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This book introduces the reader to the management consultancy
technique of Organizational Role Analysis--a technique with the
immensely practical purpose of helping managers to stay "in role
and on task." As such, it provides a coherent, superbly illustrated
framework for in-depth coaching. The ORA method is grounded in a
process of consultation that derives from the conjunction of open
systems theory, and psychodynamic understandings of human behavior.
It enables the collaborative resolution of the mental and emotional
tensions represented in the client's work role as he/she strives to
manage the dynamics between the organization-in-the-mind and the
organization-in-reality.While the method of Organizational Role
Analysis presented in this book has been evolving for three
decades, published accounts of the work have been sparse,
spasmodic, and relatively obscure. This book brings together the
work of experienced practitioners from around the globe who
illuminate the guiding concepts with lively, practical examples
that illustrate the variety of ways in which managers can receive
coaching in-depth. These accounts are complemented by an extensive
bibliography for further reading.Contributors: John Bazalgette,
Ullrich Beumer, Hanna Biran, Irving Borwick, Jane Chapman, Laurence
J. Gould, W. Gordon Lawrence, Susan Long, Rose Redding Mersky, John
Newton, Bruce Reed, and Burkard Sievers
For John Newton, one of Christendom's greatest hymn writers and
writer of "Amazing Grace," God's matchless grace was intensely
personal. Saved from a life of slave trading, John Newton was fully
aware of the "depths from which he was pulled."
In this autobiography, revised and updated for today's readers
by Dennis Hillman, Newton relates the events that led him from
unimaginable sin and spiritual bondage to a life of ministry and
renewal--transformed by God's amazing and inexhaustible grace.
Discover the timeless story of John Newton's conversion and the
true meaning of the familiar words, "Amazing grace! How sweet the
sound that saved a wretch like me. I once was lost, but now am
found; was blind, but now I see."
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Various Artists - Stars of Classical (CD)
Various Artists, Emmerich Kalman/Franz Lehar/Johann Strauss II, Francesco Sartori, Andrew Lloyd Webber, Leonard Cohen, …
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R59
Discovery Miles 590
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Ships in 10 - 20 working days
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Coaching In Depth introduces the reader to the management
consultancy technique of Organizational Role Analysis (ORA); a
technique with the immensely practical purpose of helping managers
to stay "in role and on task". The ORA method is grounded in a
process of consultation that derives from the conjunction of open
systems theory and psychodynamic understandings of human behaviour.
It enables the collaborative resolution of the mental and emotional
tensions represented in the client's work role as he/she strives to
manage the dynamics between their organization-in-the-mind and the
organization-in-reality.
"Computers in Translation" is a comprehensive guide to the
practical issues surrounding machine translation and computer-based
translation tools. Translators, system designers, system operators
and researchers present the facts about machine translation: its
history, its successes, its limitations and its potential. Three
chapters deal with actual machine translation applications,
discussing installations including the METEO system, used in Canada
to translate weather forecasts and weather reports, and the system
used in the Foreign Technology Division of the US Air Force. This
book should be of interest to academics and postgraduates studying
translation studies, language and linguistics, and to technical
publications managers, translators and technical authors.
This 1786 publication is a translation of a prizewinning Latin
essay written by Thomas Clarkson (1760 1846) at Cambridge the
previous year. Clarkson's deep research into the Atlantic slave
trade instilled in him a sense of duty, inspiring him to devote his
life to abolitionism. The publication of the essay introduced
Clarkson to like-minded campaigners, notably William Wilberforce
(1759 1833) and Granville Sharpe (1735 1813), with whom he helped
to establish in 1787 the pioneering Society for Effecting the
Abolition of the Slave Trade. Thoughts on the African Slave Trade
(1788) by the sailor, slave trader and Anglican clergyman John
Newton (1725 1807) is also reissued in this volume. Published
thirty-four years after Newton's retirement from the slave trade,
this pamphlet apologises for his 'too late' conversion to the
abolitionist movement and describes the horrific conditions aboard
slave ships during the Middle Passage.
Jesus was quite clear that we must lose our life before we find it.
This book gives a hopeful and realistic look at what losing our
life entails, articulating how "growth" in the Christian life is
not our ascent to God but the process by which our eyes are opened
to the beauty God has already given to us. It is a book about
descending into God, and into our own inner depths, about the deep
waters of the Christian faith. "Put out into the deep and let your
nets down for a catch." (Luke 5:4) We live in a world that values
productivity and success, and we vainly imagine that God expects us
to be spiritually productive and successful, too. It doesn't matter
how much we talk about grace, our conversation is often narrowly
focused on what we need to do for God-so much so that we often
block the work God longs to do in us. This book does not articulate
God's work as a process by which we become spiritually strong, but
rather as the process by which we embrace our weakness as the place
where we most fully experience God's perfect strength (2
Corinthians 12:9).
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