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CSCL has in the past 15 years (and often in conjunction with
Springer) grown into a thriving and active community. Yet, lacking
is a comprehensive CSCL handbook that displays the range of
research being done in this area. This handbook will provide an
overview of the diverse aspects of the field, allowing newcomers to
develop a sense of the entirety of CSCL research and for existing
community members to become more deeply aware of work outside their
direct area. The handbook will also serve as a ready reference for
foundational concepts, methods, and approaches in the field. The
chapters are written in such a way that each of them can be used in
a stand-alone fashion while also serving as introductory readings
in relevant study courses or in teacher education. While some
CSCL-relevant topics are addressed in the International Handbook of
the Learning Sciences and the International Handbook of
Collaborative Learning, these books do not aim to present an
integrated and comprehensive view of CSCL. The International
Handbook of Computer- Supported Collaborative Learning covers all
relevant topics in CSCL, particularly recent developments in the
field, such as the rise of computational approaches and learning
analytics.
What happens when a brother and sister who share a love as big as
the sky must separate? In a small African village in Malawi, Prisca
and her brother, Caleb, work together and play together, chasing
each other as fast as they can. But when Caleb has to leave home to
attend a good school, Prisca misses him terribly. Hoping to earn
enough money to visit him, Prisca begs a local peddler to sell her
crafts - but no one buys what she’s made. However, thanks to
Prisca’s kindness and compassion, her dreams of reuniting with
Caleb come true. This heartwarming story set in an African village
shows that, with a little generosity, there’s always a way to
come together.
CSCL has in the past 15 years (and often in conjunction with
Springer) grown into a thriving and active community. Yet, lacking
is a comprehensive CSCL handbook that displays the range of
research being done in this area. This handbook will provide an
overview of the diverse aspects of the field, allowing newcomers to
develop a sense of the entirety of CSCL research and for existing
community members to become more deeply aware of work outside their
direct area. The handbook will also serve as a ready reference for
foundational concepts, methods, and approaches in the field. The
chapters are written in such a way that each of them can be used in
a stand-alone fashion while also serving as introductory readings
in relevant study courses or in teacher education. While some
CSCL-relevant topics are addressed in the International Handbook of
the Learning Sciences and the International Handbook of
Collaborative Learning, these books do not aim to present an
integrated and comprehensive view of CSCL. The International
Handbook of Computer- Supported Collaborative Learning covers all
relevant topics in CSCL, particularly recent developments in the
field, such as the rise of computational approaches and learning
analytics.
Many of us, without even realizing it, are dominated by fear. We
might be aware of some of our fears--perhaps we are afraid of
public speaking, of financial hardship, or of losing a loved one.
Chogyam Trungpa shows us that most of us suffer from a far more
pervasive fearfulness: fear of ourselves. We feel ashamed and
embarrassed to look at our feelings or acknowledge our styles of
thinking and acting; we don't want to face the reality of our
moment-to-moment experience. It is this fear that keeps us trapped
in cycles of suffering, despair, and distress.
Chogyam Trungpa offers us a vision of moving beyond fear to
discover the innate bravery, trust, and delight in life that lies
at the core of our being. Drawing on the Shambhala Buddhist
teachings, he explains how we can each become a spiritual warrior:
a person who faces each moment of life with openness and
fearlessness. "The ultimate definition of bravery is not being
afraid of who you are," writes Chogyam Trungpa. In this book he
offers the insights and strategies to claim victory over fear.
Are you an individual who is on a path to realizing your purpose in
life and your gifts to the world? Are you wondering what is
stopping you from stepping into who you know yourself to be? Do you
want to know your life has meaning and made a difference when you
leave this world? Through her journey traveling around the world
for four years, Carolyn became clear about who is and what she came
here to do in this lifetime. However, before this clarity arose in
her, she had to peel the layers off her past history of child abuse
to get to the core of what her gifts to humanity are.
My book, Postal Revenge, is true stories about several things that
have happened inside the walls of differant postal buildings that I
have worked in. This book is an eye opener of what really goes on
behind the scene's of the Post Office door. I will tell you why we
get paid so much for what work we do, as well as the pressure of
doing so many test and the hours that we have to work. The main
event of the book is how I talked a very nice man out of killing
the foreman that had made his life very difficult and because of
all the hours we had to work, it was making his marriage fall
apart. His wife was going to file for a divorce. He was going to
have nothing and it's all because of this foreman. He wanted to
kill him . He made plans for getting it done with his gun. Also you
will read of true stories of drugs, alcohol and a carrier that was
insane who made people so scared to work with her, especially me.
This book will give you the reasons why people do get killed inside
the walls of the Post Office because of all the stress. You will
have the knowledge of what makes people go "Postal" on the people
inside the Post Office walls.
On average, black Americans are sicker and die earlier than white
Americans. "Uncertain Suffering" provides a richly nuanced
examination of what this fact means for health care in the United
States through the lens of sickle cell anemia, a disease that
primarily affects blacks. In a wide ranging analysis that moves
from individual patient cases to the compassionate yet distanced
professionalism of health care specialists to the level of national
policy, Carolyn Moxley Rouse uncovers the cultural assumptions that
shape the quality and delivery of care for sickle cell patients.
She reveals a clinical world fraught with uncertainties over how to
treat black patients given resource limitations and ambivalence.
Her book is a compelling look at the ways in which the politics of
racism, attitudes toward pain and suffering, and the reliance on
charity for healthcare services for the underclass can create
disparities in the U.S. Instead of burdening hospitals and clinics
with the task of ameliorating these disparities, Rouse argues that
resources should be redirected to community-based health programs
that reduce daily forms of physical and mental suffering.
Commonly portrayed in the media as holding women in strict
subordination and deference to men, Islam is nonetheless attracting
numerous converts among African American women. Are these women
'reproducing their oppression', as it might seem? Or does their
adherence to the religion suggest unsuspected subtleties and
complexities in the relation of women, especially black women, to
Islam? Carolyn Rouse sought answers to these questions among the
women of Sunni Muslim mosques in Los Angeles. Her richly textured
study provides rare insight into the meaning of Islam for African
American women; in particular, Rouse shows how the teachings of
Islam give these women a sense of power and control over
interpretations of gender, family, authority, and obligations. In
"Engaged Surrender", Islam becomes a unique prism for clarifying
the role of faith in contemporary black women's experience. Through
these women's stories, Rouse reveals how commitment to Islam
refracts complex processes - urbanization, political and social
radicalization, and deindustrialization - that shape black lives
generally, and black women's lives in particular. Rather than
focusing on traditional (and deeply male) ideas of autonomy and
supremacy, the book - and the community of women it depicts -
emphasizes more holistic notions of collective obligation, personal
humility, and commitment to overarching codes of conduct and
belief. A much-needed corrective to media portraits of Islam and
the misconceptions they engender, this engaged and engaging work
offers an intimate, in-depth look into the vexed and interlocking
issues of Islam, gender, and race.
"It was not always easy to be the guru's wife," writes Diana Mukpo.
"But I must say, it was rarely boring." At the age of sixteen Diana
broke with her upper-class English family and left school to marry
Chogyam Trungpa, a young Tibetan lama who would go on to become a
major figure in the transmission of Buddhism to the West. Trungpa
attracted thousands of students in North America and is credited
for introducing many key Buddhist concepts into the English
language and psyche. During his lifetime he founded more than one
hundred meditation centers and authored dozens of popular books on
meditation and Buddhism. Among Asian masters living and teaching in
the West, Trungpa was known for having an unorthodox and
unpredictable teaching style - and for leading an unconventional
personal life.In "Dragon Thunder", the reader gets an intimate look
at this compelling and enigmatic figure through the eyes of his
wife of seventeen years. Diana herself led an extraordinary and
unusual life as the "first lady" of a burgeoning Buddhist community
in the American 1970s and 80s. Diana gave birth to four sons, three
of whom were recognized as "tulkus" or reincarnations of high
Tibetan lamas. It is not a simple matter to be a modern Western
woman married to a Tibetan lama, let along to be married to a man
who is adored and sought out by thousands of eager students.
Surprising events and colourful people fill the narrative as Diana
seeks to understand the dynamic, puzzling, and larger-than-life man
she married - and to find a place for herself in his unusual world.
Chogyam Trungpa wrote more than two dozen books on Buddhism and the
Shambhala path of warriorship. "The Essential Chogyam Trungpa "
blends excerpts from bestsellers like "Shambhala: The Sacred Path
of the Warrior, Cutting Through Spiritual Materialism, Meditation
in Action, " and other titles into a concise overview of Trungpa's
teachings. Forty selections from fourteen different books
articulate the secular path of the Shambhala warrior as well as the
Buddhist path of meditation and awakening. This "new classic"
vividly demonstrates Trungpa's great appreciation of Western
culture which, combined with his deep understanding of the Tibetan
tradition, makes these teachings uniquely accessible to
contemporary readers. It will appeal to beginning students of
meditation as well as seasoned readers of Eastern religion.
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Jan Braai
Hardcover
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R425
Discovery Miles 4 250
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