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Course description: Humanities and Social Science elective Many disciplines have explored happiness - philosophy, anthropology, psychology, sociology, neurobiology, film, art and literature
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the following: a cover letter a current CV a statement of teaching philosophy and evidence of teaching effectiveness (e.g., examples of peer and/or student evaluations) a research plan (up to two single-spaced
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Date Posted: 05/17/2024 Req ID: 37382 Faculty/Division: Innis College Department: Innis One Program Campus: St. George (Downtown Toronto) Description: Course number and title: INI106H1F: Writing Literary Journalism: Telling the Stories of the City Course description: An introduction to literary...
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located across six fully-affiliated hospitals, four community-affiliated hospitals and more than a dozen additional clinical practice sites. A philosophy of innovation, creativity and continuous quality
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submitted as part of the application that should include a strong teaching philosophy statement, sample syllabi, course materials, and teaching evaluations. Teaching excellence will be evaluated commensurate
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of teaching philosophy and sample course materials. Evidence of readiness for entrepreneurship e.g. research applications/partnerships in and beyond academia (e.g. patents, research commercialization
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of teaching philosophy, sample course materials, teaching evaluations, as well as strong letters of reference. Evidence of readiness for entrepreneurship e.g. research applications/partnerships in and beyond
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University of Toronto | Downtown Toronto University of Toronto Harbord, Ontario | Canada | 2 months ago
introduction to early technology, its achievements and limitations, the origins and development of ancient science, including ancient medicine, and their interaction with philosophy. Estimated Course Enrollment
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Course description: Many disciplines have explored happiness – philosophy, anthropology, psychology, sociology, neurobiology, film, art and literature – to name a few. Why not engineering? During
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Course description: Many disciplines have explored happiness – philosophy, anthropology, psychology, sociology, neurobiology, film, art and literature – to name a few. Why not engineering? During