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DeLorean DMC-12

The Brain That Changes Itself, Norman Doidge, Dunod, 2007.

06/2008

"This book is about the revolutionary discovery that the human brain can change itself, as told through the stories of the scientists, doctors, and patients who have together brought about these astonishing transformations. Without operations or medications, they have made use of the brain's hitherto unknown ability to change. Some were patients who had what were thought to be incurable brain problems; others were people without specific problems who simply wanted to improve the functioning of their brains or preserve them as they aged."


Source: book preface.
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The Cambridge Handbook Multimedia Learning, Richard E. Mayer, Cambridge University Press, 2005.

10/2007

"During the past 10 years, the field of multimedia learning emerged as a coherent discipline with an accumulated research base that has never been synthesized and organized in a handbook. The Cambridge Handbook of Multimedia Learning constitutes the world's first handbook devoted to comprehensive coverage of research and theory in the field of multimedia learning. Multimedia learning is defined as learning from words (e.g., spoken or printed text) and pictures (e.g. illustrations, photos, maps, graphs, animation, or video). The focus of this handbook is on how people learn from words and pictures in computer-based environments. Multimedia environments include online instructional presentations, interactive lessons, e-courses, simulation games, virtual reality, and computer-supported in-class presentations. The Cambridge Handbook of Multimedia Learning seeks to establish what works (i.e., to determine which features of a multimedia lesson affect learning), and to consider when and where it works (i.e., to explore the implications of research for practice)."


Source: back cover.
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Echt abgedreht: Die Jugend der 90er Jahre, Klaus Janke & Stefan Niehues, Beck, 1995.

04/1996

"Jugendkultur war noch nie so abgekoppelt, so abgedreht zum Verständnis der Älteren. Nicht selten winken selbst 30jährige heute bereits ab: 'Damit kenn' ich mich nicht mehr aus'. Die Hippies in den 60er Jahren, die hat man gehasst, wenn man zum Establishment gehörte. Aber man hat verstanden, was sie wollten: Gleichheit, freie Liebe, keinen Vietnamkrieg, eine Absage an Verkrustungen und Autoritäten. Techno-Freaks und Computerkids von heute hasst man längst nicht mehr - dazu ist die Gesellschaft viel zu liberal geworden. Aber man versteht sie auch nicht mehr. Es herrscht ein gleichgültiges Nebeneinander - und der Dialog mit der Jugend wird immer schwerer. Institutionen, Parteien und sogar die Werbung können ein Lied davon singen."


Ausschnittsquelle: Vorbemerkung.
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Playfolios en développement

FR • La machine à explorer le temps
EN • The Time Machine
DE • Die Zeitmaschine
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