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Best Laid Plans (DVD)
Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje, Stephen Graham, David O'Hara, Lee Ingleby, Maxine Peake, …
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R23
Discovery Miles 230
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Ships in 10 - 20 working days
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David Blair directs this British drama, loosely inspired by John
Steinbeck's novel 'Of Mice and Men'. Set in Nottingham, the film
revolves around the relationship between the thuggish Danny
(Stephen Graham) and Joseph (Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje), a giant of
a man with a mental age of seven. When Danny finds himself in debt
to a local crime boss, he feels he is left with no choice but to
manipulate Joseph into participating in a series of underground
cage fights from which Danny can profit. Salvation appears to call
out to both men when they begin relationships with Lisa (Emma
Stansfield) and Isabel (Maxine Peake), but will they be able to
escape the bloody world of gambling and fighting Danny has plunged
them into?
Cyrille Regis' story is a compelling one on so many levels. The
story of his migration from the French Caribbean to a racially
divided West London in the 1960s, his development as a
semi-professional footballer and his subsequent move to a
top-flight Football League club, followed by national recognition
and glory, while still facing racial hatred is a tale in itself.
The book begins at Buckingham Palace in 2008, when Cyrille Regis
received his MBE, recognition for his services to football and the
community. This fascinating autobiography describes the battles
Cyrille faced as a child and teenager before he turned professional
and achieved great things as a footballer. As well as detailing the
glorious moments in his career, it studies the impact that he and
his black teammates had on the sociological outlook of football
fans. The book concludes with a review of Cyrille Regis' life after
he retired as a footballer and his work in the community.
Exam board: AQA, Edexcel, OCR, Eduqas Level & Subject: GCSE 9-1
English Literature First teaching: September 2015; First
examination: June 2017 Exam Board: Cambridge Assessment
International Education Level & Subject: International AS &
A Level Literature in English First teaching: September 2019; First
examination: June 2022/23 This edition of The Merchant of Venice is
perfect for GCSE-level and A-level students, with the complete play
in an accessible format, on-page notes, introduction setting the
context, timeline, character and theme indexes. Affordable high
quality complete play for The Merchant of Venice, ideal for GCSE
9-1 and Cambridge A Level Demystify vocabulary with notes on the
page and concise commentary Set the scene with perfectly pitched
introductions that introduce key contexts, concerns and stylistic
features, and examine different performances and interpretations
Recall plot summaries at the beginning of each scene Support GCSE
and A level revision and essay writing with theme and character
indexes Help students with social, historical and literary context
with the bespoke timeline of Shakespeare's life and times
Teaching Leadership is written to help people who teach, coach, or
train to build leadership capacity in others. The book is for
anyone who wants to teach leadership more effectively using three
proven methods that make learning more interactive, experiential
and impactful. It's unique among leadership books in that it
details the how of teaching leadership, and not just the what.
Teaching Leadership is a comprehensive guide to the Kansas
Leadership Center teaching, training, facilitating and coaching
methods/ideas. This publication includes the KLC curriculum, case
studies and overview of case-in-point teaching method.
Anyone who wants to know what is really happening in schools -
behind all the hype and political rhetoric about the privatizing
reforms in education - should read this book. It clarifies how
private interests are influencing the public education process, and
investigates Labour's successes and failures. These are critical
moves for parents, teachers, school principals, head teachers and
governors, student teachers, teaching assistants, researchers,
administrators, government officials, politicians, taxpayers and in
fact anyone interested in the future of education. In plain
English, it shows how schools are set up, run and held to account
through testing and inspection and how they make judgements about
the relative merits of different schools' performances. It also
indicates ways in which ordinary people can participate in shaping
the future of education in order to achieve progress and better
standards of achievement from schools and the education service
generally. This is essential reading for all those concerned about
the new future of our education system and of our children.
Overcoming barriers to learning and raising standards of
achievement are central efforts in education. In the UK the
government has made education its leading domestic priority and it
has made education the center of its drive to improve public
services by using the private sector to bring about improvements in
performance and to break the status quo. Likewise, throughout the
world private interests are now impinging heavily upon how state
education is perceived; the 'educational apartheid' between state
and private is diminishing across schools and local authorities.
This book provides an incisive commentary on this rapidly changing
phenomenon through clarification, analysis and evaluation of a
variety of policy initiatives and implementation issues in the UK
and by assessing parallel developments elsewhere in the world.
The ways in which change is being forced along in a range of guises
from public partnerships to private company deals are illustrated
with many real and contentious examples. Partnership arrangements,
sponsorships, new categories of state independent schools and
private sector take-overs of schools and education authorities form
the patchwork of how state education is becoming privatized. Will
these changes bring more choice and improved standards? How
valuable to parents is the information presented in league tables
and inspection reports? How will this impact on the future of
education? This provocative and critical book moves forward this
highly topical debate by providing a direct, in-depth and jargon
free commentary on what is happening under the banner of
privatization.
Help your students develop the skills and understanding to succeed
in IGCSE (R) Literature in English. The Student Book provides an
ideal companion to the Cambridge IGCSE (R) and IGCSE (R) (9-1)
course for first examination in 2020, giving students the tools
they need to tackle their own set texts in depth and tackle
examinations with confidence. Exam Board: Cambridge Assessment
International Education Level & Subject: IGCSE Literature in
English (0475), IGCSE (9-1) Literature in English (0992) First
teaching: September 2018 First examination: June 2020 This title is
endorsed by Cambridge Assessment International Education. Build the
fundamental skills and understanding: The first part of the book
introduces the essential skills, concepts and terminology. The
second part of the book shows students how to apply these skills to
poetry, prose and drama. Help all students make good progress.
Chapters move from teaching the underlying skills and concepts to
asking students to apply them in passage-based, discursive and
unseen tasks. Regular 'Check your progress' features help your
classes to measure their progress, while annotated responses show
them how to improve. Support all learners with clear
differentiation. Introductory chapters build learners' confidence,
the main chapters offer greater depth, while extension lessons help
all students reach their full potential. Practical for the
classroom: the book is clearly organised into lessons and packed
with activity. Each two- or four-page section in our Student Book
is supported by a double-page lesson plan in the Teacher Guide.
Engage students with rich, varied, text extracts from a variety of
periods and cultures. Texts representing the different genres in
the syllabus allow students to compare writers' choices and their
effects. Flexible for teachers: the clear book structure and lesson
headings allow teachers to dip in to find lessons to build into
their own schemes of work.
Pastors face two temptations when they consider church leadership:
one, common in more culturally conservative churches, is simply to
preach faithfully and assume that that alone is adequate Christian
leadership; the other, common in more culturally contemporary
churches, is to apply secular business wisdom, but uncritically.
The books published mirror the two camps. Both drive a wedge
between the Bible and leadership. What if the gift of leadership
was a clear outworking of biblical teaching? What if there is in
the Bible a consistent pattern of human communities flourishing
under the good rule of God's Word. Drawing on years of teaching and
ministry, Chris Green shows us how, as Mike Ovey put it, Christian
leaders can be God's best possible gift to flourishing communities.
The Collins Cambridge IGCSE (R) Literature in English Teacher Guide
supports the Student Book, giving teachers everything they need to
teach the Cambridge IGCSE (R) and IGCSE (R) (9-1) syllabuses (0475
and 0922) for first examination in 2020. Exam Board: Cambridge
Assessment International Education Level & Subject: IGCSE
Literature in English (0475), IGCSE (9-1) Literature in English
(0992) First teaching: September 2018 First examination: June 2020
Comprehensive support for the 2020 syllabuses and examination
formats. Support student progress with teaching sequences that
follow the structure of the Student Book, moving from building the
key skills in comprehension, close analysis and interpretation to
applying these skills to specific exam and coursework tasks. Save
time on planning and preparation with expert support from Anna
Gregory, an experienced examiner and trainer. The Teacher Guide
includes a two-year scheme of work and differentiated lesson plans,
worksheets and PowerPoints for every two- or four-page section of
the Student Book. Adapt the resources to the needs of your classes
with printable PDFs and editable Word and PowerPoint files. This
title is endorsed by Cambridge Assessment International Education
for teacher support.
Long before the Norman Conquest of 1066, England saw periods of
profound change that transformed the landscape and the identities
of those who occupied it. The Bronze and Iron Ages saw the
introduction of now-familiar animals and plants, such as sheep,
horses, wheat, and oats, as well as new forms of production and
exchange and the first laying out of substantial fields and
trackways, which continued into the earliest Romano-British
landscapes. The Anglo-Saxon period saw the creation of new villages
based around church and manor, with ridge and furrow cultivation
strips still preserved today. The basis for this volume is The
English Landscapes and Identities project, which synthesised all
the major available sources of information on English archaeology
to examine this crucial period of landscape history from the middle
Bronze Age (c. 1500 BC) to the Domesday survey (c. 1086 AD). It
looks at the nature of archaeological work undertaken across
England to assess its strengths and weaknesses when writing
long-term histories. Among many other topics it examines the
interaction of ecology and human action in shaping the landscape;
issues of movement across the landscape in various periods;
changing forms of food over time; an understanding of spatial
scale; and questions of enclosing and naming the landscape,
culminating in a discussion of the links between landscape and
identity. The result is the first comprehensive account of the
English landscape over a crucial 2500-year period. It also offers a
celebration of many centuries of archaeological work, especially
the intensive large-scale investigations that have taken place
since the 1960s and transformed our understanding of England's
past.
Neuropsychology offers a broad introduction to neuropsychology,
functional neuroanatomy, neuropathology, clinical assessment, and
the behavioural sequelae associated with neurological disturbance.
It provides understanding of the common neurological disorders and
enables informed choices in care. Important insight into
differential diagnosis is given, as well as help to extend and
support the health care role through an introduction to basic
bed-side assessment techniques and their interpretation. It
provides knowledge to assist health professionals in empowering
patients in their recovery or rehabilitation and is an essential
workplace manual. This book will benefit both those who have access
to neuropsychological input and those who do not and will appeal to
the more practical needs of practitioners. It bridges the
theory-practice gap and can be used by all health team members for
effective patient management. As such it provides a grounding in a
number of important areas central to both general and specialised
nursing care and associated disciplines including physiotherapy,
occupational therapy, and speech and language therapy. Specifically
targets nurses using their vocabulary and works from their
perspective Seeks to bridge the theory-practice gap and gives
detailed clinical applications Contains enough information to allow
the reader to transfer skills learnt into the workplace,
culminating in the possibility of carrying out simple bedside
screen Provides possible assessment and treatment approaches A
'one-stop' working resource book for this field Covers a
potentially complex subject in a logical and clinically relevant
format
MyMaths for Key Stage 3 is the brand new course that works with
MyMaths to fully deliver the new curriculum, allowing you to
finally replace your tired old Framework materials. With a truly
differentiated structure so all abilities can access the new
curriculum, the course is underpinned by a 'learn it once and learn
it well' philosophy that enables coherent teaching and learning.
All resources are written by teachers for teachers, so you can be
confident that it will work practically in the classroom. This
teacher companion is for teachers of higher ability students
approaching the end of KS3. It contains customisable lesson plans,
providing practical guidance based on classroom needs, as well as
medium- and long-term plans to offer a viable replacement for the
Framework. For the more experienced teacher, the Lesson-at-a-Glance
feature provides quick ideas on how to approach a lesson.
Furthermore, the unique attainment profiling provides practical
guidance on measuring your average ability students' progression. A
focus on transition to GCSE ensures your most able students have
the opportunity to achieve top grades; and a further focus on
mathematical literacy helps ensure that students communicate
effectively using maths, which is essential for GCSE. Finally the
direct links to MyMaths throughout uniquely allow you to integrate
this powerful tool into your everyday classroom delivery.
The Shaping of the English Landscape is an atlas of English
archaeology covering the period from the middle Bronze Age (c. 1500
BC) to Domesday Book (AD 1086), encompassing the Bronze and Iron
Ages, the Roman period, and the early medieval (Anglo-Saxon) age.
It was produced as part of the English Landscape and Identities
(EngLaId) project at the University of Oxford, which took place
from 2011 to 2016, funded by the European Research Council. In this
book, you will find maps (produced by Chris Green) and discussion
of themes including landscape agency, settlement, foodways and
field systems, belief and the treatment of the dead, mobility and
defence, making things, and material culture. Alongside are
artworks (produced by Miranda Creswell) dealing with similar themes
and depicting archaeological sites from across England. The authors
hope to inspire and encourage debate into the past history of the
English landscape. Includes contributions from Anwen Cooper,
Victoria Donnelly, Tyler Franconi, Roger Glyde, Chris Gosden, Zena
Kamash, Janice Kinory, Sarah Mallet, Dan Stansbie, John Talbot, and
Letty Ten Harkel.
MyMaths for Key Stage 3 is the brand new course that works with
MyMaths to fully deliver the new curriculum, allowing you to
finally replace your tired old Framework materials. With a truly
differentiated structure so all abilities can access the new
curriculum, the course is underpinned by a 'learn it once and learn
it well' philosophy that enables coherent teaching and learning.
All resources are written by teachers for teachers, so you can be
confident that it will work practically in the classroom. This
teacher companion is for teachers of higher ability students
starting KS3. It contains customisable lesson plans, providing
practical guidance based on classroom needs, as well as medium- and
long-term plans to offer a viable replacement for the Framework.
For the more experienced teacher, the Lesson-at-a-Glance feature
provides a snapshot of quick ideas on how to approach a lesson.
Furthermore, the unique attainment profiling provides essential
practical guidance on measuring your more able students'
progression. A focus on transition from KS2, with key knowledge
identified, ensures your most able students have firm foundations;
and a focus on mathematical literacy helps ensure that students
communicate effectively using maths, which is essential for GCSE.
Finally the direct links to MyMaths throughout uniquely allow you
to integrate this powerful tool into your everyday classroom
delivery.
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