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Today we are talking with Jennifer Flemmings and Julie Owens who were both part of the founding committee for the Great Plains Literacy Festival. The festival was held in April and was a great success. Jennifer and Julie give us some of the highlights of first annual from the author and illustrators to the events.
The One About…Text Structure and Inference Skills: The Latest Instructional Research!Marianne Rice, Tiffany Peltier, and Kacee Lambright“What's the Main Idea?”: Using Text Structure to Build ComprehensionAlida K. Hudson, Julie Owens, Karol A. Moore, Kacee Lambright, Kausalai (Kay) WijekumarFirst published: 27 April 2021https://ila.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/trtr.2016“Inference skills for reading: A meta-analysis of instructional practices.”Rice, M., & Wijekumar, K. (K.) (2024, March 18). Inference Skills for Reading: A Meta-Analysis ofInstructional Practices. Journal of Educational Psychology. Advance online publication.https://dx.doi.org/ 10.1037/edu0000855https://psycnet.apa.org/record/2024-63383-001Tiffany Peltier:Tiffany Peltier is a Research Scientist in the Collaborative for Student Growth at NWEA. Sheearned her PhD in Learning Science at the University of Oklahoma and her Masters in Readingand Bachelors in Early Childhood Education from Texas A&M University.https://understandingreading.home.blog/about-contact/Marianne Rice:Academic Researcher, Educator, and Reading Specialist at the Department of EducationalPsychology, Texas A&M UniversityEmail: Marianne.Rice@TAMU.EDUKacee Lambright:Research Specialist IIITEACHING, LEARNING & CULTURETexas A&M UniversityEmail: kacee331@tamu.eduSupport the showThe Literacy View is an engaging and inclusive platform encouraging respectful discussion and debate about current issues in education. Co-hosts Faith Borkowsky and Judy Boksner coach teachers, teach children to read, and hold master's degrees in education.Our goal is to leave listeners thinking about the issues and drawing their own conclusions.Get ready for the most THOUGHT-PROVOKING AND DELICIOUSLY ENTERTAINING education podcast!
Julie Griffin and Julie Owen, are residents in Ringgold, VA where they have an industrial, open air landfill in their backyards. The landfill is owned by First Piedmont where they created the landfill after the community had already existed there for 50+ years. The residents have to look at that mess every time they come out of their houses' and deal with the odor from it 24 hours a day. There is no fence around it so there is high risk with children and pets in this residential area, not to mention what is in the air and water from it. They are a chapter of BREDL called, Coalition for a Clean Dan River Region, where they are taking a stand to protect their family, homes and the air and water that we all depend on! Industrial landfills have industrial waste in them which can contain metals, glass, asphalt, and more. Landfills produced gasses such as methane, carbon dioxide, and trace amounts of oxygen, nitrogen, hydrogen, and non methane organic compounds. Not to mention, they produce leachate which is a liquid produced by landfill sites, contaminating nearby water sources, which further damages the ecosystems. I would highly suggest going to their facebook page “Save our rural community” to see pictures of the landfill and what they have to deal with daily. Contact and connect with Julie Owens and Julie Griffin: julieo495.33@gmail.com Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/groups/971369563328746/?hoisted_section_header_type=recently_seen&multi_permalinks=1599197337212629 Information about damage of landfills: https://www.colorado.edu/ecenter/2021/04/15/hidden-damage-landfills https://www.epa.gov/landfills/industrial-and-construction-and-demolition-cd-landfills
Cast:Dr. Tara Egan - hostJulie Owens - guest expertBea Coté - guest expertBetween the news media, the tabloids and social media, it is hard to have not heard about the Johnny Depp v. Amber Heard trial and talk of domestic violence. What is happening in this trial that can give us a lot of useful information about domestic violence? Listen in on the discussion with Tara and her TWO domestic violence guest experts (Julie Owens and Bea Coté) during this informative and relevant episode about the details that have been unfolding and what can be learned from it, such as: The prevalent lack of understanding about what domestic violence is.That most domestic violence is not physical or criminal.Many abusers that have never been identified as criminals, may not see themselves as abusers and then the victim often doesn't either.Common characteristics of abusers.Common characteristics of survivors.The role media is having and how believable each party is and their likeable.Julie Owens is a survivor of domestic violence who has worked in the field of violenceagainst women and women's empowerment since 1989. She has founded a hospital Domestic Violence crisis response team, a transitional shelter, advocacy groups and training programs. Julie trains professionals widely and has served as an expert witness in both criminal and civil cases regarding domestic violence and domestic violence-related post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). To learn more about Julie and her services, visit HERE.Bea Coté is a social worker, therapist and advocate who has worked exclusively withabusers for over 22 years. Prior to that, her focus was on family violence/child abuse.She is the founder of IMPACT Family Violence Services LLC, and trains and consults regionally and nationally on all facets of domestic violence/intimate partner abuse and has developed an expertise in an overlooked DV demographic: the abuser. Bea also founded a non-profit organization, Step Up to Family Safety, a 501(c)3, which provides scholarships to qualified IMPACT clients.To learn more about Bea and the ImpactDV program, visit HERE.1-800-799-SAFEPost Separation Abuse Wheel - https://www.onemomsbattle.com/post-separation-abuseWebsite - For parents to learn more about Dr. Tara Egan's child & adolescent therapy services, books, webinars, public speaking opportunities, and coaching/consultation services, Go HERE.Facebook - HERE.YouTube - HERE.Instagram - HERE.Edited by Christian Fox
Survivor/advocate/30yrs of experience, Acclaimed Speaker,consultant and Trainer she is a Domestic Violence Expert Trigger warning is applied to this podcast --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/hmisty387gmailcom/support
Julie Owens survived a domestic violence (DV) kidnapping and stabbing in 1988, then developed DV programs including hospital and counselor training programs, an ER crisis team, and a faith-based shelter. Her story is in the documentary “Broken Vows: Religious Perspectives on Domestic Violence”. She has directed DV trauma research at the National Center for PTSD, coordinated DV efforts in a mental health authority, counseled substance-using survivors, and overseen victim service agencies. Julie works nationally and globally to train employees of governments and businesses, including the Bank of America. She's an Expert Consultant who has consulted for the U.S. Dept of Justice Office for Victims of Crime, the U.S. DHHS National Human Trafficking, the U.S. Dept. of State, and Bank of America. Julie's focus is on survivor-centered and trauma-informed victim advocacy in secular and faith-based settings. Watch and read this episode at flipyourlidpodcast.com
This year, in recognition of DVAM, the Engendered Collective hosted a series of community conversations to bring greater awareness to domestic abuse and gender-based violence. Today's conversation deals with the intersection of domestic abuse and the Church. Our guests included Debra Wingfield and Julie Owens. Debra Wingfield, Ed.D. is an Author, Speaker, and Trainer with 46 years of combined experience working with abuse across the lifespan. She counseled children and adults who experienced family violence, abuse, and child maltreatment for over 25 years. She educates and trains professionals across multiple disciplines-mental health, advocates, attorneys, and court professionals on the impacts of coercive control, domestic abuse, and family violence. A former faculty member in psychology and counseling at Regis University and the University of Southern Colorado. The author of healing from abuse books for adults and children include Eyes Wide Open: Help! with Control Freak Co-Parents, From Darkness to Light: Your Inner Journey, and Through a Child's Voice: Transformational Journaling. Julie Owens is a survivor of domestic violence who has worked in the field of violence against women and women's empowerment since 1989. She has founded a hospital DV crisis response team, a transitional shelter, advocacy groups and training programs. She has worked with trauma survivors and addicted survivors, and was a research co-investigator, project director and trauma therapist on studies at the National Center for PTSD. Julie trains professionals widely and has served as an expert witness in both criminal and civil cases regarding domestic violence and domestic violence-related post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). She was a Site Coordinator for the Lily Endowment-funded RAVE project (Religion And Violence E-learning) during its five years of initial development. Her extensive work with the State of N.C. Department of Administration, N.C. Council for Women, involved oversight of numerous domestic violence, sexual assault and economic empowerment grant programs. She monitored grants, developed grant guidelines, trained non-profit boards, consulted and trained about best practices for working with victims and survivors, built collaborative initiatives and partnered with professionals in many disciplines. During our conversation, Debra, Julie, and I touched upon the following resources: Jess Hill's book, See What You Made Me Do Reverend Marie Fortune's Keeping the Faith Spiritual and Religious Abuse Wheel How the Bible verses are being misinterpreted by some to defend or justify violence against women and/or gender inequality Riane Eisler's The Chalice and the Blade Julie's packet of Christian domestic violence resources Debra's book, Eyes Wide Open: Help With Control Freak Co-Parents Debra's book, Through a Child's Voice Debra's book, From Darkness to Light: Your Inner Journey Teri's suggestions for leaders in the Religious Left including John Pavlovitz and Rabbi Rachel Timoner First Corinthians 13 from the Bible, which gives the definition of love --- Thanks for tuning in to the en(gender)ed podcast! Be sure to check out our en(gender)ed site and follow our blog on Medium. Join our feminist community of survivors, advocates and allies! Consider donating because your support is what makes this work sustainable. Please also connect with us on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook. Don't forget to subscribe to the show!
Labeling is the act of identifying and naming a person’s behavior based loosely on information obtained by unreliable sources, usually those found on social media rather than through evaluation and diagnosis from mental health clinicians. When labeling intersects with behaviors from abusers in cases of domestic violence, a pseudo-diagnosis can follow, leaving victims of domestic violence to sacrifice their own safety for the presumed mental health needs of their abuser. Terms such as narcissist and “sociopath” are often diluted through pop-psychology leading to an increase in labeling, empathy for the abuser, and risk for victims. We talk today with Julie Owens, a victim advocate who survived the domestic violence of attempted murder. For three decades she has consulted and trained nationally and internationally for organizations, governments, and professionals. She created a domestic violence crisis team for ERs and a transitional shelter before directing DV trauma therapy research at the National Center for PTSD. Julie consults and trains independently for organizations including the Office for Victims of Crime, the National Human Trafficking Center, and Bank of America. Her focus is survivor-centered, trauma informed victim advocacy in secular and faith-based settings. Content warnings for this episode include abuse, physical and sexual violence
In this episode, we talk to Ms Julie Owens MP, Federal Member for Parramatta, about engaging the Australian voters in the political discourse. Topics covered include: - Life before politics - The division bells system in Parliament House - The toll Parliamentary work can take on politicians' lives - What it means to join a political party - The benefits of political parties - What business can teach you about politics - What it is like to be a politician as an introvert - The importance of politicians being aware of constituents' ‘ordinary days' - A politician's role as a community leader - The J-Curve and declining economic literacy - The need to think creatively about the future to start to ask the questions which may become issues in 2 to 10 years' time - The future of data sector - The effects of the gig economy on our federal economy and our mental health - Business' role in the development of our cities and communities - The impact of cities on local biodiversity - How to make constituents more receptive to policy change - Seeing rubbish as an opportunity rather than a problem - The history of government support of the arts industry - Our need to think about the bigger picture and preventative action in politics - What the future will look like as cars become driverless - The opportunity for multicultural Australia in the business sector - The power of high school children About Ms Owens: Julie was first elected to the House of Representatives for Parramatta in 2004. She was a small-business owner and head of the Association of Australian Independent Record Labels. The electorate of Parramatta is based in the western suburbs of Sydney. Besides Parramatta, it includes Constitution Hill, Dundas Valley, Granville, Harris Park, Holroyd, Mays Hill, North Parramatta, Oatlands, Old Toongabbie, Rosehill, Rydalmere, Telopea, Wentworthville, & Westmead and parts of Dundas, Guildford, Merrylands, North Rocks, Pendle Hill, South Granville, South Wentworthville and Toongabbie. Some of Julie's policy areas that she is most passionate about are small business and employment, heritage and the NBN. Julie has run a small business and supports local jobs. Through her support of Shop Small and Parliamentary Friends of Fashion, Julie has been a vocal supporter of small businesses in the Parramatta area and beyond. Parramatta has some of the oldest colonial buildings in Australia and Julie has fought hard to maintain much of its heritage. While Parramatta is building as Sydney's second CBD, Julie has fought to ensure the heritage is not destroyed in the development. Julie has been very vocal on the proposed development within the Cumberland Hospital precinct and the Female Factory site. Julie has fought hard for Parramatta, being a business and residence hub, to get a higher quality broadband network. Some parts of Parramatta have internet speeds as low as 0.14 megabits per second – far slower than the average speed of the Republic of the Congo, which is 1.75 Mbps.
Alison Sullivan, an integrative mental health therapist in Fredericksburg, VA, has a discussion about domestic violence with Julie Owens, who is a world renowned domestic violence expert & survivor. The two go in depth sharing their personal domestic violence experiences, address the different types of domestic violence and what it looks like, and how to safely handle domestic violence situations.
On May 7th 2018, The New Yorker published a piece written by Jane Mayer and Ronan Farrow about physical abuse allegations by 4 women against New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman. Shortly after publication, Schneiderman denied the allegations, but then still resigned. On Lawyer 2 Lawyer, host Craig Williams joins lawyer and psychologist Karla Fischer, Joan Meier, attorney and professor from George Washington University Law School, and Julie Owens, a survivor of domestic violence and domestic violence expert witness, to discuss the abuse allegations against New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman. They take a look inside domestic violence and sexual misconduct cases and the psychology behind the obvious conflict between Schneiderman’s support of the #MeToo movement and women’s issues on the outside and his private behavior as an alleged abuser.
Julie Owens shares how the Lord has spoken to her about courage, how God has helped to transform her from one child filled with fear to someone ready to go to the mission field!
We all have set backs. It's what we do with those disruptions that define us in the long run. Listen to this inspiring podcast as PureReinvention team member Sonya Robinson talks with co-host Julie Owens about disruption on a personal level. QUOTE IT “Knowing when to hold on. Knowing when we need to walk away.” (1:29) "When opportunity knocks … walk across the threshold to go and experience my next level of reinvention.” (2:23) “Is this working for me?” (3:24) DIG IN (1:02) Being honest with ourselves. (1:48) When opportunity knocks. (2:56) Being honest even if it hurts. (3:45) Acting on honest realizations. TIP OF THE WEEK: Be an agent of your own change. Find your inner voice and listen to it.
Why is Mike wearing the pink hat? Well you just have to listen to the episode to find out! We got so much from our talk with Julie Owens that we had to bring her back for a second interview. This time we talked about how to handle disruption in the office and use common sense to work out differences. QUOTE IT “Does a degree define who I am as a professional?” (3:02) "Common sense is not so common, but we need to use it in resolving differences.” (5:28) “Words are gifts and words are weapons.” (5:37) “A scared man can’t win.” (15:17) DIG IN (2:29) Education comes in different packages. (5:20) Disagreeing without being disagreeable. (6:30) Tools for success. TIP OF THE WEEK: Disagree without being disagreeable. Be conscience of what you're saying and how you're saying it.
This week's guest is Julie Owens, case manager for the Honorable Gerald Rosen. Through her position with Judge Rosen, Julie had a front seat in witnessing the bankruptcy proceedings. Join us as we hear Julie share some stories and her thoughts on this historic event. QUOTE IT “Failure was not an option.” (6:26) “In finding a new solution . . . put in a new process.” (9:34) “Don’t go for the obvious. Don’t be afraid to do something that’s not obvious.” (12:52) DIG IN (3:55) The role of a visionary leader to reach an unprecedented resolve. (5:49) Lessons learned from the largest municipal bankruptcy. (10:14) Grand bargaining defined. TIP OF THE WEEK: When major disruption happens, take the time to take a hard look at your assets. Connect to your customers and stakeholders to be sure you're listing the right assets and that they are properly valued.
*Subscribe @ iTunes* This week The Season Pass Podcast continues the 2013 Halloween celebration with a trip to THE OFFICIAL HOME PARK of the Season Pass Podcast - Knott's Scary Farm in Buena Park, CA for Halloween Haunt! This is part ONE of TWO!! TONS of INTERVIEWS including Raffi Kaprelyan, Julie Owens, Craig Harold, Rob Perez, Daniel Miller, The Academy of Villains, Ted Dougherty, and more! Plus Experience Audio & Commentary through the NEW Black Magic haunt maze from the designer Daniel Miller. So many great stories, a plethora of Haunt sounds, and a load of Jeff Tucker!! Have Scary Fun! Links: Knott's Berry Farm Ultimate Haunt - Haunt: A Picture History Book Evil Episodes Thrillride.com Season Pass Closing Song - Wheels by Enuff Z'nuff on iTunes Check Out The Season Pass Podcast Website at: www.seasonpasspodcast.com Follow Us On Twitter! - www.twitter.com/theseasonpass Like the TSPP Facebook page! - www.facebook.com/theseasonpass Contact us: doug@seasonpasspodcast.com brent.young@seasonpasspodcast.com Call the Hotline with Park Trip Reports, Podcast Comments, or Anything else you would like to announce. –1-916-248-5524 Thanks to each one of you for listening to the show. Your support is extremely appreciated. © 2013 Season Pass Podcast
*Subscribe @ iTunes* This week it's part TWO of our Halloween celebration from Knott's Berry Farm -- 40th HAUNT!! Chris Gore (Comedian, PodCrash w/ That Chris Gore, Attack of the Show, etc.), Jenna Busch (Writer, Cocktails with Stan, etc.) and Jeff Tucker (Entertainment Supervisor from Knott's Berry Farm) return with Doug Barnes, Brent Young and Robert Coker for the second part from the huge night event. Maze walk-throughs with Daniel Miller in "Pinocchio Unstrung" and Brooke Walters in "Trick-or-Treat." Also, interviews with Julie Owens (Director of Live Entertainment for Knott's Berry Farm) and Rob Perez (Media Specialist for Knott's/Haunt). Tons of Haunt!! Enjoy! Links: Knott's Berry Farm PodCrash with That Chris Gore Cocktails With Stan - Jenna Busch AfterBuzz TV Cedar Fair ThrillRide.com Pixie Vacations Season Pass Closing Song - Wheels by Enuff Z'nuff on iTunes Check Out The Season Pass Podcast Website at: www.seasonpasspodcast.com Follow Us On Twitter! - www.twitter.com/theseasonpass Like the TSPP Facebook page! - www.facebook.com/theseasonpass Contact us: doug@seasonpasspodcast.com brent.young@seasonpasspodcast.com Call the Hotline with Park Trip Reports, Podcast Comments, or Anything else you would like to announce. –1-916-248-5524 Thanks to each one of you for listening to the show. Your support is extremely appreciated. © 2012 Season Pass Podcast