Paul and Marnie Kalkstein retired to the small town of Arrowsic, Maine in 2006. Looking for interesting things to do, they hit upon tent camping, an activity often thought to be the province of younger folk. As they left the Maine winter behind to pitch their Coleman tent in the South, and later in their home state, they discovered that our sense of passing time is malleable, and that new activities can provide benefits to retirees beyond what they had expected. Told in their two voices, this is a wide-ranging personal account, not only of their tenting experiences, but about their altering views of life and of each other.
The English Competence Handbook provides a simple, clear, and thoroughly proven method of building non-fiction writing ability and increasing a writer's confidence. Cited as a tool for literacy by Time/I> magazine in its cover story "Why Johnny Can't Write," The English Competence Handbook provides teacher and student with a graduated, easy-to-use program to develop writing and reading skills. The program moves from the sentence, to the paragraph, to the whole essay, and brings the writer beyond competence to a sense of grace and style in composition. The English Competence Handbook has been used successfully in secondary schools and colleges throughout the country. The authors of the English Competence Handbook are long-time English teachers at Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts, America's oldest incorporated boarding school. Each of them has consulted with various school systems across the nation.
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.