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With 1300 UCAT practice questions (including a full mock exam),
in-depth explanations, and comprehensive tips and techniques
spanning over 800 pages, this book constitutes an ideal preparation
tool for the UCAT exam, helping candidates save time, retain focus
and optimise their score. Fully compliant with the new-style UCAT
exam, the book shows how to approach each type of question
(abstract, verbal and quantitative reasoning, decision making and
situational judgement) and helps candidates familiarise themselves
with all the potential traps that can be laid by the examiners. The
overwhelming range of exercises that it contains will enable all
UCAT candidates to refine and optimise their technique to answer
questions under strict time constraints. This book replicates the
breadth and depth of the different types of questions that can be
asked in the live UCAT test and the spectrum of difficulties that
it covers (from normal to stretching), which makes it an ideal
preparation tool for all those who want to achieve a high score and
maximise their chances of getting into the medical school of their
choice. (Previously UKCAT)
This is a story set in America in the late 1960's early 1970's with
racial tension still apparent. The story centers around a black
male by the name of Anthony Johnson. A normal, hardworking,
law-abiding, family man. With a wife, Michelle, and two young kids,
a girl and a boy, to support. They are a happy, church-going
family. However, one fateful day Anthony makes a decision that will
change his life forever. Will anyone ever believe him? And can his
son Leon discover the truth and bring their broken family back
together again?
Over the past two hundred years German education policy and
practice has attracted interest in England. Policy makers have used
the 'German example' both to encourage change and development and
to warn against certain courses of action. This monograph provides
the first major analysis of the rich material from government
reports (including work by Matthew Arnold), the press, travel
accounts, memoirs, scholarly publications and the archives to
uncover the nature of the English fascination with education in
Germany, from 1800 to the end of the twentieth century. David
Phillips traces this story and uses recent work in theories of
educational policy 'borrowing' to analyze the reception of the
German experience and its impact on the development of English
education policy.
Edward Aitken-Davies (1899-1981) served as an Education Control
Officer in the British Zone of occupied Germany from the early
summer of 1945 until December 1949. He thus experienced the
implementation of policy in the Zone from the very beginnings of
the occupation until the founding of the Federal Republic of German
y in 1949. During the period 1945 to 1947 he wrote weekly letters
home to his mother. Those letters, together with the many speeches
he gave in Germany during his time as a leading British officer in
the Hanover region have not hitherto been available to researchers
but can now be made accessible in edited form. The letters are
placed in the context of developments in British policy and with
explanatory notes on the detail. Taken together, his letters and
other documents provide insights into the day-to-day lives of the
impressive group of individuals who oversaw the development of
education in Germany from post-war chaos to the reform and
stability which restored the education system of the country to a
pre-eminent status in Europe.
This is a history of the author's home, Tobago, one of the Windward
Islands and now part of the nation of Trinidad and Tobago. In the
era of tobacco, indigo and sugar, its fertility was sought after by
Courlanders (Latvians), the Dutch, the French and English. The
cultivation of sugar became supreme and with it the necessity for
slave labour to work the plantations. Beyond their own requirements
there was a demand for slaves by the Spanish settlements and this
the Courlanders and the Dutch were tempted to satisfy. But wars in
Europe had the habit of over-spilling into the Caribbean and Tobago
was not ignored. It constantly changed hands in the Seventeenth and
Eighteenth Centuries and its fortunes in the times of peace
fluctuated in tune with the price of sugar. This was an unequal
task and Tobago's economy by the mid 1800's had collapsed. A union
with Trinidad was the only salvation and this came about in 1899.
This is a simple story to remind the reader of the rise and fall
of an island of which they may never have heard.
Dive inside this textbook for an accessible guide to the discipline
of public services. Perfect for students, it offers a comprehensive
account of core public service topics and explains the fundamental
elements of working in the public services. Outlining their role in
the welfare state, it explores the policies, providers and
legalities shaping the context in which public services operate.
Students will study concepts of organisational change, strategy,
management, leadership and funding, and engage with timely
discussions around contemporary public issues such as equality,
sustainability and climate change. Key features to support student
learning include: * objectives at the beginning of each chapter; *
case studies and examples; * end of chapter summaries; * reflective
questions; * further reading recommendations and resources.
Bringing together authors with expertise in politics and public
policy, social policy and law, this book is essential reading for
everybody studying public services.
Using the highly successful Oxford model of teacher training and
the widely respected work in teacher education of Harry Judge, a
number of prominent educationists from around the world contribute
chapters on a range of topics relating to the interface between the
university and the schools in the complex processes involved in the
initial training of teachers.
The book covers discussion of aspects of teacher education in
the UK, the United States, and France, as well as in the developing
country context of Pakistan. Policy issues are described by William
Taylor, Tim Brighouse, and Stuart Maclure. And Jerome Bruner and
David Cohen write about the processes involved in learning and
thinking about what teachers need to know in their training.
This book was published as a special issue of the Oxford Review
of Education.
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Murph (Hardcover)
David Phillips
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R867
Discovery Miles 8 670
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Building on an increasingly sophisticated body of research on
policy 'borrowing' in education, this collection explores ways in
which the foreign example in education has been and is being used
by policy makers in a variety of settings, its principal aim being
to assess the usefulness of 'foreign' experience in 'home'
contexts.
This book brings together studies of significant British scholars
of comparative education from the 19th and 20th centuries.
Providing a unique and detailed examination of the work of the
founding British scholars of research in comparative education,
British Scholars of Comparative Education considers the legacy of
these key figures and emphasises the importance of understanding
their achievements. The advancement of research in comparative
education has long been driven by the work of key scholars,
ensuring it remains a lively area of educational research. This
book highlights the pivotal role played by each scholar in driving
a progression through humanistic and scientific approaches to new
epistemological traditions within the field of comparative
education. This in turn reveals critical historical-epistemological
transitions that have had lasting impacts on the field. With
contributions from leading scholars in the field, this volume will
be of great interest to researchers, academics, and scholars in
comparative and international education.
Dive inside this textbook for an accessible guide to the discipline
of public services. Perfect for students, it offers a comprehensive
account of core public service topics and explains the fundamental
elements of working in the public services. Outlining their role in
the welfare state, it explores the policies, providers and
legalities shaping the context in which public services operate.
Students will study concepts of organisational change, strategy,
management, leadership and funding, and engage with timely
discussions around contemporary public issues such as equality,
sustainability and climate change. Key features to support student
learning include: * objectives at the beginning of each chapter; *
case studies and examples; * end of chapter summaries; * reflective
questions; * further reading recommendations and resources.
Bringing together authors with expertise in politics and public
policy, social policy and law, this book is essential reading for
everybody studying public services.
Henry Sidgwick's The Methods of Ethics is one of the most important
books in the history of moral philosophy. But it has not hitherto
received the kind of sustained scholarly attention its stature
merits. David Phillips aims in Sidgwickian Ethics to do something
that has (surprisingly) not been done before: to interpret and
evaluate the central argument of the Methods, in a way that brings
out the important conceptual and historical connections between
Sidgwick's views and contemporary moral philosophy.
Sidgwick distinguished three basic methods: utilitarianism, egoism,
and dogmatic intuitionism. And he focused on two conflicts: between
utilitarianism and dogmatic intuitionism and between utilitarianism
and egoism. Sidgwick believed he could largely resolve the conflict
between utilitarianism and dogmatic intuitionism, but could not
resolve the conflict between utilitarianism and egoism. Phillips
suggests that the best way to approach Sidgwick's ideas is to start
with his views on these two conflicts, and with the metaethical and
epistemological ideas on which they depend. Phillips interprets and
largely defends Sidgwick's non-naturalist metaethics and moderate
intuitionist moral epistemology. But he argues for a verdict on the
two conflicts different from Sidgwick's own. Phillips claims that
Sidgwick is less successful than he thinks in resolving the
conflict between utilitarianism and dogmatic intuitionism, and that
Sidgwick's treatment of the conflict between utilitarianism and
egoism is more successful than he thinks in that it provides the
model for a plausible view of practical reason.
Phillips's book will be of interest to two different groups of
readers: to students seeking a brief introduction to Sidgwick's
most important ideas and a guidebook to the Methods, and to
scholars in ethics and the history of ideas concerned with
Sidgwick's seminal contribution to moral philosophy.
This much-needed new textbook introduces readers to the development
of China's welfare polices since its conception of an open-door
policy of 1978. Setting out basic concepts and issues, including
key terms and the process of policy making, it overcomes a major
barrier to understanding Chinese social policy: notably, that
concepts and terms in use in China are significantly different from
those current in other parts of the world. The book explores in
detail the five key policy areas of employment, social security,
health, education and housing. Each is examined using a human
well-being evaluative framework covering physical and psychological
well-being, social integration, fulfilment of caring duties, human
learning and development, self-determination, equal value and just
polity.This enables the authors to provide not only factual
information on policies but also an in-depth understanding of the
impact of welfare changes on the quality of life of Chinese people
over the past three decades. A major strength of the book lies in
its use of primary Chinese-language sources, including relevant
white papers, central and local governments' policy documents,
academic research studies and newspapers for each policy area.
There are very few books in English on social policy in China, and
this book will be welcomed not only by academic teaching staff and
students of Chinese and East Asian social policy but also by their
counterparts in comparative social policy studies in the West.
This book brings together the work of established researcher
Professor David Phillips, in one authoritative volume. Including
key chapters on education in Germany from the last three decades,
topics range from historical studies of universities and schools,
to detailed research on the role of the British in reconstructing
education in Germany after 1945, and education in post-unification
Germany. Together, the body of work draws from a multitude of
primary sources and constitutes a comprehensive analysis of
educational provision in Germany over a long historical period. In
addition to 16 chapters spanning Phillips' research from 1981 to
2012, the book includes a new introduction, bringing his ideas
together and demonstrating their continuing relevance to the field.
Investigating Education in Germany will be invaluable reading for
academics, researchers and postgraduate students in the fields of
international and comparative education, German studies, history of
education and sociology.
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