Danielle Watson Boeken






Reimagining Graduate Supervision in Developing Contexts
A Focus on Regional Universities
- 92bladzijden
- 4 uur lezen
The book explores the informal and inconsistent practices of graduate supervision, revealing the challenges faced by both students and supervisors in tertiary institutions. Watson and Roberts analyze how these unstructured approaches affect academic success and draw parallels with similar issues in other developing countries, emphasizing the need for more formalized supervisory frameworks to enhance educational outcomes.
Nayko Island
- 92bladzijden
- 4 uur lezen
The story unfolds as Alex and her companion find themselves in a surreal situation when the water beneath them begins to swirl, drawing them towards a mysterious golden grid at the bottom of a pool. The sudden shift from curiosity to chaos sets the stage for an adventure filled with intrigue and wonder, as the glowing grid hints at deeper secrets waiting to be uncovered.
Independent Thinking on Teaching in Higher Education
- 200bladzijden
- 7 uur lezen
A refreshing and invigorating exploration of what really matters and what really works in higher education teaching.
This open access book brings together insights into Pacific policing, conceptualising policing broadly as order maintenance involving the actions of multiple local, regional and international actors with sometimes competing and conflicting agendas.
Police and the Policed
Language and Power Relations on the Margins of the Global South
- 138bladzijden
- 5 uur lezen
This book examines communication between police and residents of a designated crime ‘hotspot’ community in the Global South. It looks at communicative realities within a marginalised community in the twin island republic of Trinidad and Tobago and explores how police and the individuals that they police purposefully assign categories to each other before, during and after interactions. It also examines the relations between the police and the community and how power is manifested through authored or assigned labels, stigmas and stereotypes. Overall, it suggests alternative strategies to address problematic police and community relations and provides another standpoint from which communicative redress between police and residents of marginalized communities in the Global South can be approached.