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While the term "public intellectual" has been used to describe
scholars who seek to share their re-search with the public, little
work has been done to examine the role of a public intellectual in
the field of education. This book builds upon the notion of the
public intellectual in a way that makes the term more accessible,
using it to refer to education scholars who seek to share their
research outside of academia. Media coverage of educational issues
is rife with self-appointed experts on education who have claimed
space in public discussions to define educational problems and
dominate public dialogues on education. But where are the education
researchers in these academic dialogues? This book addresses their
absence, sharing the stories of scholars who are seeking to enter
public dialogues and reclaim space for reasoned dialogue on
education. The stories of public scholars highlighted here
acknowledge that the policymaking arena is teeming with value
conflicts that can lead to dismissing or ignoring research if it
does not fit with political agendas.
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Myrtle's Game (Paperback)
Lauren Reyes-Grange; Illustrated by Jo Robinson; Cynthia Reyes
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R266
Discovery Miles 2 660
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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""A Good Home" will delight your soul and touch your heart. There
is magic in these words "
--DEBRA USHER, President and Editor-in-Chief, "Arabella Magazine"
Cynthia Reyes glass is almost always half full, but ours, as we
read her uplifting story, brims over. "
--COLIN McALLISTER and JUSTIN RYAN, www.colinandjustin.tv
"A Good Home" is an addictive read, a profoundly emotional book
about the author s early life in rural Jamaica, her move to urban
North America, and her trips back home, all told through vivid
descriptions of the unique homes she has lived in -- from a tiny
pink house in Jamaica and a mountainside cabin near Vancouver to
the historic Victorian farmhouse she lives in today, surrounded by
neighbors who share spicy Malaysian noodles and seafood, Greek
pastries and roast lamb, and Italian tomato sauce and wine (really
strong wine).
Full of lovingly drawn characters and vividly described places, "A
Good Home" takes the reader through deeply moving stories of
marriage, children, the death of parents, and an accident that
takes its high-flying author down a humbling notch. Its pages
sparkle with stories and reflections on home as:
A foundation on which to build connections with children,
relatives, and friendsA place to celebrate the joys of elegant
design, overflowing gardens (except for the wisteria vine, which
"cannot" be coaxed into blooming), and the sharing of good foodA
wise teacher, showing us who we really were -- and who we really
areWhen this brave, clear-eyed, and honest book returns, full
circle, to the way it began, readers will want to read it all over
again.
Cynthia Reyes has published non-fiction stories in "Arabella
Magazine," one of the fastest-growing magazines in the United
States and Canada, as well as in the "Globe and Mail" and "Toronto
Life." Reyes is a former journalist and executive producer with the
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. More than a hundred episodes of
her programs have appeared on network television. She is the winner
of national and international awards and acclaim for her work as a
television producer, project leader, and public speaker, including
the Children s Broadcast Institute Award and the Crystal Award for
Outstanding Achievement in Film and Television.
While the term "public intellectual" has been used to describe
scholars who seek to share their re-search with the public, little
work has been done to examine the role of a public intellectual in
the field of education. This book builds upon the notion of the
public intellectual in a way that makes the term more accessible,
using it to refer to education scholars who seek to share their
research outside of academia. Media coverage of educational issues
is rife with self-appointed experts on education who have claimed
space in public discussions to define educational problems and
dominate public dialogues on education. But where are the education
researchers in these academic dialogues? This book addresses their
absence, sharing the stories of scholars who are seeking to enter
public dialogues and reclaim space for reasoned dialogue on
education. The stories of public scholars highlighted here
acknowledge that the policymaking arena is teeming with value
conflicts that can lead to dismissing or ignoring research if it
does not fit with political agendas.
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