Offering a thorough exploration of journal publishing, this book includes expert insights and case studies that address key practices and issues within the industry. It serves as a valuable resource for professionals and those in training, providing a comprehensive understanding of the field and its intricacies.
This book brings Brian Jackson and Dennis Marsden's pioneering Education and
the Working Class from 1962 up to date for the 21st century and reveals what
we can do to achieve a fairer education system.
The Manchester and Ashton trolleybus network was one of the largest in the country. Manchester's red and Ashton's blue vehicles shared the wires on most of the services between the two areas, and in addition Manchester had a substantial network of its own. The photographs allow the reader to explore all the routes in turn, including those radiating from the city centre into Cheshire, and the intense services into the north-west suburbs, showing how all these areas looked in the middle of the last century.
Billy Winters, a typical Boston teen with a passion for the comic book hero Red Valor, juggles his fast-food job and a crush on Isabelle Corbett. His life takes an unexpected turn when he embarks on a journey that transforms him into something extraordinary, blending the mundane with the heroic. This coming-of-age story explores themes of identity and self-discovery against a backdrop of teenage aspirations and adventures.
Blackpool's trams are a national treasure. This book commemorates 75 years since the entry into service of the first of a fleet of streamlined trams, a type that has long been so enduring and the most of the tram fleet in Blackpool today is derived from these 1930s designs. Through these pages, take a bracing 12 mile trip along the Promenade and the cliffs from Star Gate to Fleetwood as it was between the 1930s and the 1960s.
This album is published to commemorate the centenary of the opening of this much-loved Welsh narrow gauge passenger tramway. Connecting two major seaside resorts on the North Wales coast, the trams ran for almost 50 years, during which time they became a tourist attraction in their own right.
During the middle decades of the last century, the streets of the city were busy with the comings and goings of the yellow trolleybuses which lined up in the city centre to take shoppers home to Jesmond or shipyard workers to Walker. Through these pages, take a ride and visit each route in turn, looking at what Newcastle was like fifty or so years ago.
"Degrees of Choice" provides a sophisticated account of the overlapping effects of social class, ethnicity and gender in the process of choosing which university to attend. The shift from an elite to a mass system has been accompanied by much political rhetoric about widening access, achievement-for-all and meritocratic equalisation.Drawing on an award-winning British Economic and Social Research Council funded study,this book gives a full and different picture, drawing on qualitative and quantitative data to show how the welcome expansion of higher education has also deepened social stratification, generating new and different inequalities. While gender inequalities have reduced, those of social class remain and are now reinforced by racial inequalities in access. Employing perspectives from the sociology of education and particularly Bordieu’s work on distinction and judgement, the book links school (institutional habitus) and family (class habitus) with individual choice making in a socially informed dynamic.The contradictions and tensions arising from attempts to expand student numbers rapidly are vividly brought alive through the narratives of prospective applications to higher education. Students are seen to confront vastly different degrees of choice that are powerfully shaped by their social class and race.