an American sitcom that premiered on April 9, 2015, on Hulu. [1] The series was created by Alex J. Reid , Taylor Jenkins Reid , and Natalia Anderson and follows a group of resident advisors at a college.
The Review and Herald Publishing Association was the older of two Seventh-day Adventist publishing houses in North America. The organization published books, magazines, study guides, CDs, videos and games for Adventist churches, schools and individual subscribers. It also printed and distributed the Adventist Review magazine. In 2014 the Review ...
American Nations: A History of the Eleven Rival Regional Cultures of North America is an American non-fiction book written by Colin Woodard and published in 2011. Woodard proposes a framework for examining American history and current events based on a view of the country as a federation of eleven nations, each defined by a shared culture established by each nation's founding population.
The Triple Package: How Three Unlikely Traits Explain the Rise and Fall of Cultural Groups in America is a book published in 2014 by two professors at Yale Law School, Amy Chua and her husband, Jed Rubenfeld. Amy Chua is also the author of the 2011 international bestseller, Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother.