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Andrew Christensen, co-developer (along with the late Neil
Jacobson) of Integrative Behavioral Couple Therapy and Brian Doss
provide an essential manual for their evidence-based practice. The
authors offer guidance on formulation, assessment and feedback of
couples' distress from an IBCT perspective. They also detail
techniques to achieve acceptance and deliberate change. In this
updated edition of the work, readers learn about innovations to the
IBCT approach in the 20+ years since the publication of the
original edition-including refinements of core therapeutic
techniques. Additionally, this edition provides new guidance on
working with diverse couples, complex clinical issues and
integrating technology into a course of treatment.
Every couple has disagreements, but what happens when recurring
conflicts start to pull your relationship apart? Do you lie awake
hoping that your spouse will eventually see things your way, or
rehashing the evidence that you're right? Demand some immediate
changes--or else? This popular, science-based guide offers powerful
solutions for couples frustrated by continual attempts to make each
other change. True acceptance may seem difficult to accomplish, but
the clear-cut steps and thought-provoking exercises in this book
can make it a reality. You'll learn why you keep having the same
fights again and again; how to keep small incompatibilities from
causing big problems; what communication strategies really work to
resolve conflicts; and how to problem-solve and make positive
changes--together. Updated throughout with new research, practical
tools, and examples, the second edition features a new chapter on
mindfulness. Mental health professionals: learn about using this
self-help guide as an adjunct to therapy at the authors' website
(http: //ibct.psych.ucla.edu)
How did somebody come up with the idea for bridges, skyscrapers,
helicopters, and nightlights? How did people figure out how to
build them? In 3D Engineering: Design and Build Your Own
Prototypes, young readers tackle real-life engineering problems by
figuring out real-life solutions. Kids apply science and math
skills to create prototypes for bridges, instruments, alarms, and
more. Prototypes are preliminary models used by engineers--and
kids--to evaluate ideas and to better understand how things work.
Engineering design starts with an idea. How do we get to the other
side of the river? How do we travel long distances in short periods
of time? Using a structured engineering design process, kids learn
how to brainstorm, build a prototype, test a prototype, evaluate,
and re-design. Projects include designing a cardboard chair to
understand the stiffness of structural systems and designing and
building a set of pan pipes to experiment with pitch and volume.
Creating prototypes is a key step in the engineering design process
and prototyping early in the design process generally results in
better processes and products. 3D Engineering gives kids a chance
to figure out many different prototypes, empowering them to
discover the mechanics of the world we know.
Scott Andrew Christensen's debut collection the boundaries of
return is a compelling exploration of passage in and through the
natural world. Richly symbolic and formally experimental,
Christensen's poems create worlds at once uniquely perceptive and
recognisable, in patterns of verbal play that are distinctive and
memorable. "Scott Andrew Christensen's poetry haunts the borders
between the physically detailed and the metaphysically mysterious,
or between Nature--in its beautiful details--and the Spirit, what
is ineffable... Although the boundaries of return represents a
debut, Christensen is already preternaturally skilled in edging
toward Wisdom or Faith via witnessing everyday doings and the
beings of persons, creatures, and things. Welcome--with joy--the
boundaries of return." GEORGE ELLIOT CLARKE
Canals and Dams: Investigate Feats of Engineering invites children
ages 9 and up to explore the innovation and physical science behind
the amazing waterways and barriers our world depends on. Trivia and
fun facts illustrate engineering ingenuity and achievements from
ancient aqueducts to the Suez Canal and the Hoover Dam. Readers
will discover that engineers and builders alike put their lives on
the line to advance civilization, experiencing triumphs and
tragedies in building big. Through dazzling success and
heartbreaking failure, they developed increasingly sophisticated
tools and building methods. Activities and projects encourage
children to explore the engineering process and to try, try again
through trial and error. They'll engage in hands-on explorations of
buoyancy, Newton's third law of motion, and forces that push and
pull structures. They'll create a paper-cup zip line, build an
arch, and simulate a tsunami, while experimenting with gravity,
hydroponics, and velocity. In Canals and Dams: Investigate Feats of
Engineering, children will gain an appreciation for the important
field of engineering as they develop their own building skills.
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