Social emotional learning (SEL) is frequently taught in schools, but how can educators embrace it in their own lives? In this helpful guidebook, Wendy Turner demonstrates the importance of SEL being embraced, understood, and modeled by all members of the learning community. First, she offers tools to increase your self-awareness, including mindset, identity and culture, strengths, and core values. Second, she shows what self-management is and why it matters in helping everyone manage complex emotions in myriad ways. Then she explains what empathy is, and is not, and how it pertains to social issues, identity, and culture. Next, she discusses relationships—how we can foster successful relationships with everyday tools to ignite and support positive connections. Finally, she shows how to synthesize our skills, improving decision-making and modeling this for our students. Throughout each chapter, she provides creative, easy-to-implement ideas, stories, and reflection questions so you can make the ideas your own, enabling you to authentically grow and thrive on your personal and professional path.
IF OUR ANCIENT PRE-HUMAN ANCESTORS COMMUNICATED THROUGH CALLS, WHAT HAPPENED TO TURN THESE INTO SPOKEN LANGUAGE? Survival of the Smallest is the story of what was behind this amazing achievement, and who was the driving force. Beginning with a species living 3.5 million years ago and ending with our own, Homo sapiens, 45 thousand years ago, Wendy Turner brings to life the day-to-day challenges which confronted our ancestors - and the pressures on their survival skills. At the heart of the process were their vulnerable young, making their own bid to survive. Using knowledge and experience gained over twenty years of working as a Speech and Language Therapist, she shows how species by species, adaptations arose in their communication systems. Informative and readable, Survival of the Smallest is referenced from a range of sources, offering a personal perspective on how spoken language evolved. Along the way, insights can be found into the kind of approaches that help today's children develop their own speech and language - a priceless gift from our ancient past.
Timmy wishes for lots of brothers and sisters so he'll never feel lonely or bored. When Cosmo and Wanda grant his wish, Timmy gets more siblings than he knows what to do with. Full color.
What would the world look like if women were confident, empowered, and fulfilled? Why do so many women get lost in endless overwhelm, imperfect relationships, and draining jobs? How can women overcome all of these obstacles to become the best version of themselves—the person they were meant to be? In Becoming ‘You’ for Women, Wendy Turner-Larsen answers these questions and more. This book is the must-have kit—complete with revolutionary concepts, in-depth explanations, interactive exercises, and supplementary resources—for women who are ready to take the leap to become who they really are. Becoming ‘You’ for Women is the last self-help book you’ll ever need. Turner-Larsen draws on her thirty years of mental health, counselling, and coaching experience to show women how to un become the person they think they should be and thereby become their true, whole, empowered selves. This book will show you how to identify the beliefs that are getting in your way, how to let go of these beliefs, how to engage with your emotions and spirituality, and how to improve brain health so you can become you—the person you truly are and want to be. By equipping yourself with this knowledge, you will gain the courage, know-how, and develop the self-compassion you need to take full responsibility of your life and make those long-overdue changes. Like all journeys, this one begins with a single step: choosing to embark on this adventure to become you. And, as Turner-Larsen will convince you, you are enough.
There's huge excitement at Buckingham Palace when King Charles and Queen Camilla receive a surprise invite from Princess Kate: to watch her and Prince William play Andy Murray and Heather Watson at a charity match on Wimbledon's famous Centre Court! But things go messily wrong when Kate and William discover Harry the Hero Rat's stash of strawberries... and Charles and Camilla find themselves serving for the match instead! But will they win...?!
IF OUR ANCIENT PRE-HUMAN ANCESTORS COMMUNICATED THROUGH CALLS, WHAT HAPPENED TO TURN THESE INTO SPOKEN LANGUAGE? Survival of the Smallest is the story of what was behind this amazing achievement, and who was the driving force. Beginning with a species living 3.5 million years ago and ending with our own, Homo sapiens, 45 thousand years ago, Wendy Turner brings to life the day-to-day challenges which confronted our ancestors - and the pressures on their survival skills. At the heart of the process were their vulnerable young, making their own bid to survive. Using knowledge and experience gained over twenty years of working as a Speech and Language Therapist, she shows how species by species, adaptations arose in their communication systems. Informative and readable, Survival of the Smallest is referenced from a range of sources, offering a personal perspective on how spoken language evolved. Along the way, insights can be found into the kind of approaches that help today's children develop their own speech and language - a priceless gift from our ancient past.
Whether you've filed for bankruptcy or not, a book on how to recover from bankruptcy can help anyone to make wiser financial decisions in the future. A person yet to experience the anguish of making that decision to file can learn ways to better manage their finances and how to hopefully avoid making choices that lead to bankruptcy later in life. Bankruptcy is avoidable and a book on how to recover from filing will show you how to avoid it.
It's the King's Coronation and the Asian Mice in Hounslow are planning a glittering ball to mark the occasion. But disaster strikes when their massive glitter ball fails to shine! There's panic all round until an ingenious plan is devised - to take back the actual Kohinoor diamond from the royal crown and return it to it's rightful home, in the heart of the Indian community where it belong! Charles and Camilla are very busyorganising their outfits for the big day... will they even notice?!
Emily West's idyllic childhood is shattered when her young brother, Bobby, dies from meningitis. Her wish to escape to a more exciting, adventurous life seems to be granted when, at the age of eighteen, she meets Darren O'Dowel. Fifteen years her senior and with a job at the local radio station he appears to offer a sophisticated and glamorous existence... the reality is anything but. Darren is controlling, domineering, abusive and violent and leads her into a dark and degrading world of drink, drugs and sexual exploitation. Only when she eventually extracts herself from this destructive relationship can her life start afresh. But Darren O'Dowel does not forgive or forget. He blames her for his downturn in fortune and he wants revenge. He believes that Emily West has ruined his life... now he will try to ruin hers. (50% of the royalties from this book will go to the domestic violence charity REFUGE)
As religiously grounded moral arguments have become ever more influential factors in the national debate-particularly reinforced by recent presidential elections and the creation of the faith-based initiative office in the White House-journalists' ignorance about theological convictions has often worked to distort the public discourse on important policy issues. Pope John Paul II's pronouncements on stem-cell research, the constitutional controversies regarding faith-based initiatives, the emerging participation of Muslims in American life-issues like these require political journalists in print and broadcast media to cover religious contexts that many admit they are ill-equipped to understand. Put differently, these news events reflect subtle theological nuances and deep faith commitments that shape the activities of religious believers in the public square. Inasmuch as a faith tradition is an active or significant participant in the public arena, journalists will need to better understand the theological sources and religious convictions that motivate this political activity. The current national discourse has brought faith and its relationship to public policy to the forefront of our daily news. Since 1999, the Ethics and Public Policy Center, through the generosity of the Pew Charitable Trusts, has hosted six conferences for national journalists to help raise the level of their reporting by increasing their understanding of religion, religious communities, and the religious convictions that inform the political activity of devout believers. This book contains the presentations and conversations that grew out of those conferences.
The Bells, a family of mice living under Belsize Park Tube Station, are invited by Roger, the Mouse Minister for Transport, to Westminster for tea. When Roger's briefcase, containing top secret plans, is stolen, the Bells, aided by Charlotte Holmes, mouse detective, solve the mystery. Illustrated in colour and black and white by Andy Hunt.
This book is about the social understanding and treatment of the mentally ill, incompetent, and disabled in late medieval England. Drawing on archival, literary, medical, legal, and ecclesiastic sources and studies, the volume seeks to present a coherent picture of society's treatment, protection, abuse, care, and custody of the incapacitated. Although many medieval stories stereotyped the mad (most often as sinners or innocents), for example, there is clear evidence that English society treated and cared for the impaired on a person-by-person basis. The mentally incapacitated were not lumped into one category and not ignored or sent away; on the contrary, both the English administration and the public had many categories and terms for mental conditions, cognitive abilities, and levels of physicality (violence) associated with impairment. English society also had safeguards and assistants (keepers, custodians, guardians) in place to help mentally impaired persons in life. This study therefore eschews totalizing assumptions about a societal 'core' and its 'margins'; instead, it instigates a new consideration of communities as holistic entities with an ebb and flow among the contributing and non-contributing elements as people live, grow, age, get sick, become well, have children, break bones, or live with mental or physical impairments.
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.