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Adding pedagogical process knowledge to pedagogical content knowledge: teachers' professional learning and theories of practice in science education Smith, Colin - Blake, Allan - Kelly, Fearghal - Gray, Peter - McKie, Michelle
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But who learns what? On the risks of knowledge accumulation through networked learning in R&D Kekäle, Tauno - Cervai, Sara - Gómez Bernabeu, Ana
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A contribution to knowledge of the biodiversity of Syrphidae (Diptera) in Spain Ricarte Sabater, Antonio Ramón - Quinto Cánovas, Javier - Speight, Martin C.D. - Marcos García, María Ángeles
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Review of the effects of protection in marine protected areas: current knowledge and gaps, Revisión de los efectos de la protección en las áreas marinas protegidas: conocimiento y deficiencias actuales Ojeda Martínez, Celia - Bayle Sempere, Just T. - Sánchez Jerez, Pablo - Salas, Fuensanta - Stobart, Ben - Goñi Beltrán de Garizurieta, Raquel - Falcón, Jesús M. - Graziano, Mariagrazia - Guala, Ivan - Higgins, Ruth - Vandeperre, Frédéric - Le Diréach, Laurence - Martín Sosa, Pablo - Vaselli, Stefano
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The effect of self-talk in learning the volleyball service skill and self-efficacy improvement Zetou, Eleni - Vernadakis, Nikolas - Bebetsos, Evagelos - Makrari, Eleftheria
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‘Stars’ or ‘professionals’: the imagined vocation and exclusive knowledge of translators in Israel Sela-Sheffy, Rakefet
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Comparison of distance covered in paddle in the serve team according to performance level Ramón Llin, Jesús - Guzmán Luján, José Francisco - Llana Belloch, Salvador - Vuckovic, Goran - James, Nic
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EMOCause: an easy-adaptable approach to emotion cause contexts Russo, Irene - Caselli, Tommaso - Rubino, Francesco - Boldrini, Ester - Martínez Barco, Patricio
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Living on the edge: assessing the extinction risk of critically endangered Bonelli’s eagle in Italy López López, Pascual - Sarà, Maurizio - Di Vittorio, Massimiliano
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After at least 138 years of discussion, the etymological puzzle is possibly solved: the originally British English informalism kibosh as in “put the kibosh on [something]” could come from the clogmakers’ term kybosh ‘iron bar which, when hot, is used to soften and smooth leather’ (with possible reinforcement from Western Ashkenazic British English khay bash ‘eighteen pence’), Kibosh: etymology of the English word Gold, David L.
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