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Showing 1 - 25 of
111 matches in All Departments
Good management skills alone won't get executives and their
organizations far enough. What is also needed is the seemingly
indefinable, evanescent, quirky, and paradoxical quality called
leadership. Leadership lies in the emotional side of management. It
pumps life into organizations and gives meaning to management
structures. Leadership is symbolic, charismatic, inspirational--no
matter how it is defined, Barach and Eckhardt prove that it can be
DEGREESIlearned DEGREESR. Their book is thus a solidly researched,
readable assessment of what leadership actually is, its various
dimensions, its place among other necessary executive skills, and
how it can be nurtured and propagated. With examples from the
worlds of business, politics, sports, and the military and
buttressed by sound academic studies, Barach and Eckhardt succeed
in making the concept of leadership come alive and--of greatest
value to organizations and their people--useful.
Barach and Eckhardt start by describing the emotional side of
management, the paradoxical nature of leadership, and how it fits
into the full set of executive responsibilities and skills. They go
on to break leadership down into its 20 components. In chapters
devoted to each component, they provide readers with
well-documented descriptions of leadership's characteristics:
desire, decisiveness, vision, integrity, anchoring, following,
kinship, caring, inspiring, listening, telling, mentoring. They
reassemble the parts and show how leadership works in Washington,
D.C. Closing with a detailed discussion of the 6 most important
leadership issues that Barach has identified in his decade-long
study of the topic, the authors offer readers an opportunity to
discover issues familiar to them personally, how to analyze them,
and make use of the results.
This volume frames the question of responsibility as a problem of
agency in relation to the systems and structures of globalization.
According to Ricoeur responsibility is a "shattered concept" when
considered too narrowly as a problem of act, agency and individual
freedom. To examine this Esther Reed develops a short genealogy of
modern liberal and post-liberal concepts of responsibility in order
to understand better the relationship dominant modern framings of
the meanings of responsibility. Reed engages with writings by major
modern (Schleiermacher, Hegel, Marx, Weber) and post-liberal
(Buber, Levinas, Derrida, Badiou, Butler, Young, Critchley)
theorists to illustrate the shift from an ethnic responsibility
built on notions of accountability and attributions to an ethic
responsibility that starts variously from the 'other'. Reed sees
Dietrich Bonhoeffer as the most promising partner of this
theological dialogue, as his learning of responsibility from the
risen Christ present now in the (global) church is a welcome
provocation to new thinking about the meaning of responsibility
learned from land, distant neighbour, (global) church and the
bible. Bonhoeffer's reflections on the centre, boundaries and
limits of responsibility remain helpful to Christian people
struggling with an increasingly exhausted concept of
accountability.
This volume examines ways in which service delivery to individuals
with autism can be improved from both ends of the basic-applied
research spectrum. It introduces the concept of translational
scholarship and examines real-world value in developing relevant
interventions. Each area of coverage reviews current findings on
autism from basic research and, then, discusses the latest applied
research literature to create a roadmap for researchers,
clinicians, and scientist-practitioners to develop new, effective
strategies as children, adolescents, and adults with autism
continue to learn and grow. Featured coverage includes: Why
practice needs science and how science informs practice. The social
learning disorder of stimulus salience in autism. Assessment and
treatment of problem behaviors associated with transitions.
Understanding persistence and improving treatment through
behavioral momentum theory. The behavioral economics of reinforcer
value. Increasing tolerance for delay with children and adults with
autism. Autism Service Delivery is an essential resource for
researchers, clinicians and scientist-practitioners, and graduate
students in the fields of developmental psychology, behavioral
therapy, social work, clinical child and school psychology,
occupational therapy, and speech pathology.
Sport psychology is a topic of growing interest. Many professionals
read journals such as The International Journal of Sports, Journal
of Sport Behavior, Journal of Applied Sport Psychology, Research
Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, and The Sport Psychologist. In
August 2008, Monitor on Psychology, the monthly publication of the
American Psychological Association (APA), featured a special issue
on sport psychology. Indeed, Division 47 of APA is devoted to "the
scientific, educational, and clinical foundations of exercise and
sport psychology." The North American Society for the Psychology of
Sport and Physical Activity (NASPSPA) and the Association for the
Advancement of Applied Sport Psychology (AAASP) convene conferences
each year to present scientific findings and new developments in a
rapidly expanding field. The AAASP and other organizations also
qualify professionals as certified sport and exercise psychology
consultants. Finally, a visit to any bookstore will reveal the lay
public's fascination with sports, as revealed in numerous self-help
books and guides to perfecting athletic performance. Behavioral
psychologists have studied sport psychology for more than three
decades (Martin, Thompson, & Regehr, 2004). Applied behavior
analysis (ABA), in particular, has been an instrumental approach to
behavioral coaching in many sports, including baseball (Osborne,
Rudrud, & Zezoney, 1990), basketball (Pates, Cummings, &
Maynard, 2002), figure skating (Ming & Martin, 1996), football
(Ward & Carnes, 2002), golf (Pates, Oliver, & Maynard,
2001), ice hockey (Rogerson & Hrycaiko, 2002), soccer (Brobst
& Ward, 2002), swimming (Hume & Crossman, 1992), and tennis
(Allison & Ayllon, 1980). ABA stresses the application of
learning theory principles, objective measurement of athletic
skills, controlled outcome evaluation, and socially significant
behavior-change. Cognitive behavior therapy, or CBT, also has been
a dominant approach to psychological intervention in sports
(Meyers, Whelan, & Murphy, 1996; Weinberg & Comar, 1994).
CBT addresses athletic performance through cognitive-change methods
combined with behavioral practice and environmental modifications.
The purpose of the book described in this proposal is to compile
the most recent experimental and applied research in behavioral
sport psychology. Several journal articles have reviewed critical
dimensions of behavioral sport psychology (Martin et al., 2004;
Martin, Vause, & Schwartzman, 2005) but no book has covered the
topic with an emphasis on ABA and CBT methodology and practice.
Accordingly, Behavioral Sport Psychology: Evidence-Based Approaches
to Performance Enhancement is a first of its kind volume.
The Handbook of Crisis Intervention and Developmental Disabilities
synthesizes a substantive range of evidence-based research on
clinical treatments as well as organizational processes and policy.
This comprehensive resource examines the concept of behavioral
crisis in children and adults with special needs and provides a
data-rich trove of research-into-practice findings. Emphasizing
continuum-of-care options and evidence-based best practices, the
volume examines crisis interventions across diverse treatment
settings, including public and private schools, nonacademic
residential settings as well as outpatient and home-based programs.
Key coverage includes: Assessment of problem behaviors.
Co-occurring psychiatric disorders in individuals with intellectual
disabilities. Family members' involvement in prevention and
intervention. Intensive treatment in pediatric feeding disorders.
Therapeutic restraint and protective holding. Effective evaluation
of psychotropic drug effects. The Handbook of Crisis Intervention
and Developmental Disabilities is a must-have resource for
researchers, scientist-practitioners, and graduate students in
clinical child, school, developmental, and counseling psychology,
clinical social work, behavior therapy/analysis, and special
education as well as other related professionals working across a
continuum of service delivery settings.
The idea of security has recently seen a surge of interest from
political philosophers. After the atrocities of 11 September 2001
and 7 July 2005, many leading politicians justified encroachments
on international legal standards and civil liberties in the name of
security and with a view to protecting the rights of the people.
Suggestions were made on both sides of the Atlantic to the effect
that the extremism of terrorism required the security of the many
to be weighed against the liberties of other citizens. In this
collection of essays, Jeremy Waldron, Conor Gearty, Tariq Modood,
David Novak, Abdelwahab El-Affendi and others debate how to move
beyond the false dichotomy whereby fundamental human rights and
international standards are conceived as something to be balanced
against security. They also examine the claim that this aim might
better be advanced by the inclusion in public debate of explicitly
religious voices.
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A Commentary on Ovid's Metamorphoses
Alessandro Barchiesi; Edited by Phillip Hardie, E. J. Kenney, Joseph D. Reed, Gianpiero Rosati
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R7,272
Discovery Miles 72 720
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Comprising fifteen books and over two hundred and fifty myths,
Ovid's Metamorphoses is one of the longest extant Latin poems from
the ancient world and one of the most influential works in Western
culture. It is an epic on desire and transgression that became a
gateway to the entire world of pagan mythology and visual
imagination. This, the first complete commentary in English, covers
all aspects of the text – from textual interpretation to poetics,
imagination, and ideology – and will be useful as a teaching aid
and an orientation for those who are interested in the text and its
reception. Historically, the poem's audience includes readers
interested in opera and ballet, psychology and sexuality, myth and
painting, feminism and posthumanism, vegetarianism and
metempsychosis (to name just a few outside the area of Classical
Studies).
This volume examines ways in which service delivery to individuals
with autism can be improved from both ends of the basic-applied
research spectrum. It introduces the concept of translational
scholarship and examines real-world value in developing relevant
interventions. Each area of coverage reviews current findings on
autism from basic research and, then, discusses the latest applied
research literature to create a roadmap for researchers,
clinicians, and scientist-practitioners to develop new, effective
strategies as children, adolescents, and adults with autism
continue to learn and grow. Featured coverage includes: Why
practice needs science and how science informs practice. The social
learning disorder of stimulus salience in autism. Assessment and
treatment of problem behaviors associated with transitions.
Understanding persistence and improving treatment through
behavioral momentum theory. The behavioral economics of reinforcer
value. Increasing tolerance for delay with children and adults with
autism. Autism Service Delivery is an essential resource for
researchers, clinicians and scientist-practitioners, and graduate
students in the fields of developmental psychology, behavioral
therapy, social work, clinical child and school psychology,
occupational therapy, and speech pathology.
The idea of security has recently seen a surge of interest from
political philosophers. After the atrocities of 11 September 2001
and 7 July 2005, many leading politicians justified encroachments
on international legal standards and civil liberties in the name of
security and with a view to protecting the rights of the people.
Suggestions were made on both sides of the Atlantic to the effect
that the extremism of terrorism required the security of the many
to be weighed against the liberties of other citizens. In this
collection of essays, Jeremy Waldron, Conor Gearty, Tariq Modood,
David Novak, Abdelwahab El-Affendi and others debate how to move
beyond the false dichotomy whereby fundamental human rights and
international standards are conceived as something to be balanced
against security. They also examine the claim that this aim might
better be advanced by the inclusion in public debate of explicitly
religious voices.
The Handbook of Crisis Intervention and Developmental Disabilities
synthesizes a substantive range of evidence-based research on
clinical treatments as well as organizational processes and policy.
This comprehensive resource examines the concept of behavioral
crisis in children and adults with special needs and provides a
data-rich trove of research-into-practice findings. Emphasizing
continuum-of-care options and evidence-based best practices, the
volume examines crisis interventions across diverse treatment
settings, including public and private schools, nonacademic
residential settings as well as outpatient and home-based programs.
Key coverage includes: Assessment of problem behaviors.
Co-occurring psychiatric disorders in individuals with intellectual
disabilities. Family members' involvement in prevention and
intervention. Intensive treatment in pediatric feeding disorders.
Therapeutic restraint and protective holding. Effective evaluation
of psychotropic drug effects. The Handbook of Crisis Intervention
and Developmental Disabilities is a must-have resource for
researchers, scientist-practitioners, and graduate students in
clinical child, school, developmental, and counseling psychology,
clinical social work, behavior therapy/analysis, and special
education as well as other related professionals working across a
continuum of service delivery settings.
Sport psychology is a topic of growing interest. Many professionals
read journals such as The International Journal of Sports, Journal
of Sport Behavior, Journal of Applied Sport Psychology, Research
Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, and The Sport Psychologist. In
August 2008, Monitor on Psychology, the monthly publication of the
American Psychological Association (APA), featured a special issue
on sport psychology. Indeed, Division 47 of APA is devoted to "the
scientific, educational, and clinical foundations of exercise and
sport psychology." The North American Society for the Psychology of
Sport and Physical Activity (NASPSPA) and the Association for the
Advancement of Applied Sport Psychology (AAASP) convene conferences
each year to present scientific findings and new developments in a
rapidly expanding field. The AAASP and other organizations also
qualify professionals as certified sport and exercise psychology
consultants. Finally, a visit to any bookstore will reveal the lay
public's fascination with sports, as revealed in numerous self-help
books and guides to perfecting athletic performance. Behavioral
psychologists have studied sport psychology for more than three
decades (Martin, Thompson, & Regehr, 2004). Applied behavior
analysis (ABA), in particular, has been an instrumental approach to
behavioral coaching in many sports, including baseball (Osborne,
Rudrud, & Zezoney, 1990), basketball (Pates, Cummings, &
Maynard, 2002), figure skating (Ming & Martin, 1996), football
(Ward & Carnes, 2002), golf (Pates, Oliver, & Maynard,
2001), ice hockey (Rogerson & Hrycaiko, 2002), soccer (Brobst
& Ward, 2002), swimming (Hume & Crossman, 1992), and tennis
(Allison & Ayllon, 1980). ABA stresses the application of
learning theory principles, objective measurement of athletic
skills, controlled outcome evaluation, and socially significant
behavior-change. Cognitive behavior therapy, or CBT, also has been
a dominant approach to psychological intervention in sports
(Meyers, Whelan, & Murphy, 1996; Weinberg & Comar, 1994).
CBT addresses athletic performance through cognitive-change methods
combined with behavioral practice and environmental modifications.
The purpose of the book described in this proposal is to compile
the most recent experimental and applied research in behavioral
sport psychology. Several journal articles have reviewed critical
dimensions of behavioral sport psychology (Martin et al., 2004;
Martin, Vause, & Schwartzman, 2005) but no book has covered the
topic with an emphasis on ABA and CBT methodology and practice.
Accordingly, Behavioral Sport Psychology: Evidence-Based Approaches
to Performance Enhancement is a first of its kind volume.
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Assortment 8
D Reed Whittaker
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R287
Discovery Miles 2 870
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Assortment 10
D Reed Whittaker
|
R290
Discovery Miles 2 900
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Assortment 11
D Reed Whittaker
|
R290
Discovery Miles 2 900
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
|
Assortment 9
D Reed Whittaker
|
R290
Discovery Miles 2 900
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Assortment 7
D Reed Whittaker
|
R290
Discovery Miles 2 900
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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