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It is 2125 and life as Rose previously knew it is over. Having
been forced to live in a government-controlled society that, for
years, has sponsored the use of people-not the enhancement of
creativity, inspiration, and universal growth-Rose is prepared to
escape the social disaster that has robbed her of her dreams. When
she finally departs for a cabin in the hills far above San
Francisco, she walks away from everything she has ever known.
Rose adjusts to her new environment far away from the city by
relying on her inner strength and her memories of her old life.
With little food or water, she must forage for a place to sleep
every night. As her challenging trek through the wilderness
continues, Rose gloomily recalls the chain of events that
instigated her journey to freedom. She must fight through the
bitterness she feels for having been forced to give up her
doctorate and instead work in demeaning government jobs because of
society's greed, selfishness, and injustice.
A Long Walk to Knowing shares one woman's journey to discover
her own humanity as she slowly learns to endure a new way of
life.
Surviving the Move and Learning to Thrive: Tools for Success in
Secondary Schools, Grades 6-12 is collection of seven chapters that
provide tools for all students, especially struggling and reluctant
learners, to find a better path to learning while moving through
middle and high school. Each chapter addresses critical areas of
need from learning styles to parent involvement in a way that is
easy to understand and implement. This text helps students and
parents move with teachers from grade level to grade level with a
greater ease and higher capability to secure success.
Obento 5e is the market-leading Japanese series for Years 7–10
students in Australia. The fifth edition is revised and updated
with greater explicit alignment to The Australian Curriculum:
Japanese, greater support for the acquisition of Japanese script,
streamlined and high-calibre digital content and a more cohesive
7–10 series. The write-in consumable workbook offers a range of
macro-skill (L/S/R/W) activities, plus: videos and all audio for
the workbook activities so students can complete tasks
independently; accurate modelling of pronunciation and fluency in
all audio files; and numerous opportunities to practise and
consolidate the key language and script in the student book.
NelsonNet Student Workbook resources* • Videos and animated
cartoon stories • Audio tracks from the workbook *Complimentary
access to NelsonNet is available to teachers who use an
accompanying student book as a core resource in their classroom.
Contact your local education consultant for access codes and
conditions.
The Freedom Factory tells the story of a real military factory in
Saint Petersburg, recounted in the form of monologues collected
from its anonymized workers, managers, and engineers. The Freedom
Factory is not exactly realism: it combines poetry and documentary
in unique proportion to convey the atmosphere of the absurd, harsh,
and magnetic factory floor. Sometimes the narrative comes very
close to everyday speech, sometimes it evolves into lyricism or
grotesque humor, but it always remains sincere. The Freedom Factory
recounts life stories and love stories, military secrets and
anecdotes, work and leisure, as the many voices of the factory
merge into a chorus.
Junctures in Women's Leadership: Higher Education illuminates the
careers of twelve women leaders whose experiences reveal the
complexities of contemporary academic leadership through the
intersection of gender, race, and institutional culture. The
chapters combine interviews and research to create distinct case
studies that identify the obstacles that challenged each woman's
leadership, and the strategies deployed to bring about resolution.
The research presented in this volume reveals not only theoretical
factors of academic leadership, but also real time dynamics that
give the reader deeper insights into the multiple stakeholders and
situations that require nimble, relationship-based leadership, in
addition to intellectual competency. With chapters written by many
of today's leading women in higher education, this book brings into
sharp focus the unique attributes of women leaders in the academy
and adds a new dimension of analysis to the field of women's
leadership studies. Women leaders interviewed in this volume
include Bernice Sandler, Juliet Villarreal GarcIa, and Johnnetta
Betsch Cole.
Junctures in Women's Leadership: Higher Education illuminates the
careers of twelve women leaders whose experiences reveal the
complexities of contemporary academic leadership through the
intersection of gender, race, and institutional culture. The
chapters combine interviews and research to create distinct case
studies that identify the obstacles that challenged each woman's
leadership, and the strategies deployed to bring about resolution.
The research presented in this volume reveals not only theoretical
factors of academic leadership, but also real time dynamics that
give the reader deeper insights into the multiple stakeholders and
situations that require nimble, relationship-based leadership, in
addition to intellectual competency. With chapters written by many
of today's leading women in higher education, this book brings into
sharp focus the unique attributes of women leaders in the academy
and adds a new dimension of analysis to the field of women's
leadership studies. Women leaders interviewed in this volume
include Bernice Sandler, Juliet Villarreal GarcIa, and Johnnetta
Betsch Cole.
Definitive and daring, The Ecopoetry Anthology is the authoritative
collection of contemporary American poetry about nature and the
environment--in all its glory and challenge. From praise to lament,
the work covers the range of human response to an increasingly
complex and often disturbing natural world and inquires of our
human place in a vastness beyond the human. To establish the
antecedents of today's writing,The Ecopoetry Anthology presents a
historical section that includes poetry written from roughly the
mid-nineteenth to the mid-twentieth century. Iconic American poets
like Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson are followed by more modern
poets like Wallace Stevens, William Carlos Williams, Ezra Pound,
and even more recent foundational work by poets like Theodore
Roethke, Elizabeth Bishop, Robert Hayden, and Muriel Rukeyser. With
subtle discernment, the editors portray our country's rich heritage
and dramatic range of writing about the natural world around us.
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