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Books > Children's & Educational > Life skills & personal awareness, general studies > Personal, health & social education (PHSE)
Healthy, Happy You is a complete PSHE course for 1st and 2nd level
in Scotland. It provides schools with a PSHE Scheme of Work for P2
to P7, with structured progression so children build up their
understanding of health, relationships, safety and social issues in
age-appropriate steps. The Second Level Handbook supports teachers
in delivering the Health & Wellbeing Curriculum for Excellence
by providing over 150 lessons, organised into topics. Each lesson
comes with a lesson plan, a PowerPoint presentation, discussion
guide, resource sheets and assessment. All materials are editable
so they can be used flexibly and can be adapted so that they are
specific to every setting. Teachers can be confident delivering
this essential subject with this comprehensive toolkit.
A brilliant new Bing picture book about vaccinations for preschoolers that comes with stickers!
Bing has got his vaccination today. He can’t wait to go to Dr Molly’s clinic to get his injection and his special Hoppity Voosh sticker for being brave! But not all his friends are feeling as brave as Bing. Can Dr Bing help them?
A delightful story reflecting the reality of a pre-schooler’s routine experience of vaccinations, the nervousness some feel and the key role stickers play in incentivising them. This is an upbeat book with Bing role playing and learning that vaccinations are nothing to be afraid of.
""In Australia they call high-achievers 'Tall Poppies'. A field of
poppies looks better when they appear to be all the same. So, if
one poppy grows taller than the other poppies in the field, they
just chop it down. It really is the same way with people. When
someone achieves too much and 'grows too tall' it seems like their
peers feel obligated to try to knock that person down."" The five
Tall Poppies seemed to win everything in fifth grade-academic
awards, solos in concerts, leads in the play, and (worst of all)
the school talent show. The girls soon learned that awards and
congratulatory messages over the school PA system often result in
green-eyed gossip and cold shoulders from jealous classmates. After
a successful, yet uber-stressful, school year the Tall Poppies'
eagerly awaited and well planned "Perfect Summer" has finally
arrived. On the agenda for the day:
- Attend Tall Poppy Club meeting
- Organize scrapbooking stuff
- Finish two scrapbook pages each
- Hang out with The Boys
- Have fun
But the Tall Poppies' "Perfect Summer" plans get derailed when the
malicious class "Weeds" Hayden and Mia intrude into Tall Poppy
territory. Add an envious new classmate and her mother to the mix,
sprinkle in a shocking admission that jeopardizes the Tall Poppies'
impending Hollywood movie debut and you get a recipe for the first
day of a less-than "Perfect Summer." One annoying new classmate +
two "weedy" mean girls + three awesome guy friends + four pair of
binoculars + five half-finished scrapbooks + sixth grade year +
seven spots on a Hollywood motion picture set = The First Day of
Summer for the Tall Poppies. And their "(im)Perfect Summer" has
only just begun EXTRAS INSIDE: Tall Poppy Terms Tall Poppy Power
Secrets Tall Poppy Tips: The Boys' Views Tall Poppy "Get Organized"
Tips Tall Poppy Scrapbooking Tips
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Head Lice
(Hardcover)
Beth Bence Reinke
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R739
R611
Discovery Miles 6 110
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"Racial Stigma on the Hollywood Screen from WWII to the
Present"""charts how the dominant white and black binary of
American racial discourse influences Hollywood's representation of
the Asian. The Orientalist buddy film draws a scenario in which two
buddies, one white and one black, transcend an initial hatred for
one another by joining forces against a foreign Asian menace.
Alongside an analysis of multiple genres of film, Brian Locke
argues that this triangulated rendering of race ameliorates the
longstanding historical contradiction between U.S. democratic
ideals and white America's persistent domination over blacks.
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Xander's Story
(Hardcover)
Christopher J Garcia-Halenar, Alejandro M Garcia-Halenar
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R480
R428
Discovery Miles 4 280
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This collection explores conceptions and practices of democracy of
social movement organizations involved in global protest. Focusing
on the global justice movement this book shows how they adopt
radical new democratic approaches and thus provide a fundamental
critique of conventional politics.
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What Kyle Can Do
(Hardcover)
Conni Branscom; Contributions by Brooke Luckadoo Hicks; Illustrated by Marcin Piwowarski
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R501
Discovery Miles 5 010
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Explore the incredible history of Afro hair. The Story of Afro Hair
celebrates the fashion and styles of Afro hair over the last 5,000
years. From plaits to the Gibson Girl, cornrows to locks, the
hi-top fade to funki dreds, The Story of Afro Hair is the ultimate
book of Afro hairstories. Kicking off with an explanation of how
Afro hair type grows and why, The Story of Afro Hair then takes us
right back to the politics and fashion of Ancient Egypt. Speeding
forwards to modern times we experience the Kingdom of Benin, Henry
VIII's court, the enslavement of African peoples, the Harlem
Renaissance, the beginnings of Rastafarianism, Britain in the 1980s
- and much more. With vibrant full colour illustrations by Joelle
Avelino. A sparkling gold foil hardback cover - the perfect gift
for anyone interested in culture, fashion and history. With
profiles of inspirational key figures in the Afro hair beauty
industry, such as Sara Spencer Washington, Madam CJ Walker, Viola
Desmond, Lincoln Dyke, Dudley Dryden and Anthony Wade. "A brilliant
read for Black History Month, [a] thought-provoking, lively &
accessible guide for seven plus" - The Guardian
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Harbor Me
(Paperback)
Jacqueline Woodson
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R232
R181
Discovery Miles 1 810
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A NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER! Jacqueline Woodson's first
middle-grade novel since National Book Award winner Brown Girl
Dreaming celebrates the healing that can occur when a group of
students share their stories. It all starts when six kids have to
meet for a weekly chat--by themselves, with no adults to listen in.
There, in the room they soon dub the ARTT Room (short for "A Room
to Talk"), they discover it's safe to talk about what's bothering
them--everything from Esteban's father's deportation and Haley's
father's incarceration to Amari's fears of racial profiling and
Ashton's adjustment to his changing family fortunes. When the six
are together, they can express the feelings and fears they have to
hide from the rest of the world. And together, they can grow braver
and more ready for the rest of their lives.
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