Knihobot

Barry Gray

    Ale in Prose and Verse
    A Play on Words
    My Married Life at Hillside
    Advocacy and Learning Disability
    Hygge Home: Cozy, Danish Ideas for House Interiors
    • Hygge Series: Book 1 We all want to feel comfortable and cozy in our own home; it's just second nature. However, few of us ever manage to achieve that feeling. Well, that is all about to change simply by applying the principles of hygge. This book will guide you through the various aspects of hygge within the home. It will cover the way that colors work to help you create that special atmosphere. How scents and music create a different feeling. It will examine how clutter has a negative impact on the energy in a room and how to then deal with it. Not only that, you will be guided through a home taking you room to room and the key things that you should consider doing in order to transform your home into this cozy paradise. In addition, you will explore the outside and how creating that special feeling begins even before you venture through the door. So, are you ready to turn your home into your very own serene space?

      Hygge Home: Cozy, Danish Ideas for House Interiors
    • Advocacy and Learning Disability

      • 256 stránek
      • 9 hodin čtení
      4,0(1)Ohodnotit

      This book presents an examination of the historical, legal and philosophical contexts within which advocacy services have developed. It discusses the professional and practical issues and problems confronting those running and using advocacy services, the role of advocacy, and advocacy with families and people with communication difficulties. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1. Advocacy and learning disability, Barry Gray, King Alfred's College, Winchester and Robin Jackson, Camphill Scotland. 2. Principles and types of advocacy, Jan Walmsley, The Open University. 3. Integrity and advocacy, Michael Kendrick, Independent Consultant. 4. Exploring the role of values in the management of advocacy schemes, Tim Clement, The Open University. 5. Professional consciousness and conflict in advocacy Colin Goble, King Alfred's College, Winchester. 6. The legal context of the advocacy service, Deborah Baillie, The Open University and Veronica Strachan, Robert Gordon University. 7. Thoughts from a UK citizen advocacy scheme, Mike Pochin, Dorset Advocacy. 8. Self advocacy and research, Dorothy Atkinson, The Open University. 9. The role of self advocacy: stories from a self advocacy group through the experiences of its members, Fred Spedding, Elizabeth Harkness, Louise Townson, Andy Docherty, Niall McNulty and Rohhss Chapman, Carlisle People First. 10. The neglected dimension - advocacy and the families of children with learning difficulties, Nick Pike, Annie Lawson School, Berkshire. 11. Advocacy with people with communication difficulties, Janet Scott, Southern General Hospital, Glasgow and Janet Larcher, Independent Consultant. 12. Some observations on the American advocacy scene, Michael Kendrick, Independent Consultant. 13. Better and worse: overview of formal advocacy for people with intellectual disabilities in Australia, Dimity Peter, Flinders University of South Australia. 14. Advocacy - the last frontier in special education? Colleen Brown, Manakau Institute of Technology, Auckland, New Zealand. The Contributors. References. Index.

      Advocacy and Learning Disability
    • Ale in Prose and Verse

      • 140 stránek
      • 5 hodin čtení

      A delightful collection of poems, stories, and essays on the subject of ale and beer. Featuring contributions from a range of notable writers and drinking enthusiasts, this book is a must-read for beer lovers everywhere.

      Ale in Prose and Verse