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Pearson Revise is the revision series from Pearson, the assessment
experts. From the very start of your GCSE, Pearson Revise is the
best way to keep learning up to date, practise skills and prepare
for assessments and exams. one-topic-per-page format helps you
revise more quickly, without the hassle exam-style worked examples
match the new specification and demonstrate good exam technique
'Now try this' exam-style practice questions let you test
understanding of a topic problem solving support throughout
including tricky questions on easy topics and strategies and
techniques for answering harder questions. complete coverage of the
new specification including brand-new topics. visual explanations
of key concepts help you revise quickly and recall key skills in
exams. Part of a comprehensive range of learning and revision
support available for Pearson Edexcel and AQA GCSEs from Pearson
Revise including: Revision Guides, Revision Workbooks, Revision
Cards, Practice Papers Plus all linked to a free online learning
portal.
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Road to Paloma (DVD)
Charlie Brumbly, Henree Alyse, Tye Alexander, Chris Browning, Jason Momoa, …
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R23
Discovery Miles 230
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Ships in 10 - 20 working days
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Jason Momoa produces, directs, co-writes and stars in this thriller
about a Native American who goes on the run after getting his
revenge on the man who murdered his mother. As Wolf (Momoa) rides
his motorcycle through the Wild West searching for a place to
scatter his mother's ashes, he learns along the way that in order
to get vengeance and justice on others, you must pay a price. The
cast includes Tye Alexander, Henree Alyse and Lisa Bonet.
Target exam success with My Revision Notes. Our updated approach to
revision will help students learn, practise and apply their skills
and understanding. Coverage of key content is combined with
practical study tips and effective revision strategies to create a
guide that can be relied on to build both knowledge and confidence.
My Revision Notes: Pearson Edexcel A-level Geography will help
students: - Develop subject knowledge by making links between
topics for more in-depth exam answers - Plan and manage revision
with our topic-by-topic planner and exam breakdown introduction -
Practise and apply skills and knowledge with Exam-style questions
and frequent check your understanding questions, and answer
guidance online - Build quick recall with bullet- pointed summaries
at the end of each chapter - Understand key terms for the exam with
user-friendly definitions and a glossary - Avoid common mistakes
and enhance exam answers with Examiner tips - Improve
subject-specific skills with an Exam skills checkbox at the end of
each chapter
Exam Board: Edexcel Level: GCSE Subject: Geography (Specification
A) First teaching: September 2016 First exams: Summer 2018 Series
Editor: John Hopkin This Student Book: covers the essential content
in the new specification with up-to-date diagrams, facts, maps and
case studies of geographical events, processes and issues at work
to bring the subject to life. uses the 'Thinking Geographically'
approach devised by experts and targeted activities to help develop
key geographical, mathematical and statistical skills in context.
has 'Writing Geographically' features that focus on the writing
skills most important to success in geography. This literacy
support uses the proven Grammar for Writing approach used in many
English departments. includes modelled fieldwork investigations and
activities to support the development of enquiry skills for
fieldwork studies in the specification. gives plenty of
opportunities to track progress. Alongside activities throughout
each topic, there are knowledge checklists, learning checkpoints,
extension materials and end-of-unit tests to consolidate learning
and deepen understanding. includes lots of fieldwork and exam
guidance, with practice questions, sources, sample answers and tips
from our experts to support preparation for GCSE assessments. *You
do not have to purchase any resources to deliver our qualification.
Brand-new resources for Edexcel GCSE (9-1) Geography B:
Investigating Geographical Issues
In As BIG As It Gets, Farrell J. Chiles chronicles his tenure as
the Board Chair of Blacks In Government (BIG), the leading
international organization for African-American public service
employees. He presents his experiences, observations, and insight
into leading BIG during an unprecedented period of growth. The
story begins with his election on the Board of Directors and
follows his journey to his election as the Chairman of the Board
for five consecutive terms.
Cramming all new-case studies, new geographic data and reams of new
questions, this new Pearson Edexcel A-level Geography student book
will capture imaginations as it travels around the globe. This new
book will help your students develop the geographical skills and
knowledge they need to succeed. It has been written by our expert
author team and structured to provide support for learners of all
abilities. The book includes: * Activities and regular review
questions to reinforce geographical knowledge and build up core
geographical skills * Clear explanations to help students to
grapple with tricky geographical concepts and grasp links between
topics * Case studies from around the world to vividly demonstrate
geographical theory in action * Exciting fieldwork projects that
meet the fieldwork and investigation requirements This student book
is supported by digital resources on our new digital platform
Boost, providing a seamless online and offline teaching experience.
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Moonraker (Blu-ray disc)
Michael Lonsdale, Roger Moore, Richard Kiel, Lois Chiles, Corinne Clery, …
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R91
R71
Discovery Miles 710
Save R20 (22%)
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Ships in 10 - 20 working days
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When a space shuttle goes missing during a test flight, James Bond
(Roger Moore) is the man who must track it down. His investigations
take him to Venice (where he uses his specially customized
gondola), Rio de Janeiro (where he fights steel-toothed henchman
Jaws on top of a cable car), and finally into outer space (where he
uncovers a ruthless plot to wipe out the human race and replace it
with genetically engineered humanoids). Highlights include Bond's
encounters with NASA scientist Dr Holly Goodhead (Lois Chiles) and
the climactic battle aboard villain Hugo Drax's (Michael Lonsdale)
space station.
A Black-majority city with a history of the most severe segregation
and inequity, Richmond is still grappling with this legacy as it
moves into the twenty-first century. Marvin Chiles now offers a
unique take on Richmond’s racial politics since the civil rights
era by demonstrating that the city’s current racial disparities
in economic mobility, housing, and public education actually
represent the unintended consequences of Richmond’s racial
reconciliation measures. He deftly weaves municipal politics
together with grassroots efforts, examining the work and legacies
of Richmond’s Black leaders, from Henry Marsh on the city council
in the 1960s to Mayor Levar Stoney, to highlight the urban
revitalization and public history efforts meant to overcome racial
divides after Jim Crow yet which ironically reinforced racial
inequality across the city. Compellingly written, this project
carries both local and broader regional significance for
Richmonders, Virginians, southerners, and all Americans.
One significant yet challenging element of studying New York State
is the centrality of its history to the broader sweep of American
life. This prominence leaves many episodes in New York's past
well-known and intensely studied. However, as the articles in the
Winter 2022-2023 issue of New York History (103.2) reminds us,
innovative methodologies and new documentary evidence ceaselessly
open opportunities for fresh insights into the Empire State's rich
past—from the social history of New Netherland to
mid-twentieth-century design.
As surprising as it might seem now, during the late eighteenth
century many early Americans asked themselves, "How could a person
of one race come to be another?" Racial thought at the close of the
eighteenth century differed radically from that of the nineteenth
century, when the concept of race as a fixed biological category
would emerge. Instead, many early Americans thought that race was
an exterior bodily trait, incrementally produced by environmental
factors and continuously subject to change. While historians have
documented aspects of eighteenth-century racial thought,
Transformable Race is the first scholarly book that identifies how
this thinking informs the figurative language in the literature of
this crucial period. It argues that the notion of "transformable
race" structured how early American texts portrayed the formation
of racial identities. Examining figures such as Phillis Wheatley,
Benjamin Franklin, Samson Occom, and Charles Brockden Brown,
Transformable Race demonstrates how these authors used language
emphasizing or questioning the potential malleability of physical
features to explore the construction of racial categories.
As heard on BBC Radio 4 and RTE Radio 1 A WATERSTONES BEST FOOD AND
DRINK BOOK OF 2022 'An easy read mixture of wit and wisdom ...
should be read by all who drink more than the limit' Prof David
Nutt, author of Drink? The New Science of Alcohol and Your Health
The popular broadcaster and columnist sets out to discover the
unsung pleasures of drinking in moderation. The recommended alcohol
limit is 14 units a week. Adrian Chiles used to put away almost
100. Ever since he was a teenager, drinking was his idea of a good
time - and not just his, but seemingly the whole nation's. Still,
it wasn't very good for him: the doctor made that clear. If you
lined them up, Adrian must have knocked back three miles of drinks.
How many of them had he genuinely wanted? A mile? There's an awful
lot of advice out there on how to quit booze completely. If you
just want to drink a bit less, the pickings are slim. Yet while the
alcohol industry depends on a minority of problem drinkers, the
majority really do enjoy in moderation. What's their secret? Join
the inimitable Chiles as he sets out around Britain and plumbs his
only slightly fuzzy memories of a lifetime in pubs in a quest to
find the good drinker within.
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