“Whether you're a business person wanting to create deeper relationships with clients and prospects, a leader wanting to create a culture of trust, or a regular person who simply wants to treat others with respect, The Collaboration Effect will give you the tools needed to achieve these results." — Deirdre Van Nest, Professional Speaker “The Collaboration Effect is a valuable resource as we deal with the disruption in our respective industries and markets.” — Danita Bye, Executive Sales Leadership Advisor “This is a great read for anyone from a teenager working at their first job to a seasoned CEO.” — Amy Miller, Our Family Encounter, Founder “Filled with down-to-earth ideas that you, your team, and your organization can utilize immediately. The Collaboration Effect successfully blends research, real-world application, storytelling, and leveraging Michael’s expertise as a consultant and keynote speaker.” — Dr. Jermaine M. Davis, Keynote Speaker “Anyone interested in taking collaboration to the next level should read The Collaboration Effect.” — Guy Sanschgrin, WTP Advisors, Principal Is conflict blocking your results? Do you want to increase results and enhance collaboration with others? Take advantage of The Collaboration Effect®. With 25-years of multi-level leadership experience and owning his own consulting firm, author Michael Gregory wrote The Collaboration Effect to help leaders become more focused on the tasks at hand, provide them with confidence when navigating difficult situations, and result in more peace in professional and personal relationships. This book is perfect for executive level leaders, midlevel managers, front-line supervisors, team leads, or anyone who has to lead in a given situation. Working with futurists, innovators, neuroscientists, and numerous successful business leaders, Mike has extensively researched the power of collaboration. With concise commentary and key callouts, you will learn about: - The Collaboration Effect®; - the tools of business negotiations; - enhancing personal and professional relationships; - educating others using different tactics; - improving health with a busy lifestyle; - technology and information considerations; - and enabling positive workplace culture. The Collaboration Effect is all about connecting relationships, listening actively, and educating judiciously in order to build bridges to negotiate closure. When you’re a part of a work environment that is aligned and closely connected, the group flourishes, which will in turn benefit them as individuals and professionals, and increase the bottom line. Over many years of his professional life with various life experiences, Mike has gained happiness and success from the lessons he has learned. He shares this with you in his new book so that you too can have happiness and success.
2020 Catholic Press Association second place award in theology--history of theology, church fathers and mothers In April 2015, Pope Francis named the Armenian poet and theologian St. Gregory of Narek (c. 945–1003) a Doctor of the Church. Though venerated for centuries by Catholic and Orthodox Armenians, Gregory is an obscure figure virtually unknown to the rest of the Church. Adding to the extraordinary nature of the pope’s declaration, Gregory has the distinction of being the only Catholic Doctor who lived his entire life outside the visible communion of the Catholic Church. The Doctor of Mercy aims to provide an accessible introduction to Gregory’s literary works, theology, and spirituality, as well as to make the case for the contemporary relevance of his writings to the problems that face the Church and the world today.
Is conflict blocking your results? Do you want to increase results and enhance collaboration with others? Take advantage of The Collaboration Effect(R). With 25-years of multi-level leadership experience and owning his own consulting firm, author Michael Gregory wrote The Collaboration Effect to help leaders become more focused on the tasks at hand, provide them with confidence when navigating difficult situations, and result in more peace in professional and personal relationships. This book is perfect for executive level leaders, midlevel managers, front-line supervisors, team leads, or anyone who has to lead in a given situation. Working with futurists, innovators, neuroscientists, and numerous successful business leaders, Mike has extensively researched the power of collaboration. With concise commentary and key callouts, you will learn about: The Collaboration Effect(R); the tools of business negotiations; enhancing personal and professional relationships; educating others using different tactics; improving health with a busy lifestyle; technology and information considerations; and enabling positive workplace culture. The Collaboration Effect is all about connecting relationships, listening actively, and educating judiciously in order to build bridges to negotiate closure. When you're a part of a work environment that is aligned and closely connected, the group flourishes, which will in turn benefit them as individuals and professionals, and increase the bottom line. Over many years of his professional life with various life experiences, Mike has gained happiness and success from the lessons he has learned. He shares this with you in his new book so that you too can have happiness and success.
An historical account of the first combat operation of the Vietnam war of the men of the 1st Battalion (Airborne), 12th Cavalry Regiment, 1st Cavalry Division (Air Mobile), 10-14 October 1965. This battle was not just our first combat experience, but also the first combat test of the air mobile concept.
Each of us will be touched by cancer in the course of our lifetime - as a person diagnosed with the disease or as a family member or friend who must witness its course in someone we love. For all of us, this encounter with cancer will entail an exploration of the margins of life and death. Too often, especially once the curative stage is passed, patients and their loved ones make this journey in silence and without the full support of a medical system whose chief mandate is to "win the battle" against cancer.
Draws on insider testimonies to describe the day-to-day, nitty-gritty responsibilities for hundreds of professions from lawyers and dentists to teachers and computer programmers. In a guide that shares complementary information on the educational background for cited professions as well as average starting and median salaries.
Originally published in 1978. This book provides and explains a framework for understanding and describing variations of style of language in relation to the social context in which it is used. Constant features of language users, such as their temporal, geographical. and social origins, their range of intelligibility, and their individualities, are related to concepts of dialects, but dialects are not the only kind of language variety. There are features of language situations that yield others; the medium used, the roles of the users and their relationships, as well as recurring situations and cultural habits, all relate to the style employed. Variety in language can be seen in terms of the major functions of language, as 'content' as 'inter-action' and as 'texture'. Studying variety in language from sociological and linguistic aspects this book is also interesting for psycholinguistics and literary study.
This is a special issue—our 50th, as you may have noticed from our cover. To celebrate, all past and present editors were to contribute a story. (It helps that they are also amazingly talented writers.) So we have stories from Michael Bracken, Barb Goffman, Paul Di Filippo, Darrell Schweitzer, and Cynthia Ward in addition to our other fare. But wait! There’s more! This issue features four original tales—Elizabeth Zelvin has a fantasy/mystery stories, Phyllis Ann Karr has a weird western, and Cynthia Ward has a gonzo science fiction crowd-funding story. And I have completed a story by the late H.B. Fyfe, who was best known for his science fiction stories, though this one is a revenge tale that most closely fits the mystery genre. And the good stuff doesn’t stop there. We also have a superhero story from Darrell Schweitzer. Space Opera from Algis Budrys and E.E. “Doc” Smith. A historical mystery novel by western author B.M. Bower. A historical investigation from Charles Todd. A Mallworld story from Somtow Sucharitkul (who also writes as S.P. Somtow). And no issue is complete without a solve-it-yourself mystery by Hal Charles. All in all, this is an probably our best Black Cat Weekly yet. Here’s the complete lineup: Mysteries / Suspense / Adventure: “The Ladies of Wednesday Tea” by Michael Bracken [short story] “Hidden in Plain Sight” by Hal Charles [Solve-It-Yourself Mystery] “Ice Ice Baby” by Barb Goffman [short story] “Flayed” by H.B. Fyfe and John Gregory Betancourt [short story] “Blood Money” by Charles Todd [Barb Goffman Presents short story] “The House of Marble” by Elizabeth Zelvin [Michael Bracken Presents short story] The Eagle’s Wing, by B.M. Bower [novel] Science Fiction & Fantasy: “The House of Marble” by Elizabeth Zelvin [Michael Bracken Presents short story] “The Rise and Fall of Whistle-Pig City” by Paul Di Filippo [short story] “Rabid in Mallworld” by Somtow Sucharitkul [short story] “Fighting the Zeppelin Gang” by Darrell Schweitzer [short story] “Winona of Bleeding Kansas” by Phyllis Ann Karr [short story] “The Campaign Is Now Officially Complete” by Cynthia Ward [short story] “Blood on my Jets” by Algis Budrys [short story] The Skylark of Valeron, by Edward E. Smith, Ph.D. [novel]
Blending social, intellectual, legal, medical, gender, and cultural history, Segregation's Science: Eugenics and Society in Virginia examines how eugenic theory and practice bolstered Virginia's various cultures of segregation - rich from poor, sick from well, able from disabled, male from female, and black and Native American from white. Of interest to historians, educators, biologists, physicians, and social workers, this study reminds readers that science is socially constructed."--BOOK JACKET.
Black Cat Weekly #9presents: Mysteries & Suspense “Tie Score,” by Lee Mayers[short story] “Lunch Is Served,” by Hal Charles [Solve-It-Yourself Mystery] “Lamplighter by the Sea,” by Michael Nethercott [Barb Goffman Presents short story] Judas Journey, by Lee Roberts [mystery novel] Special Detective, by John Thomas McIntyre [novel, Ashton-Kirk series] Science Fiction & Fantasy “The Wolf Woman,”, by H. Bedford-Jones [short story] “The New Pass,” by Amelia B. Edwards [short story] “Sympathy for Mummies,” by John Gregory Betancourt [short story] “No-Risk Planet,” by Stephen Marlowe [short story] Peril of the Starmen, by Kris Neville [novel] The Amulet, by A.R. Morlan [novel]
This new manual, intended for beginners, contains all you need to begin playing authentic Irish jigs, reels, hornpipes and more on the mandolin. Starting with simple polkas and slides, 26 common session tunes are included. the tunes are all favorites allowing you to rapidly join the fun of session playing. A special section explains pick direction for authentic jig picking. Included are instructions on basic Irish ornamentation for reels and jigs. the accompanying CD can be used for traditional by ear learning. Presented in mandolin tablature and standard musical notation.• Contains all you need to begin playing authentic Irish jigs, reels, hornpipes and more on the mandolin•
A detailed study of research on the psychology of expertise in weather forecasting, drawing on findings in cognitive science, meteorology, and computer science. This book argues that the human cognition system is the least understood, yet probably most important, component of forecasting accuracy. Minding the Weather investigates how people acquire massive and highly organized knowledge and develop the reasoning skills and strategies that enable them to achieve the highest levels of performance. The authors consider such topics as the forecasting workplace; atmospheric scientists' descriptions of their reasoning strategies; the nature of expertise; forecaster knowledge, perceptual skills, and reasoning; and expert systems designed to imitate forecaster reasoning. Drawing on research in cognitive science, meteorology, and computer science, the authors argue that forecasting involves an interdependence of humans and technologies. Human expertise will always be necessary.
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