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1

Shepherd, Erin Jennifer Watt, and Roberta Lynn Woodgate. "A Journey Within a Journey." Journal of Pediatric Oncology Nursing 28, no. 4 (June 8, 2011): 231–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1043454211409583.

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Agarwal, Yatish, and Bipin Batra. "The Journey Within." Astrocyte 3, no. 1 (2016): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/2349-0977.192717.

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Bloomfield, Irene. "Healing—The Journey Within." Contact 95, no. 1 (January 1988): 9–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13520806.1988.11759649.

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Hassenkamp, Anne-Marie. "From ‘Therapy’ to ‘Rehabilitation’ – a journey, all within one journal." International Journal of Therapy and Rehabilitation 18, no. 2 (February 2011): 67. http://dx.doi.org/10.12968/ijtr.2011.18.2.67.

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Pigford, Aretha B. "Leadership: A Journey That Begins Within." NASSP Bulletin 80, no. 576 (January 1996): 116–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/019263659608057618.

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LaChance, Paul. "Recourse to Psychology within the Vocational Journey." Lonergan Workshop 26 (2012): 223–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.5840/lw20122634.

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Tran, Seav-Ly, and Nalini Ramarao. "Bacillus cereusimmune escape: a journey within macrophages." FEMS Microbiology Letters 347, no. 1 (August 13, 2013): 1–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1574-6968.12209.

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8

Zacharias, Robert. "In-Between WorldandWorlds Within: Reading Diasporic Return in Vassanji and Bissoondath." Cambridge Journal of Postcolonial Literary Inquiry 1, no. 2 (June 5, 2014): 207–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/pli.2014.12.

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The return journey has long been recognized as a central feature of diaspora, yet contemporary diaspora studies have conventionally understood it in stubbornly mythological terms. This paper looks to foster discussion about physical diasporic return journeys by juxtaposing M. G. Vassanji’sThe In-Between World of Vikram Lall(2003) and Neil Bissoondath’sThe Worlds Within Her(1998). Although the two novels overlap in their exploration of the Indian diaspora against the backdrop of racially volatile independence movements in former British colonies, they offer starkly different renderings of diasporic return that are reflected in their engagements with diasporic history. The paper closes with a consideration of the critical assumptions that have allowed the return journey to be overlooked in diaspora literary studies to date, suggesting that its absence may reflect the methodological nationalism of the field.
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Moffatt, Christine J., and Susie G. Murray. "The experience of children and families with lymphoedema - a journey within a journey." International Wound Journal 7, no. 1 (February 2010): 14–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1742-481x.2010.00657.x.

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Harvie, Linda, Steve Harper-Travers, and Amanda Jaeger. "Assessment within ILP: A journey of collaborative inquiry." Journal of Educational Leadership, Policy and Practice 32, no. 1 (2019): 133–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.21307/jelpp-2017-012.

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Gardstrom, S. C. "Surviving suicide: My journey to the light within." Music Therapy Perspectives 22, no. 1 (January 1, 2004): 55–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/mtp/22.1.55.

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Breymier, Tonya, and Diane Baker. "Utilizing Simulation within Nursing Education: The Fundamental Journey." Clinical Simulation in Nursing 5, no. 3 (May 2009): e132-e133. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecns.2009.04.013.

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Balint, P. V., and M. A. D'Agostino. "Spondyloarthritis: a journey within and around the joint." Rheumatology 51, suppl 7 (December 1, 2012): vii13—vii17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/rheumatology/kes342.

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14

Wilson, R. "'Speech within speech': The writing of Antonio Tabucchi." Literator 17, no. 1 (April 30, 1996): 77–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.4102/lit.v17i1.581.

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The narrator of Antonio Tabucchi’s 1991 novel Requiem has an appointment with a dead poet. During the twenty-four hours which he spends in Lisbon waiting to keep his appointment, he undertakes a physical journey through the city, which turns out to be also a parallel journey of the anima through memory. The journey is initiated by a book, Livro do Desassossego (The book of disquietude), by Fernando Pessoa, the “great poet” who awaits the narrator in the city of this novel. This paper examines Tabucchi's "dialogue with the dead", both within this text and across other Tabucchi texts. It endeavours to show how Tabucchi’s recuperation of Pessoa becomes the recognition of the Other's voices within one’s own unconscious, enabling the exploration of repressed discourse.
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Hamilton, Ryan, Rosellina Ferraro, Kelly L. Haws, and Anirban Mukhopadhyay. "Traveling with Companions: The Social Customer Journey." Journal of Marketing 85, no. 1 (March 31, 2020): 68–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0022242920908227.

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When customers journey from a need to a purchase decision and beyond, they rarely do so alone. This article introduces the social customer journey, which extends prior perspectives on the path to purchase by explicitly integrating the important role that social others play throughout the journey. The authors highlight the importance of “traveling companions,” who interact with the decision maker through one or more phases of the journey, and they argue that the social distance between the companion(s) and the decision maker is an important factor in how social influence affects that journey. They also consider customer journeys made by decision-making units consisting of multiple individuals and increasingly including artificial intelligence agents that can serve as surrogates for social others. The social customer journey concept integrates prior findings on social influences and customer journeys and highlights opportunities for new research within and across the various stages. Finally, the authors discuss several actionable marketing implications relevant to organizations’ engagement in the social customer journey, including managing influencers, shaping social interactions, and deploying technologies.
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Følstad, Asbjørn, and Knut Kvale. "Customer journeys: a systematic literature review." Journal of Service Theory and Practice 28, no. 2 (March 12, 2018): 196–227. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jstp-11-2014-0261.

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Purpose Customer journeys have become an increasingly important topic in service management and design. The purpose of this paper is to review customer journey terminology and approaches within the research literature prior to 2013, mainly from the fields of design, management, and marketing. Design/methodology/approach The study was conducted as a systematic literature review. Searches in Google Scholar, Scopus, Web of Knowledge, ACM Digital Library, and ScienceDirect identified 45 papers for the analysis. The papers were analyzed with respect to customer journey terminology and approaches, the relation to customer experience, the referenced background, and the use of visualizations. Findings Across the reviewed literature, customer journeys are described not only as a means to take the viewpoint of the customer, but also to reach insight into their experiences. A rich and at times incoherent customer journey terminology is analyzed and discussed, as are two emerging customer journey approaches: customer journey mapping (analysis of a service process “as is”) and customer journey proposition (generative activities leading toward a possible service “to be”). Research limitations/implications The review is limited to analyzing and making claims on research papers that explicitly apply the term customer journey. In most of the reviewed papers, customer journeys are not the main object of interest but are discussed as one of several topics. Practical implications A nuanced discussion of customer journey terminology and approaches is provided, supporting the practical application of a customer journey perspective. Originality/value The review contributes a needed common basis for future customer journey research and practice.
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Trabskaia, Iuliia, and Tõnis Mets. "Perceptual Fluctuations within the Entrepreneurial Journey: Experience from Process-Based Entrepreneurship Training." Administrative Sciences 11, no. 3 (August 19, 2021): 84. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/admsci11030084.

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The entrepreneurial idea and opportunity are formed in the entrepreneurial process, which is characterized by entrepreneurial learning. During the entrepreneurial journey, the entrepreneur repeatedly reassesses the maturity of his business/venture idea and venture creation process to enter the market. The entrepreneur’s decisions are influenced by both objective and affective circumstances. This study aims to identify and map the fluctuations of idea–opportunity perception and affection by a student entrepreneur throughout the entrepreneurial learning journey simulating a genuine entrepreneurial (learning) process. The data collection of variables took place during an entrepreneurship course that modeled the entrepreneurial journey via process-based entrepreneurship training and applying feasibility and attractiveness self-assessment, observation and in-depth interviews. A small group of doctoral students developed their business ideas during a process-based entrepreneurship course. After each lesson and homework, they assessed the feasibility and attractiveness of their idea and opportunity. The results showed asynchronous fluctuations in these individual context-based perception variables, frequently depending on the progression of the entrepreneurial journey. The study added the concept of affective artifact and some generalizing dimensions to describe the entrepreneurial journey. Recommendations are given for the implementation and research of entrepreneurial process-based training.
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Lovenburg, Natalie. "Journey Within Afghanistan: Inside Creative's digital book tracking system." Childhood Education 94, no. 5 (August 31, 2018): 52–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00094056.2018.1516473.

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Cheng, Jui-Ching, Siou-Mi Chen, and Mei-Ju Chou. "Planting Aesthetics Seeds within the Journey of Children's Reading." Universal Journal of Educational Research 3, no. 9 (September 2015): 643–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.13189/ujer.2015.030909.

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Roberts, Debra, Joanne Douwes, Catherine Sutherland, and Vicky Sim. "Durban’s 100 Resilient Cities journey: governing resilience from within." Environment and Urbanization 32, no. 2 (August 24, 2020): 547–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0956247820946555.

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Urban resilience is the focus of a global policy discourse that is being mobilized by a wide range of organizations to reduce urban risk and respond to the shocks and stresses facing cities. This paper explores the process of “governing for resilience” through Durban’s resilience journey as part of the 100 Resilient Cities (100RC) programme. From an insider perspective, it presents both 100RC and Durban’s approaches to developing a resilience strategy. It reflects on the contestations that emerged as Durban and 100RC struggled over the meaning and practice of urban resilience. The paper develops a continuum of urban resilience approaches to analyse the conflicts that emerged as the global programme of urban resilience travelled to, and landed in, a South African city. The paper argues that a global framing of urban resilience needs to be responsive to a world of cities that share common risk trajectories but have different contexts and vulnerabilities.(1)
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Persichitte, Kay A., Edward P. Caffarella, and Donna Ferguson-Pabst. "A Continuing Journey Toward Technology Infusion Within Teacher Preparation." TechTrends 47, no. 2 (March 2003): 12–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf02763418.

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22

Varotsos Vrynas, Angelos, Julia Perea Paizal, Chris Bakal, and Sam H. Au. "Arresting metastasis within the microcirculation." Clinical & Experimental Metastasis 38, no. 4 (July 9, 2021): 337–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10585-021-10109-8.

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AbstractThe behaviour of circulating tumour cells in the microcirculation remains poorly understood. Growing evidence suggests that biomechanical adaptations and interactions with blood components, i.e. immune cells and platelets within capillary beds, may add more complexity to CTCs journey towards metastasis. Revisiting how these mediators impact the ability of circulating tumour cells to survive and metastasise, will be vital to understand the role of microcirculation and advance our knowledge on metastasis.
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Kidd, Terry T., Carolyn Ashe, and Natasha Carroll. "A Journey through the Wilderness." International Journal of Information Technology Project Management 4, no. 4 (October 2013): 1–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/ijitpm.2013100101.

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Autoethnography has emerged as a relatively new methodological approach within the fields of project management, information technology, organizational behavioral studies, and more broadly within the social sciences. As a reflexive methodology it offers the beginning and experienced researcher a means of critically exploring the social forces that shapes ones involvement in the information technology project implementation process and subsequent the project management experience. In this article the authors discuss the significance of autoethnography as it was utilized to research the experiences of project managers in the enterprise resource planning systems implementation process. The process involved recollecting, writing and re-reading experiences in light of social capital and organizational theories that explore the socio-psychological and cultural aspects within the implementation period of an enterprise resources planning system. The autoethnographic approach used in this article contributes to the emergent methodological literature that embraces the textual or narrative turn within qualitative studies of information technology and project management.
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Kah, Olivier. "A 45-years journey within the reproductive brain of fish." General and Comparative Endocrinology 288 (March 2020): 113370. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ygcen.2019.113370.

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Moppett, I., S. Mahankali, L. Pearson, C. Thomas, and R. Griffith. "Prospective audit of timings within the patient journey through theatre." European Journal of Anaesthesiology 25, Sup 44 (May 2008): 14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00003643-200805001-00044.

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26

TORGERSON, JON N. "OUTWARDLY A MONSTER, ALL BEAUTY WITHIN (A Journey with Those Who See the Beauty Within)." Metaphilosophy 22, no. 3 (July 1991): 239–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9973.1991.tb00719.x.

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Loshakova, Galina A. "Travel and Journey Semantics in Austrian Biedermeier Prose." Observatory of Culture, no. 1 (February 28, 2014): 120–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.25281/2072-3156-2014-0-1-120-125.

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Deals with travel and journey literature (Reiseliteratur) that played an important role in the Biedermeier era. It reflected the desire of the reader - burgher to expand his educational and ideological horizon, created a circle of family reading, raised certain personality traits. Feeling reader’s request, Biedermeier prose novelists turned to the images of walks, excursions, trips, journeys and travel within the Austrian cultural and geographical space, and outside it too
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Henderson, Erica, and Kim Fry. "Implementing registration within a health organisation setting." Aotearoa New Zealand Social Work 25, no. 3 (May 15, 2016): 11–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.11157/anzswj-vol25iss3id69.

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This article tracks the journey MidCentral Health took after the introduction of the Social Workers Registration Act (2003). The accomplishments and the challenges that we encountered along the way indicate the importance of engaging the entire organisation to raise awareness and support for health social workers to not only achieve registration but stand alongside our regulated colleagues.
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Hjelde, Sigurd. "Schleiermachers Skandinavische Reise (1833)." Journal for the History of Modern Theology / Zeitschrift für Neuere Theologiegeschichte 25, no. 1-2 (May 25, 2018): 27–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/znth-2018-0002.

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Abstract During his lifetime, Friedrich Schleiermacher went on many journeys, not only within Germany but also abroad. His last journey took him, in the last year of his life (1833), to Scandinavia, where he during many weeks travelled through parts of Sweden, Norway and Denmark. His stay in Copenhagen at the end of the journey is sufficiently documented by scholars but there exists, as far as I know, no corresponding account of the many weeks on Swedish and Norwegian soil. The aim of the present paper is therefore to examine this longest part of the journey: Which way did Schleiermacher travel, which towns and places did he visit, whom did he have contact with and what else did he experience on his way? And – finally: what was the motivation of this 64 years old scholar for embarking on such a strenuous undertaking which a journey of many weeks – on land and at sea – certainly must have been in this period of our history?
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Brown, Cynthia J., Mary Bishop, and Bonnie B. Bar. "Creating and Sustaining Peace Within for the Journey of Nursing Leadership." Nursing Administration Quarterly 37, no. 4 (2013): E1—E7. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.naq.0000434947.57388.b3.

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Grosskopf, Brit, and Graeme Pearce. "Do You Mind Me Paying Less? Measuring Other-Regarding Preferences in the Market for Taxis." Management Science 66, no. 11 (November 2020): 5059–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2019.3483.

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We present a natural field experiment designed to measure other-regarding preferences in the market for taxis. We employed testers of varying ethnicity to take a number of predetermined taxi journeys. In each case, we endowed them with only 80% of the expected fare. Testers revealed the amount they could afford to pay to the driver midjourney and asked for a portion of the journey for free. In a 2 × 2 between-subjects design, we vary the length of the journey and whether a business card is elicited. We find that (1) the majority of drivers give at least part of the journey for free, (2) giving is proportional to the length of the journey, and (3) 27% of drivers complete the journey. Evidence of outgroup negativity against black testers is also reported. In order to link our empirical analysis to behavioral theory, we estimate the parameters of a number of utility functions. The data and the structural analysis lend support to the quantitative predictions of experiments that measure other-regarding preferences, and they shed further light on how discrimination can manifest itself within our preferences. This paper was accepted by Yan Chen, behavioral economics.
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MacVicar, Sonya, and Karen Osinski. "Prescribing within clinical toxicology." Journal of Prescribing Practice 2, no. 12 (December 2, 2020): 674–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.12968/jprp.2020.2.12.674.

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In 2020, the first clinical toxicology advanced nurse practitioner and independent prescriber post was introduced in the United Kingdom. This article discusses the remit of clinical toxicology and the integration of nurse prescribing into this service by following a patient journey from admission to discharge. The case study describes an acute paracetamol poisoning presentation following intentional self-harm. Paracetamol is widely available and safe in therapeutic dosages; however, it is the drug most commonly taken in intentional overdose and the toxic effect can result in hepatic failure and fatality. The nurse prescriber conducted a holistic consultation, assessed pharmacological management and instigated timely treatment. Current research on the benefits and disadvantages of paracetamol antidote regimes are discussed. Long-term physical and mental wellbeing following intentional overdose require interprofessional liaison with access to psychological support, arranged prior to patient discharge.
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Dutta, Uttaran. "Design Engagements at the Margins of the Global South: De-Centering the “Expert” Within Me." Sustainability 11, no. 20 (October 14, 2019): 5675. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su11205675.

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Conceiving everyone as a potential designer and believing in local peoples’ informed understandings and agentic capabilities in addressing local problems, my design research journey was committed to opening up avenues for sustained transformations in the underserved spaces of rural eastern India. In my design engagements, we (community members and I) contributed in three design projects, namely design for community development (DfCD), information design for development (IDfD), and design for grassroots innovation (DfGD). In my design journey, I sincerely questioned/challenged my presumptions and design approaches as well as reflexively reoriented myself to make the design processes culturally meaningful and contextually appropriate. Being constantly cognizant about minute traces of superiority (and sense of indispensability) within me, being willing to challenge, modify, and rediscover myself continually, as well as privileging and situating local and indigenous perspectives and knowledge at the center of design processes, characterize some of the key learning of my design journey.
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Brusky, Sarah. "The Travels of William and Ellen Craft: Race and Travel Literature in the 19th Century." Prospects 25 (October 2000): 177–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0361233300000636.

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Describing their move north in an escape from slavery, William and Ellen Craft's slave narrative, Running a Thousand Miles for Freedom (1860), offers a peculiar form of travel literature. The notion that slave narratives chronicle movement has not gone unrecognized. Indeed, scholarship on 20th-century African-American literature often argues the thematic importance of a journey motif that some trace to antebellum America. Blyden Jackson, for example, notes that African-American “literature bears within itself content, as well as themes and moods, reflecting the Great Migration” (xv), the period from early to mid-20th century, which Marcus E. Jones says actually began before the Civil War when blacks fled the South for the urban, industrial North (30). And Robert Stepto has identified two basic types of journeys in African-American literature: one of “ascent” in which “an ‘enslaved’ and semiliterate figure [travels] on a ritualized journey to a symbolic North,” and one of “immersion,” which is a “ritualized journey into a symbolic South” (6). Such discussions of journey motifs, however, have not yet led to an examination of slave narratives as travel literature.
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Yatiman, Noor Ain, Nor Fadzila Aziz, and Ismail Said. "Homeschool Journey's Affordances in Children's Performances within Rural Environment." Asian Journal of Behavioural Studies 3, no. 9 (January 5, 2018): 101. http://dx.doi.org/10.21834/ajbes.v3i9.65.

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The study investigated children’s performances during homeschool journey in a rural environment through their actualized affordances at a village in Johor, Malaysia. The study was conducted with fifty-four middle childhood children through drawings, interviews and participant observation. The data were analyzed using qualitative content analysis. Children engaged more with natural elements rather than manmade elements and positively perceived, utilized and shaped the affordances. Therefore there is evidence to suggest that children recognized homeschool journey as their play spaces allowing them to interact with nature and developed their physical, social and cognitive skills, especially for children with high independent mobility.Keywords: Children performances; natural environment; independent mobility; homeschool journeyeISSN 2398-4295 © 2018. The Authors. Published for AMER ABRA cE-Bs by e-International Publishing House, Ltd., UK. This is an open-access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/). Peer–review under responsibility of AMER (Association of Malaysian Environment-Behaviour Researchers), ABRA (Association of Behavioural Researchers on Asians) and cE-Bs (Centre for Environment-Behaviour Studies), Faculty of Architecture, Planning & Surveying, Universiti Teknologi MARA, Malaysia.
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Khan, Jamshed Hasan. "SPEL: The Quality Journey." Asian Case Research Journal 09, no. 02 (December 2005): 203–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s021892750500068x.

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Synthetic Products Enterprises (Private) Limited (SPEL) was one of the few (indigenous) Pakistani companies that had introduced and implemented many quality and productivity improvement initiatives. These included Benchmarking, Statistical Quality Control, Quality Control Circles, and 5S'. A distinguishing feature of these initiatives was the involvement and motivation of its employees. However, with emerging competition coupled with reduced trade barriers, it became imperative for the company to constantly review and improve its current systems, which were predominantly quality driven. SPEL was able to develop a quality culture within its organization whereas several other companies, which had implemented similar kinds of quality tools, failed to develop it. This case explores the process through which a customer focused Total Quality Culture was developed and the conditions needed to facilitate this development.
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Green, Nigel R., William M. Roberts, Dwayne Sheehan, and Richard J. Keegan. "Charting Physical Literacy Journeys Within Physical Education Settings." Journal of Teaching in Physical Education 37, no. 3 (July 1, 2018): 272–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1123/jtpe.2018-0129.

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Physical literacy is creating significant interest worldwide due to its holistic nature and the potential it has to impact on people’s lives. It is underpinning many physical education programs, coaching strategies, health initiatives, and policymakers’ decisions. However, the complex philosophical and holistic nature of the concept has meant that methods used to chart/assess/measure progress have been very much dependent on the pedagogues interpretation of the concept. This paper will provide a review of current practices and issues related to charting/assessing/measuring progress of an individual’s journey. It will go on to highlight considerations that, we suggest, should be made by any organization developing methods to chart/assess/measure progress.
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Singh, Udai Pratap. "Looking within and beyond the Conventional Windows of ‘Anthropometry’: An Anthropological Journey." Asian Man (The) - An International Journal 7, no. 1and2 (2013): 61. http://dx.doi.org/10.5958/j.0975-6884.7.1x.009.

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39

Afolabi, Niyi. "Backadabush: Journey Within as ?Rattling the Cage? in Ian Strachan'sGod's Angry Babies." Research in African Literatures 34, no. 3 (September 2003): 115–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.2979/ral.2003.34.3.115.

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40

Kaitelidou, Daphne, Maria Kalogeropoulou, Theofanis Katostaras, Olympia Konstantakopoulou, Panagiotis Minogiannis, Alexandra Skitsou, Olga Siskou, Georgios Charalampous, Alexandros Ardavanis, and Lykourgos Liaropoulos. "Living with breast cancer: Patients’ journey within the Greek National Health System." Forum of Clinical Oncology 6, no. 4 (December 1, 2015): 1–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/fco-2015-0016.

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Abstract Background: Process mapping (a patient-centred method) and recording the medical, nursing and administrative staff’s views involved in the provision of care help us understand patients’ experience regarding the constraints, delays and bottlenecks of healthcare service processes and identify areas of improvement. Patients and Methods: Time information and data were collected through time and motion study with regard to the path patients with breast cancer follow in two public hospitals (sample of 86 patients) and a semi-structured questionnaire was administered to medical, nursing and administrative staff (sample of 14 employees). Results: The amount of time required in total for the prescription process was increased up to seve7 times compared to the beneficial amount of time, and the longest delays in patients’ waiting time were observed with regard to the process of chemotherapy (more than 2 hours and 40 minutes, in some cases). About 92.3% of the staff of the two hospitals prioritized the malfunctioning of theCcentralIinformationSsystem as the most important factor and more than 75% of the study participants mentioned that several administrative and technical aspects have a negative and significant effect on the time required to prescribe the necessary medicines for the treatment of patients. Conclusions: The lack of understanding of the hospital’s processes and spatial infrastructure by most patients, the lack of an electronic patient record system and central information system are highlighted as the main issues that contribute decisively to the increase in the non-beneficial time that patients with breast cances have to spend nowadays in hospitals of the NHS in Greece.
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webster, Catrin. "The journey and movement, repetition and time: Drawing within my visual practice." Journal of Visual Art Practice 11, no. 1 (August 16, 2012): 27–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/jvap.11.1.27_1.

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42

Harding, Keith G., and Douglas Queen. "A 25-Year Wound Care Journey within the Evolution of Wound Care." Advances in Skin & Wound Care 25, no. 2 (February 2012): 66–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.asw.0000411406.13178.c5.

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43

Ramprasad, Gayathri. "Finding the light within: My cross-cultural journey from depression to wellness." Asian Journal of Psychiatry 14 (April 2015): 84–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ajp.2015.01.004.

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44

Schüttler, Christina, Hans-Ulrich Prokosch, Michael Hummel, Martin Lablans, Björn Kroll, and Cäcilia Engels. "The journey to establishing an IT-infrastructure within the German Biobank Alliance." PLOS ONE 16, no. 9 (September 22, 2021): e0257632. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0257632.

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Background Biobanks ensure the long-term storage and accessibility of biospecimens and corresponding data sets. Thus, they form the foundation for many research projects which may contribute to improving medical care. With the establishment of the German Biobank Node and Alliance, expertise in biobanking is bundled and strengthened. An important component within this research infrastructure is the set-up of an information technology (IT) network for allowing feasibility requests across individual biobanks. Objective We aim to describe relevant aspects that have shaped the journey to interconnect biobanks, to enhance their visibility within the research-community, to harmonize data, and to enable feasibility searches to support access to available data and biosamples. Methods To achieve this task, we resorted to a wide variety of methods: we ran a requirement analysis, decided on the mode of operation for the federated team of IT-developers and on the development approach itself, took related national and international initiatives into account, and concluded with evaluations of the developed software artefacts and the operation of the entire chain of applications. Results We drew an IT framework including all heterogeneous data aspects derived from our requirement analysis and developed a comprehensive IT infrastructure. The successful implementation benefited from a smooth interaction of a federated IT team distributed across all participating sites that was even able to manage a major technology change mid-project. Authentication and project management services from associated partners could be integrated and the graphic user interface for an intuitive search tool for biospecimens was designed iteratively. The developed code is open source to ensure sustainability and the local implementation is concluded and functioning. The evaluation of the components was positive. Conclusions The entire project had given ample opportunity for challenges, predictable and unpredictable—from the mode of operation to changing some of the initial ideas. We learned our lessons concerning personnel, budget planning and technical as well as manual monitoring as well as some requirements arising only during the process of the project. Nevertheless, we can here report a success story of a network infrastructure, highly agile and much easier in local installation than initially anticipated.
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45

Pasaribu, Truly Almendo, Novita Dewi, and Barli Bram. "A Jesuit Perspective on Metaphors for COVID-19 in the Online Journal "Thinking Faith "." Respectus Philologicus, no. 39 (44) (April 23, 2021): 32–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.15388/respectus.2020.39.44.75.

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This article investigated how metaphors for COVID-19 were framed in a Catholic-based journal Thinking Faith. Data, consisting of 107 metaphors, were collected from the online journal and were analyzed within the Jesuit perspectives. Results showed that out of the 107 occurrences of metaphoric expressions for the pandemic, the source domains tend to have reflective and empowering aspects. The 12 main source domains of COVID-19 were war, drama, tools, natural forces, journey, manageable item, teacher, other living beings, darkness, pain, threat, and signs of the times. The coverage of Thinking Faith aimed to show the life-changing wisdom of the Gospel, Catholic Social Teaching, and Papal messages. Positive or neutral word choices of metaphors like teacher, drama, journey, manageable items, natural forces, and signs of the times managed to spark hopefulness for the journal readership. Meanwhile, the violence-related metaphors war, pain, and threat may appear to be discouraging. Overall, the metaphors used in the Jesuit online journal were contextually heartening
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Ostřanský, Bronislav. "The Sufi Journey to the Next World." Archiv orientální 83, no. 3 (March 4, 2021): 475–500. http://dx.doi.org/10.47979/aror.j.83.3.475-500.

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Since the very birth of Islam, the Last Things have become a subject of passionate dispute among Muslims. In addition to the “external” approaches of Islamic jurists and theologians with regard to death, funerals, the Hereafter, etc., Sufis have incorporated sepulchral images into their symbolic ways of expression. This article sets out to precisely discuss such Sufi symbolism and the interpretation has a twofold goal: first, to discuss the emblematic approaches to the Last Things, within the framework of Sufi spiritual legacy. The second objective is to prove that symbolic interpretation of the eschatological journey has its demonstrable “earthly counterpart” within Sufi teaching about the spiritual progress of the human being.
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Cibulskienė, Jurga. "The development of the journey metaphor in political discourse." Metaphor and the Social World 2, no. 2 (December 31, 2012): 131–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/msw.2.2.01cib.

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The present paper focuses on the variation and dynamics of cross-cultural conceptual metaphor national DEVELOPMENT is a journey in Lithuanian political discourse. The paper aims to answer the question: To what extent do we share the same or different understanding of politics as a journey? Employing Critical Metaphor Analysis (CMA) (Charteris-Black, 2005) as methodological background, an attempt is made to look at variation of conceptual metaphor and metaphorical linguistic expressions within one political party, i.e. the Conservative Party, but at different periods of time. It is assumed that linguistic metaphorical expressions underlying the conceptual metaphor NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT IS a JOURNEY are likely to have a temporal character. The results show that metaphorical linguistic expressions underlying the JOURNEY metaphor alter significantly within one political discourse before joining the European Union and NATO and after it. Moreover, marked changes in conceptual metaphor have also been observed. Thus, the development of the JOURNEY metaphor shows ideological implications emerging in the political discourse of Lithuania.
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Gibson, Poppy Frances, and Sarah Smith. "Digital literacies: preparing pupils and students for their information journey in the twenty-first century." Information and Learning Science 119, no. 12 (November 12, 2018): 733–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ils-07-2018-0059.

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Purpose In a fast-moving world where technology has become intertwined with our daily lives, meaning information is available at our fingertips, information overload (Khabsa and Giles, 2014) is just one of many challenges that this technological overhaul has presented for learners from the primary classroom up to studies within higher education (HE). This paper aims to present skills needed by both pupils and students to navigate their information journey, and discusses how educators can support the acquisition and development of these skills. Design/methodology/approach Drawing on key literature in the fields of education and academia through the process of systematic review and adopting the analogy of a journey to represent lifelong learning, this bipartite paper explores how both primary school pupils and university students are required to access information in their very own information journeys in this “Information Age”. Findings The similarities and differences between child and adult learners are considered. This paper shares practical strategies for promoting the smarter use of information – and a shorter journey – for these “travelers” along the way. This paper essentially aims to raise questions in the minds of educators as they help to prepare their learners to learn. Originality/value This paper offers an interesting insight for teachers and lecturers as the crossover between two sets of learners, primary-age pupils and students in HE, is considered in terms of how we, as educators, can help to provide more effective and efficient information journeys, and therefore promote successful learning. A five-stage model is presented for the information journey.
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Shen, Shiwei, Marios Sotiriadis, and Yuwen Zhang. "The Influence of Smart Technologies on Customer Journey in Tourist Attractions within the Smart Tourism Management Framework." Sustainability 12, no. 10 (May 19, 2020): 4157. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su12104157.

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Nowadays, smartness and smart management of tourism destinations and suppliers are becoming a top priority and big challenge. This article focuses on tourist attractions and aims at exploring how smart technologies influence the customer journey. The main research question is how smart technologies are influencing the tourists’ visit experience. The study takes a consumer behavior perspective with a specific focus on the visit cycle (prospective, active, and reflective phases), based on the theoretical foundations of customer journey process model. First, a research framework was elaborated, encompassing three hypotheses. Then, this model was empirically tested and validated by means of a quantitative research using as a study site the Ningbo Museum, Ningbo, China. This investigation allows us to get insights into consumer behavior, which is useful for tourist attraction to become ‘smarter’. The study’s findings indicate that smart technologies have an influence on the customer journey at all three phases, the most significant being at the prospective and active phases, without neglecting the reflective one. This article extends our knowledge by providing new insights into the influence of smart technologies that have theoretical and marketing implications for tourist attraction.
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Wilder, Seth A. "Sentimental journey? The drifting rhythms of Tsai Ming-liang’s Journey to the West." Asian Cinema 32, no. 1 (April 1, 2021): 3–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/ac_00030_1.

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With his experimental short, Journey to the West, Tsai Ming-liang creates a cinematic experience that recalls the early ‘cinema of attractions’, but this is an attraction with a twist. As a spectacle, it is more specular than spectacular. An attraction without the attendant excitement, his is a reflection that presents a provocation. By calling out the shortened attention span of contemporary life, Tsai identifies the level of distraction that characterizes the contemporary, post-industrialized spaces of late-stage capitalism. An attempt at redemption, his film conveys a sense of what Rey Chow refers to in contemporary Chinese cinema as ‘the sentimental’. Framed by Henri Lefebvre’s and Lea Jacobs’s respective ideas concerning rhythms both extrinsic and intrinsic to the cinematic, and complemented by considerations of temporality, rather than making meaning, this article attempts to make sense of the film by locating these rhythms within it.
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