Recommended Pages at britannica.com
The Tucson Shootings | Britannica Blog
britannica.com — “The Tucson Shootings | Britannica Blog” View full resource at britannica.com
Most Recently Shared on January 14, 2011 at 10:30 pm By:
An excellent post on the Tucson tragedy from, of all places, Encyclopaedia Britannica (a former client): http://bit.ly/e9Ka3t
The Decline of Creativity in the United States: 5 Questions for Educational Psychologist Kyung Hee Kim | Britannica Blog
britannica.com — “The Decline of Creativity in the United States: 5 Questions for Educational Psychologist Kyung Hee Kim | Britannica Blog” View full resource at britannica.com
Most Recently Shared on October 31, 2010 at 3:39 pm By:
Why is America's #creativity dropping? Expert on concerning study likens impact to "eating dry cereal out of a box." http://bit.ly/c2wklP
Humanistic and Positive Psychology: The Methodological and Epistemological Divide. :: Humanistic Psychologist :: April 2008 -- Britannica Online Encyclopedia
britannica.com — “Humanistic and Positive Psychology: The Methodological and Epistemological Divide.. Humanistic and positive psychology both focus on similar concerns, but have differences regarding methodology and epistemology. In terms of methodology, humanistic psychologists tend to prefer qualitative over quantitative approaches, whereas positive psychologists tend to hold the opposite preference. Likewise, in terms of epistemology, humanistic psychologists tend to prefer postpositivism, whereas positive psy” View full resource at britannica.com
Most Recently Shared on September 27, 2010 at 7:15 am By:
Humanistic and Positive Psychology: The Methodological and Epistemological Divide http://ping.fm/ScaCn
talent (unit of weight) -- Britannica Online Encyclopedia
britannica.com — “Britannica online encyclopedia article on talent (unit of weight), unit of weight used by many ancient civilizations, such as the Hebrews, Egyptians, Greeks, and Romans. The weight of a talent and its relationship to its major subdivision, the mina, varied considerably over time and location in the ancient world. The most common ratio of the talent to the mina was...” View full resource at britannica.com
Most Recently Shared on July 20, 2010 at 1:53 am By:
Just fact checked Dr. Rand's fun fact that "talent" meant weight in ancient Babylonia. Verdict? It's true! http://bit.ly/cI0PWW #huge

