Of Firebirds & Moonmen
- 220 stránek
- 8 hodin čtení
Of Firebirds & A Designer's Story From The Golden Age
Of Firebirds & A Designer's Story From The Golden Age
Focusing on the lives of students facing poverty, the author shares poignant narratives that highlight their struggles and the strategies they employ to achieve success. One particularly striking story reveals the extreme measures a mother took, tying her son to a tree for three days, to instill discipline and resilience. These compelling accounts shed light on the complex dynamics of hardship and determination in the pursuit of a better future.
The Sourcebook for Teaching Science is a unique, comprehensive resource designed to give middle and high school science teachers a wealth of information that will enhance any science curriculum.
This comprehensive collection of nearly 200 investigations, demonstrations, mini-labs, and other activities uses everyday examples to make physics concepts easy to understand. For quick access, materials are organized into eight units covering Measurement, Motion, Force, Pressure, Energy & Momentum, Waves, Light, and Electromagnetism.
Principals will discover practical strategies for strengthening and improving reading programs using the foundation established by the authors six truths of reading instruction. Explore comprehensive, multifaceted instruction techniques, as well as additional steps you can take to support students directly. Identify and troubleshoot problems your teachers may face, and gain valuable approaches to topics such as reading comprehension, vocabulary and literacy, and phonics and fluency."
Featuring over 125 mouth-watering recipes, this cookbook allows readers to recreate the vibrant street food experience showcased in the TV series Eat St. by James Cunningham. It highlights the best curbside eats from various food vendors across North America and includes a few favorites from England. The book encapsulates the diverse flavors and culinary creativity seen in four seasons of the show, inviting food lovers to indulge in irresistible, messy delights from the comfort of their own kitchens.
Most love stories are pretty much the same. A man and a woman comes together, fall in love, and pursue their dreams of happiness. Yet each story is as unique as the individual lovers. In this story, the couple struggle against great odds for their love for each other but also for the continuation of a family line that is threatened with the real possibility of extinction. The driving force comes from the love, strength, wisdom, and spirituality of the matriarch. She supplies the strategy and determination that is needed to save the bloodline and the vast holdings of the Covington Family.
Following an outline of the origins of the concept of ethos as it is found in the writings of Aristotle and Plato, James Norman examines the Catholic Church’s understanding of ethos in post-Vatican II educational documents and compares this understanding with the Irish Catholic Church’s approach to school ethos. Based on his own experience and research, Norman suggests new possibilities for the development of ethos in Catholic schools.