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Top Books on sanchez-ramirez
1. Ignacio ramírez
Date of Publication - 2009
Number of Pages 205
Publisher - Planeta
Places in the book - México, D.F
2. Martín ramírez
ISBN10 Number - 0977802817
Date of Publication - 2007
Number of Pages 192
Publisher - Marquand Books and the American Folk Art Museum,Marquand Books in association with American Folk Art Museum, New York
3. The ramirez bride
Date of Publication - 2005
Number of Pages 186
Publisher - Harlequin Mills & Boon, Limited
4. Aramis ramirez
Date of Publication - 2013
Number of Pages 32
Publisher - Mason Crest Publishers Inc.,Mason Crest Publishers,Mason Crest
Places in the book - Broomall, PA
5. Viva ramirez!
ISBN10 Number - 0552088870
Date of Publication - 1972
Number of Pages 414
Publisher - Corgi,CORGI CHILDRENS
Places in the book - London
6. Ramirez : a poem
ISBN10 Number - 1375117556
Date of Publication - Jul 20, 2017
Number of Pages 86
Publisher - Gale NCCO, Print Editions
7. The misfortunes of alonso ramírez
Date of Publication - 2011
Number of Pages 240
Publisher - University of Texas Press
Places in the book - Austin
8. Joaquin ramirez cabanas
ISBN10 Number - 9703208819
Date of Publication - Apr 11, 2004
Number of Pages 418
Publisher - Universidad Nacional Autonoma
9. What happened to ruthy ramirez
ISBN10 Number - 1668630443
Date of Publication - Mar 07, 2023
Number of Pages 1
Publisher - Hachette B and Blackstone Publishing
10. José rivera ramírez
ISBN10 Number - 8483537516
Date of Publication - Apr 22, 2016
Number of Pages 295
Publisher - MONTE CARMELO
11. What do you think, mr. ramirez?
"Geoffrey Galt Harpham met a Cuban immigrant on a college campus, who told of arriving, penniless and undocumented, in the 1960s and eventually earning a GED and making his way to a community college. In a literature course one day, the professor asked him, 'Mr. Ramirez, what do you think?' The question, said Ramirez, changed his life because 'it was the first time anyone had asked me that.' Realizing that his opinion had value set him on a course that led to his becoming a distinguished professor. That, says Harpham, was the midcentury promise of American education, the deep current of commitment and aspiration that undergirded the educational system that was built in the postwar years, and is under extended assault today. The United States was founded, he argues, on the idea that interpreting its foundational documents was the highest calling of opinion, and for a brief moment at midcentury, the country turned to English teachers as the people best positioned to train students to thrive as interpreters--which is to say as citizens of a democracy. Tracing the roots of that belief in the humanities through American history, Harpham builds a strong case that, even in very different contemporary circumstances, the emphasis on social and cultural knowledge that animated the midcentury university is a resource that we can, and should, draw on today." -- From the cover.