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Aida Marie Alaka

Researcher at Washburn University

Publications -  6
Citations -  20

Aida Marie Alaka is an academic researcher from Washburn University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Professional writing & Legal writing. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 6 publications receiving 19 citations.

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Learning Styles: What Difference Do the Differences Make?

TL;DR: Learning styles have been defined as cognitive, affective, and psychological behaviors that indicate how learners interact with and respond to the learning environment and how they perceive, process, store, and recall what they are attempting to learn as mentioned in this paper.
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Corporate Reorganizations, Job Layoffs, and Age Discrimination: Has Smith v. City of Jackson Substantially Expanded the Rights of Older Workers Under the ADEA?

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the impact of Smith, and particularly the Court's emphasis on the RFOA provision, and argued that the ADEA still does not protect older workers from the harsh consequences of economically motivated employment decisions.
Journal Article

Corporate Reorganizations, Job Layoffs, and Age Discrimination: Has Smith V. City of Jackson Substantially Expanded the Rights of Older Workers under the ADEA?

Aida Marie Alaka
- 22 Dec 2006 - 
TL;DR: In a recent study, this article found that older workers who are laid off more likely than younger workers to remain unemployed, but they are more likely to be re-employed on a part-time basis.
Posted Content

The Grammar Wars Come to Law School

TL;DR: The authors provided a concise overview of pedagogical shifts in language arts education over the last twenty-plus years as well as empirical studies of high school and college reading and writing skills.

Phenomenological Practitioner Research: How to Study Your Students' Problems to Improve Your Teaching

TL;DR: Aida M Alaka as mentioned in this paper is an associate professor of law at Washburn University School of Law, where she teaches courses in legal research and writing, race discrimination law and higher education law.