persona Personal Taxprep Overview By www.cch.ca Published On :: Wed, 17 Oct 2012 13:16:27 GMT Personal Taxprep Overview This webinar provides an overview of the Personal Taxprep interface and explains the basic operations of the program, working with taxpayer, spouse and dependant returns, navigating the tax return and entering data. While this webinar is designed primarily for new users, it may also be helpful to users that would like a refresher on the operation of the program. This webinar is approximately 1.5 hours in length. Available Sessions for this Seminar:December 09, 2014 1:00 PM - 2:30 PM ESTFebruary 02, 2015 1:00 PM - 2:30 PM ESTMarch 03, 2015 1:00 PM - 2:30 PM EST Full Article
persona 2014 Personal Tax Update – The Year in Review By www.cch.ca Published On :: Mon, 01 Dec 2014 13:57:01 GMT The 2014 T1 season is almost upon us, so it's time for tax return preparers to get updated again on all the current issues that may impact their clients' tax returns. This webinar will get you in position to prepare your clients' 2014 personal tax returns, and will review some of the more commonly experienced issues faced by tax preparers. Join Erin Swint, a tax partner with Squire and Company, for a thorough overview of the key changes from the past year that will impact personal tax return filing including the 2013 Federal Budget, CRA announcements and relevant court cases. Erin will also discuss some other tax matters that are integral to personal taxation as well as administrative issues related to filing returns. Available Sessions for this Seminar:January 20, 2015 12:00 PM - 2:00 PM EST Full Article
persona It’s Time to Get Personal By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Mon, 09 Dec 2019 12:00:00 +0000 Laura Kalbag discusses the gift of personal data we give to Big Tech when we share information on its platforms, and how reviving ye olde personal website can be one way to stay in control of the content we share and the data we leak. Christmas is a time for giving, but know what you’re giving to whom. Is it just me or does nobody have their own website anymore? OK, some people do. But a lot of these sites are outdated, or just a list of links to profiles on big tech platforms. Despite being people who build websites, who love to share on the web, we don’t share much on our own sites. Of course there are good reasons people don’t have their own websites. For one, having your own site is something of a privilege. Understanding hosting packages, hooking up a domain name, and writing a basic HTML page are not considered the most difficult challenges for a web designer or developer – but they often require intimidating choices, and the ability to wield that knowledge with confidence tends to come with repeated experience. Buying a domain and renting web hosting doesn’t cost much, but it does cost money, and not everyone can afford that as an ongoing commitment. Building and maintaining a site also takes time. Usually time nobody else is going to pay you for doing the work. Time you could be be spending making the money you need to pay the bills, or time you could be spending with your family and friends. A personal website also creates personal pressure. Pressure to have things worth sharing. Pressure to be cool and interesting enough for a personal site. Pressure to have a flashy design, or a witty design, or the cleverest and cleanest code. Pressure to keep the site updated, not look like you lost interest, or stopped existing after your site was last updated in 2016. We are sharing Most of us share loads of expressive and personal stuff with each other: status updates, photos, videos, code snippets, articles and tutorials. Some people only do these things in social contexts, like those who live on Instagram. Some only in workplace contexts, like the performative professionalism of LinkedIn. And plenty of people mix the two together, like those of us who mix dog photos and tech news on Twitter. Many of us find sharing what we learn, and learning from each other, to be one of the few joys of working in the web community. One of the reasons web design and development as practices are accessible to people regardless of their background is because of those who believe sharing back is a fundamental element of community. A lot of us taught ourselves how to design and code because of those who shared before us. Our work often depends on free and open frameworks and packages. Our practices evolve at a rapid rate because we share what we’ve learned, our successes and our failures, to benefit others who are working towards the same goals. But we’re sharing on other people’s platforms Big Tech has given us a load of social platforms, and the content we’ve shared on those platforms has made them valuable. These platforms are designed to make it easy and convenient to share our thoughts and feelings. And they don’t cost us any money. The social nature of the platforms also make us feel validated. One button press for a like, a love, a star, a share, and we feel appreciated and connected. And it’s all for free. Except it isn’t. It’s not news anymore that the vast majority of the web is funded by extracting and monetising people’s personal information. Shoshana Zuboff coined the term “surveillance capitalism” to describe this model. Aral Balkan calls it “people farming.” Essentially it means when we are not paying for mainstream tech with money, we are paying for it with our privacy. And sometimes we can pay for tech with money and still have our privacy eroded. (I call this the “have-your-cake-and-eat-it-too model” or the “Spotify model”.) Many—usually cis, white, heterosexual—people in the tech industry believe that this “privacy tradeoff” is worthwhile. While they have a financial incentive in the continuation of this model, and are not necessarily the worst harmed when their privacy is weakened, their privilege has made them short-sighted. There are many people who are harmed by a model that reinforces stereotypes, discriminates against race, gender and disability, and shares vulnerable people’s information with exploitative corporations and authoritarian governments. We’re not just making decisions about our own privacy, either. By using a script that sends site visitor information back to somebody else’s server, we’re making our visitors vulnerable. By using an email provider that extracts personal information from our emails, we’re making our contacts vulnerable. By uploading photos of our friends and families to platforms that create facial recognition databases, we’re making our loved ones vulnerable. Making technology that respects the rights of the people using it isn’t a fun responsibility to take on. It’s also a challenging exercise to weigh our convenience and privilege against exposing other people to harm when life feels difficult already. But we can’t sit back and expect other people/overseers/charities/ombudsmen/deities to fix our communities or industries for us. We’ve got to do some of the work, pay some of the costs, and take responsibility for ourselves. Especially if we are people who can afford it or have the time. We can’t keep prioritising our conveniences over the safety of other people. One small way to get our independence and agency back from exploitative platforms is to build personal websites to share on instead. Of course, it’s a tiny tiny step. But it’s a step to taking back control, and building a web that neither relies upon, nor feeds, the harms of Big Tech. Personal websites give us independence and agency Personal doesn’t have to mean individualistic. Your website might be your own blog, portfolio or hobby project, but it could also be for your community, local team or cause. It could be all about a person, or anonymous. You could use it to showcase other people’s work that you appreciate, such as links to articles you’ve found valuable. A website doesn’t have to be a fancy work of art that’ll be written up in a hundred publications, a website is just an HTML page. You can even add some CSS if you want to show off. A home (or an office) When people ask where to find you on the web, what do you tell them? Your personal website can be your home on the web. Or, if you don’t like to share your personal life in public, it can be more like your office. As with your home or your office, you can make it work for your own needs. Do you need a place that’s great for socialising, or somewhere to present your work? Without the constraints of somebody else’s platform, you get to choose what works for you. Miriam Suzanne’s site is an example of bringing together a variety of work from different disciplines in one feed with loads of personality. Your priorities For a long time, I’ve been giving talks about being conscious of the impacts of our work. But when I talk about the principles of small technology or the ethical design manifesto, people often tell me how impossible it is take a stand against harmful practices at their job. Personal sites give you the freedom to practice the design and development you care about, without the constraints of your boss’s bad business model or your manager’s questionable priorities. We can create accessible and inclusive sites that don’t exploit our visitors. We can experiment and play to work out what really matters to us. If we don’t like our personal site, we can start again from scratch, iterate, change, keep working to make it better. I asked on Twitter for examples of great personal websites, and Mel Choyce recommended Susan Lin’s incredible site which demonstrates how a personal site can show personality and a stunning aesthetic while also covering the professional stuff. Your choice of design Your own personal website means you choose the design. Rather than sharing on a blogging platform like Medium, we can make our design reflect our content and our principles. We don’t need to have ads, paywalls or article limits imposed on us. When people ask me for examples of beautiful accessible and inclusive websites, I often point them in the direction of Tatiana Mac’s site – a striking and unique design that couldn’t be further from the generic templates offered up by platforms. No tracking It does rather defeat the point of having a personal website, if you then hook it up to all the tracking mechanisms of Big Tech. Google Analytics? No thanks. Twitter follow button? I’d rather not. Facebook Like button? You must be joking. One of the benefits of having your own personal site is that you can make your personal site a tracking-free haven for your site’s visitors. All the personal websites I’ve shared here are tracking-free. Trust me, it’s not easy to find websites that value their visitors like this! One brilliant example of this is Karolina Szczur’s (also gorgeous) site which even includes a little “No tracking” bit of copy in the footer where other sites would often include a privacy policy detailing all the tracking they do. Staying connected A personal website doesn’t mean an antisocial website. Charlie Owen’s site comprises a feed of her notes, checkins, likes, replies, reposts and quotes, along with her longer-form posts and talks. If you want to go hardcore, you can even run your own social platform instance. I have my own Mastodon instance, where I can post and socialise with other people in the “fediverse,” all from the comfort and control of my own domain. Freedom from the popularity contest (and much of the harassment) There’s value to being sociable, but one of the perks of having your own personal site is freedom from follower counts, likes, claps, and other popularity contests that reduce your self-expressions into impressions. It’s nice to know when people like your work, or find it valuable, but the competition created from chasing impressive numbers results in unequal power structures, clickbait, and marginalised people having their work appropriated without credit. A personal site means your work can still be shared but is also more likely to stay in that location, at the same URL, for much longer. You also get the final say over who can comment on your work in your own space. Wave goodbye to the trolls, they can go mutter to themselves under their own bridges. Your choice of code As I mentioned earlier, your website doesn’t have to be anything more than an HTML page. (Just think how fast that would load!) With your own personal site, you get to choose what code you want to write (or not write) and which frameworks you want to use (or not use). As an individual or a small group, you don’t need to worry about scale, or accommodating as many users as possible. You can choose what works for you, even what you find fun. So I thought I’d share with you the whats and whys of my own personal site setup. Your choice of setup I use iwantmyname to buy domain names and Greenhost for web hosting. (Greenhost kindly provides Small Technology Foundation with free hosting, as part of their Eclipsis hosting for “Internet freedom, liberation technology developers, administrators and digital rights activists.” You don’t get many benefits in this line of work, so I treasure Greenhost’s/Open Technology Fund’s kindness.) My blog has ten years’ worth of posts, so I rely on a content management system (CMS) to keep me organised, and help me write new posts with as little fuss as possible. Two years ago, I moved from WordPress to Hugo, a static site generator. Hugo is fine. I wrote my own theme for Hugo because I can, and also because I value accessible HTML and CSS. The setup works well for a personal site. Now my website is just a self-hosted static site, it’s noticeably faster. Importantly, I feel I have more ownership and control over my own site. The only third-party service my site needs is my web host. As it’s “serverless”, my site also doesn’t have the security risks associated with a server-side CMS/database. Nowadays, static sites and JAMstack (JavaScript, APIs, Markup -stack) are ultra trendy. While static sites have the aforementioned benefits, I worry about the APIs bit in the JAMstack. With static site generators, we (can, if we want) take out a number of the privacy, security and performance concerns of serverside development, only to plug them all back in with APIs. Every time we use a third-party API for critical functionality, we become dependent on it. We add weakness in the deployment process because we rely on their uptime and performance, but we also become reliant on the organisations behind the API. Are they a big tech platform? What are we paying for their service? What do they get out of it? Does it compromise the privacy and security of our site’s visitors? Are we lending our loyalty to an organisation that causes harm, or provides infrastructure to entities that cause harm? For all we speak of interoperability and standards, we know we’re unlikely to move away from a shady service, because it’s too deeply embedded in our organisational processes and/or developer conveniences. What if we don’t create that dependent relationship in the first place? It’s why I use Site.js. Site.js is a small tech, free and open, alternative to web frameworks and tools of Big Tech. I use Site.js to run my own secure (Site.js provides automatic trusted TLS for localhost) development and production servers, and rapidly sync my site between them. It has no dependence on third-parties, no tracking, and comes as a single lightweight binary. It only took one line in the terminal to install it locally, and the same line to install it on my production server. I didn’t need to buy, bolt on or configure an SSL certificate. Site.js took care of it all. In development, I use Site.js with Hugo to run my site on localhost. To test across devices, I run it on my hostname with ngrok (a tunnelling app) to expose my development machine. My site running locally with Site.js and Hugo. Site.js also provides me with ephemeral statistics, not analytics. I know what’s popular, what’s 404ing, and the referrer, but my site’s visitors are not tracked. The stats themselves are accessible from a cryptographically secure URL (no login required) so I could share this URL with whoever I wanted. Stats for my site since my server was last restarted on the 27th of November. My site is most popular when people are requesting it via… RSS. I’m not sharing the URL with you because I’m embarrassed that I still haven’t sorted my web fonts out, or made an alias for the /feed URL. I’m not having you check up on me… For those who want the dynamic functionality often afforded by third-party APIs, Site.js enables you to layer your own dynamic functionality on top of static functionality. We did this for Small Technology Foundation’s fund page. We wanted our patrons to be able to fund us without us relying on a big tech crowdfunding platform (and all the tracking that comes along with it). Aral integrated Stripe’s custom checkout functionality on top of our static site so we could have security for our patrons without relinquishing all our control over to a third party. You can even build a little chat app with Site.js. Every decision has an impact As designers and developers, it’s easy to accept the status quo. The big tech platforms already exist and are easy to use. There are so many decisions to be made as part of our work, we tend to just go with what’s popular and convenient. But those little decisions can have a big impact, especially on the people using what we build. But all is not yet lost. We can still build alternatives and work towards technology that values human welfare over corporate profit. We’ve got to take control back bit by bit, and building our own personal websites is a start. So go on, get going! Have you already got your own website already? Fabulous! Is there anything you can do to make it easier for those who don’t have their own sites yet? Could you help a person move their site away from a big platform? Could you write a tutorial or script that provides guidance and reassurance? Could you gift a person a domain name or hosting for a year? Your own personal site might be a personal thing, but a community and culture of personal sites could make a significant difference. About the author Laura Kalbag is a British designer living in Ireland, and author of Accessibility For Everyone from A Book Apart. She’s one third of Small Technology Foundation, a tiny two-person-and-one-husky not-for-profit organisation. At Small Technology Foundation, Laura works on a web privacy tool called Better Blocker, and initiatives to advocate for and build small technology to protect personhood and democracy in the digital network age. More articles by Laura Full Article Business business
persona How to be a dictator: the cult of personality in the twentieth century / Frank Dikötter By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 12 Apr 2020 09:49:18 EDT Dewey Library - JC495.D55 2019 Full Article
persona Manish Tiwari: Congress not to bank on any personality in election By archive.indianexpress.com Published On :: Wed, 25 Sep 2013 13:58:17 GMT "UPA will fight the polls on the basis of the strength of its policies and programmes." Full Article
persona Calcutta HC directs RTI queries to mention post box,no personal details By indianexpress.com Published On :: Wed, 20 Nov 2013 13:14:23 +0000 Full Article DO NOT USE West Bengal India
persona JSJ 381: Building a Personal Brand with John Sonmez By devchat.tv Published On :: Thu, 08 Aug 2019 06:00:00 -0400 Sponsors Sentry– use the code “devchat” for $100 credit RxJS Live Panel Charles Max Wood Christopher Beucheler AJ O’Neal With Special Guest: John Somnez Episode Summary John is the founder of Bulldog Mindset andSimple Programmer, which teaches software developers soft skills, and the author of a couple books. He specializes in creating a personal brand and marketing. He addresses the rumors of him leaving software development and gives an introduction to marketing yourself as a software developer and its importance. The panel discusses their experience with consulting and how marketing themselves has paid off. John talks about the importance of having soft skills. In his opinion, the most important soft skills for programmers are communication, persuasion and influence, people skills and charisma. He talks about highlight those soft skills. The truth is, more and more people are hiring for people skills rather than technical skills. The panel discusses more about the importance of people skills. John talks about ways to build your personal brand. One of the easiest ways is blogging but he talks about other methods like podcasts YouTube, writing books, and others. A key to building a personal brand is choosing something that you can become the best at, no matter how small it is. The panel shares their experiences of what things have gotten them attention and notoriety and talk about how other influential programmers got famous. They talk about interacting with central platforms like Medium and Github. Building a personal brand for software developers is the same as any other personal brand, such as having a consistent message, consistent logos and color schemes, and repeated exposure). Most people in the software world aren’t willing to do what’s necessary to build a personal brand, so it makes you stand out when you do it. John talks about the importance of controlling your image so that companies want to hire you. John gives a brief overview of his course How to Market Yourself as a Software Developer. Click here to cast your vote NOW for JavaScript Jabber - Best Dev Podcast Award Links John Somnez’s books Data Grid Girl Follow JavaScript Jabber on Facebook and Twitter Picks Charles Max Wood: To Sell is Human How to Win Friends and Influence People John Somnez: Follow John at bulldogmindset.com and simpleprogrammer.com The Little Book of Stoicism Training Peaks Christopher Beucheler: Strasborg, France AJ O’Neal Distant Worlds: Music from Final Fantasy Parallels Cam Slide Full Article
persona JSJ 431: Personal Branding for Developers with Morad Stern By devchat.tv Published On :: Tue, 28 Apr 2020 06:00:00 -0400 JavaScript Remote Conf 2020 May 13th to 15th - register now! The JSJ panel talks with Morad Stern from Wix about personal branding; what it is, why it’s important for developers, and how to build it. Panel Steve Edwards AJ O’Neal Dan Shappir Guest Morad Stern Sponsors Taiko Educative.io | Click here for 10% discount "The MaxCoders Guide to Finding Your Dream Developer Job" by Charles Max Wood is now available on Amazon. Get Your Copy Today! Links Obama asks America to learn computer science Configuring Apache Solr Multi-core With Drupal and Tomcat on Ubuntu 9.10 Picks AJ O’Neal: Follow AJ on Twitter > @coolaj86 War Stories | How Crash Bandicoot Hacked The Original Playstation Crash Bandicoot Co-Creator Andy Gavin: Extended Interview | Ars Technica The Story of Spyro the Dragon | Gaming Historian Utah Node.js: Scaling Node.js at Plaid Steve Edwards: Follow Steve on Twitter > @wonder95, Website Six13 Uptown Passover - an "Uptown Funk" adaptation for Pesach Dan Shappir: Follow Dan on Twitter > @DanShappir Scott Lynch Morad Stern: Follow Morad on Twitter > @morad This Is Marketing: You Can't Be Seen Until You Learn to See: Seth Godin Follow JavaScript Jabber on Twitter > @JSJabber Full Article
persona Strategische personalentwicklung in der praxis [electronic resource] : instrumente, erfolgsmodelle, checklisten, praxisbeispiele. / Christine Wegerich By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Wegerich, Christine, author Full Article
persona JAMA Facial Plastic Surgery : Evaluation of Personality Perception in Men Before and After Facial Cosmetic Surgery By traffic.libsyn.com Published On :: Thu, 11 Jul 2019 15:00:00 +0000 Interview with Michael J. Reilly, MD, author of Evaluation of Personality Perception in Men Before and After Facial Cosmetic Surgery Full Article
persona Personal Taxprep Overview By www.cch.ca Published On :: Wed, 17 Oct 2012 13:16:27 GMT Personal Taxprep Overview This webinar provides an overview of the Personal Taxprep interface and explains the basic operations of the program, working with taxpayer, spouse and dependant returns, navigating the tax return and entering data. While this webinar is designed primarily for new users, it may also be helpful to users that would like a refresher on the operation of the program. This webinar is approximately 1.5 hours in length. Available Sessions for this Seminar:ipwebinar.aspx?tab=1&smid=1409, February 02, 2015ipwebinar.aspx?tab=1&smid=1409, March 03, 2015 Full Article
persona 2014 Personal Tax Update – The Year in Review By www.cch.ca Published On :: Mon, 01 Dec 2014 13:57:01 GMT The 2014 T1 season is almost upon us, so it's time for tax return preparers to get updated again on all the current issues that may impact their clients' tax returns. This webinar will get you in position to prepare your clients' 2014 personal tax returns, and will review some of the more commonly experienced issues faced by tax preparers. Join Erin Swint, a tax partner with Squire and Company, for a thorough overview of the key changes from the past year that will impact personal tax return filing including the 2013 Federal Budget, CRA announcements and relevant court cases. Erin will also discuss some other tax matters that are integral to personal taxation as well as administrative issues related to filing returns. Available Sessions for this Seminar:ipwebinar.aspx?tab=1&smid=1708, January 20, 2015 Full Article
persona How companies are getting 1,4-dioxane out of home and personal care products By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 22 Mar 2020 17:35:30 +0000 Chemical makers, cleaning product firms, and cosmetics makers are all scrambling to meet new limits on the impurity Full Article
persona Ivanka Trump's personal assistant tests positive for coronavirus By timesofindia.indiatimes.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 13:41:49 IST Ivanka Trump's personal assistant has tested positive for the deadly coronavirus, making her the third White House staff member to be infected from Covid-19, a media report said on Saturday. The assistant, who works in a personal capacity for Ivanka, has not been around her in several weeks. She has been teleworking for nearly two months and was tested out of caution. Full Article
persona Das herzkatheterlabor [electronic resource] : einführung in die aufgabenbereiche des kardiologischen assistenzpersonals / M. Winkhardt By darius.uleth.ca Published On :: Darmstadt : Steinkopff, 2005 Full Article
persona Mirza seeks to confirm personal quota for Tokyo By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 23:26:24 +0530 With events dropping off, keeping the horses fit has become his priority. Full Article Other Sports
persona Personality and intelligence at work [electronic resource] : exploring and explaining individual differences at work / Adrian Furnham By darius.uleth.ca Published On :: London ; New York : Routledge, 2008 Full Article
persona Personalising Learning in Open-Plan Schools By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 6 Dec 2015 06:20:39 EST Online Resource Full Article
persona Personal life, young women and higher education: a relational approach to student and graduate experiences / Kirsty Finn By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 21 Feb 2016 06:21:47 EST Online Resource Full Article
persona Why Irrfan Khan's passing is so personal to so many By www.rediff.com Published On :: Thu, 30 Apr 2020 12:03:44 +0530 Most of us have a memory like that with our fathers, tucked away in the back of our minds or hidden away in family albums. Irrfan's passing took us right back. It's also what made it so personal to so many of us, points out Abhishek Mande Bhot. Full Article Gogol Ashoke Ganguli Irrfan Khan Ashima Abhishek Mande Bhot Jhumpa Lahiri New York American
persona Need cash? Medical personal loans can help tide over coronavirus crisis By www.business-standard.com Published On :: Fri, 10 Apr 2020 13:42:00 +0530 Your existing bank will give this loan, and rates may be better Full Article
persona Need cash? Loan against fixed deposits is cheaper than a personal loan By www.business-standard.com Published On :: Fri, 17 Apr 2020 13:31:00 +0530 Here is how the rares of loan against fixed offered by various banks stack up Full Article
persona 7 personal finance tips to guide you through these unprecedented times By www.business-standard.com Published On :: Fri, 24 Apr 2020 12:41:00 +0530 Coming out of these unusual times financially fitter and stronger would require discipline, perseverance, conservancy tricks and fortitude. Here are some handy tips for millennials Full Article
persona Ivanka Trump's personal assistant tests positive for coronavirus - Times of India By Published On :: Ivanka Trump's personal assistant tests positive for coronavirus - Times of India Full Article
persona Family law in Syria: patriarchy, pluralism and personal status codes / Esther van Eijk By grammy.mit.edu Published On :: Tues, 29 Aug 2017 Rotch Library - KMU54.E55 2016 Full Article
persona Scholarly Personae in the History of Orientalism, 1870-1930 / edited by Christiaan Engberts, Herman Paul By grammy.mit.edu Published On :: Fri, 6 Dec 2019 Rotch Library - DS61.85.S35 2019 Full Article
persona Being Palestinian: personal reflections on Palestinian identity in the diaspora / edited by Yasir Suleiman By grammy.mit.edu Published On :: Wed, 15 Apr 2020 Rotch Library - DS113.6.B45 2016 Full Article
persona Sharp Drop in Personal Stock By digital.lib.usf.edu Published On :: Sat, 01 Feb 2014 13:37:10 -0400 Full Article
persona Personal interview, M.N. McCullough, 2581 St. Johns Ave., Jacksonville, Florida By digital.lib.usf.edu Published On :: Wed, 05 Feb 2014 10:18:51 -0400 Full Article
persona Performance verification of personal aerosol sampling devices By digital.lib.usf.edu Published On :: Sat, 15 Feb 2014 18:09:26 -0400 Full Article
persona Concerning theories of personal identity By digital.lib.usf.edu Published On :: Sat, 15 Feb 2014 18:11:05 -0400 Full Article
persona Personality and motivational characteristics of the successful mentor By digital.lib.usf.edu Published On :: Sat, 15 Feb 2014 18:11:16 -0400 Full Article
persona Strain, personality traits, and deviance among adolescents By digital.lib.usf.edu Published On :: Sat, 15 Feb 2014 18:23:25 -0400 Full Article
persona Effects of social skills training on the interpersonal behaviors of elementary school students in an after-school program By digital.lib.usf.edu Published On :: Sat, 15 Feb 2014 18:26:01 -0400 Full Article
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persona The association between personality and risk taking By digital.lib.usf.edu Published On :: Sat, 15 Feb 2014 18:40:08 -0400 Full Article
persona Effect of personal and practice contexts on occupational therapists' assessment practices in geriatric rehabilitation By digital.lib.usf.edu Published On :: Sat, 15 Feb 2014 18:42:35 -0400 Full Article
persona How similar are personality scales of the "same" construct? a meta-analytic investigation By digital.lib.usf.edu Published On :: Sat, 15 Feb 2014 18:49:50 -0400 Full Article
persona The validity of personality trait interactions for the prediction of managerial job performance By digital.lib.usf.edu Published On :: Sat, 15 Feb 2014 18:50:22 -0400 Full Article
persona The relationship of cognitive, emotional, and interpersonal factors to screening and health-promoting behaviors among sisters of breast cancer patients By digital.lib.usf.edu Published On :: Sat, 15 Feb 2014 18:52:11 -0400 Full Article
persona Facilitating communication and effective interpersonal relationships at work By digital.lib.usf.edu Published On :: Sat, 15 Feb 2014 18:52:20 -0400 Full Article
persona Personal epistemological growth in a college chemistry laboratory environment By digital.lib.usf.edu Published On :: Sat, 15 Feb 2014 18:52:48 -0400 Full Article
persona The relationship between individual differences in cognitive, social and personality development and the increase in complexity of children's alcohol expectancies By digital.lib.usf.edu Published On :: Sat, 15 Feb 2014 18:53:16 -0400 Full Article
persona Exploring the relationship between childhood sexual abuse and borderline personality features using social support as a moderating factor By digital.lib.usf.edu Published On :: Sat, 15 Feb 2014 19:00:04 -0400 Full Article
persona How personality and self-identity impact the effects of leader member exchange on role stressors and organizational outcomes By digital.lib.usf.edu Published On :: Sat, 15 Feb 2014 19:01:03 -0400 Full Article
persona Personality and work-family conflict By digital.lib.usf.edu Published On :: Sat, 15 Feb 2014 19:01:36 -0400 Full Article
persona Interrelationships among personality, perceived classmate support, and life satisfaction in adolescents By digital.lib.usf.edu Published On :: Sat, 15 Feb 2014 19:06:55 -0400 Full Article
persona The roles of social bonds, personality, and rational decision-making By digital.lib.usf.edu Published On :: Sat, 15 Feb 2014 19:09:19 -0400 Full Article
persona The effect of a reasoning warning on faking in personality testing for selection and the perception of procedural justice By digital.lib.usf.edu Published On :: Sat, 15 Feb 2014 19:13:38 -0400 Full Article
persona An examination of the influence of band director teaching style and personality on ratings at concert and marching band events By digital.lib.usf.edu Published On :: Sat, 15 Feb 2014 19:15:32 -0400 Full Article