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Books > Social sciences > Education > Higher & further education > Students / student organizations
Student life can be expensive - but don't panic. Manage Your Money
helps you successfully juggle your finances as you study, giving
you the confidence and good habits to stay on track. Manage your
budget (and still have a life) Become a savvy spender so your cash
goes further Explore sources of funding you didn't know existed.
Super Quick Skills provide the essential building blocks you need
to succeed at university - fast. Packed with practical, positive
advice on core academic and life skills, you'll discover focused
tips and strategies to use straight away. Whether it's writing
great essays, understanding referencing or managing your wellbeing,
find out how to build good habits and progress your skills
throughout your studies. Learn core skills quickly Apply right away
and see results Succeed in your studies and life. Super Quick
Skills give you the foundations you need to confidently navigate
the ups and downs of university life.
Practicing equity in our schools can ensure all students master
rigorous standards and graduate high school college and/or career
ready. The author, a long-time public-school educator, helps her
colleagues understand more deeply what the practice of equity
involves and how to use it to create cultures and systems in our
current schools that go beyond a rudimentary education for some
students to ensuring even the most marginalized of students achieve
at the highest levels. This book encourages teachers, principals,
and district leaders to each maximize the practice of equity in
their various positions so that together we ensure a bright future
for our children and our country. Equity practices in nurturing
school culture, reading instruction, content area literacies,
effective instructional practices, student supports, social
services, and distribution of resources is required to ensure
equality in outcomes so that education truly becomes the great
equalizer Horace Mann proclaimed it to be.
From grassroots campaigns and activism to top-down initiatives for
and against curricular reform, this open access book investigates
the movement to integrate LGBTQ+ history into high school history
courses in the USA. Stacie Brensilver Berman charts the development
of the movement from the founding of the Gay, Lesbian and Straight
Education Network (GLSEN) and the passing of the Fair, Accurate,
Inclusive, and Respectful (FAIR) Education Act in California, to
the resurgence of conservative thought after the 2016 election.
Based on 13 interviews with high school teachers about integrating
LGBTQ+ history in their classes, the author reveals the challenges
inherent to K-12 curricular reform amid the reluctance of a
conservative nation and many of its school systems to consider an
alternative vision. The book offers the first detailed portrait of
a prophetic minority of educators and activists championing a more
inclusive and accurate vision of American history. The book
includes a Foreword written by Blanche Wiesen Cook, Distinguished
Professor of History and Women's Studies at the City University of
New York, USA, and Robert Cohen, Professor of Social Studies,
Education, at New York University, USA. The ebook editions of this
book are available open access under a CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 licence on
bloomsburycollections.com.
The 2nd edition of Gifted or Just Plain Smart? was revised to
address the vast changes in the post COVID educational environment.
It is designed to be a useful guide for all who work with gifted
school-age children: parents, teachers, principals, and pre-service
teachers in university settings. It covers gifted education from
its origins and theories to the practical use of current technology
at home or in the school. It also addresses strategies to recognize
and develop overlooked gifted students such as those who are twice
exceptional, those from diverse underserved populations, and those
with a variety of gender issues, including students who identify
with LGBTQ+ communities. It is an updated practical how-to manual
with examples, anecdotes, real-life comments, and includes a guide
to free resources.
In Experiences from First Generation College Graduates, 31 alumni
who were the first in their family to obtain a college degree share
their experiences in college. These stories illuminate how the
struggles of first-generation students are primarily due to a
combination of multiple social inequities that are ignored,
reinforced, and perpetuated by exclusive college systems. These
authors speak directly to current and future first generation
students, offering tips and advice for success, along with powerful
words of encouragement in their emotionally rich narratives.
College faculty and staff are challenged to shift their
perspectives from viewing these students from a deficit lens or
attempting to make them more like continuing-generation students,
to instead having deeply honest confrontations with the pedagogies
and structures of college, which are frequently so ingrained that
they are invisible, and that cater to continuing-generation
students, who are often predominantly white, middle- and
upper-class. Colleges can create a more equitable system in which
universities are enriched by the wisdom, experiences, and talents
of first-generation students while promoting a generative culture
for all students.
This book provides background, strategies, and tips for higher
education faculty and instructors interested in incorporating
meditation in their classrooms. The work is based on research
involving introducing brief meditation practices to college
students and developing a detailed guide. Readers will learn how to
develop their own meditation practice as an academic, to set the
stage of introducing practice to students, to create ideal
conditions for meditation in the classroom, specific,
classroom-friendly meditation methods, ways to advance meditation
practice with students and keep it interesting, and how to spread
the culture of meditation across campus. A detailed script is
provided.
Interviews of high achieving adults who attended Ivy League schools
or pursued master's and doctoral degrees in STEM including parents
of such successful adults revealed that beliefs about one's ability
drives motivation and perseverance to learn math. Beliefs about
one's ability to learn math is not static it is a process of
becoming as the individual interacts in the school, home, and
social environment. Parents and teachers will gain insights on how
to create conditions to support a child to be successful in math
and persevere..
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