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In our era of financial uncertainty and disruptive technological
change, the music industry is in crisis. One career path that holds
great promise, however, is independent music teaching. For a host
of reasons, demand exists in every corner, providing one of the
most stable, promising career options available to musicians
regardless of instrument, genre, or background - at least, in the
hands of a savvy music teacher. In this book, author David Cutler
offers hands-on advice for creating a music career that is
meaningful, artistically fulfilling, and financially
self-supporting. The book's overriding goal is to ensure a steady
income for its reader and to give the reader tools to use that
income to provide financial independence. Cutler walks the reader
through the process of setting up a profitable and sustainable
career plan, and then through the practical aspects of getting out
of debt, spending responsibly, investing, and saving for
retirement. Cutler also sheds light on the logistics of running a
teaching studio, providing helpful documentation and tips for
everything from bookkeeping to time management. Lastly and most
importantly, Cutler explores situations for increasing a teacher's
impact. Rather than simply creating wealthy teachers, the
overriding goal of their book is to cultivate leaders who add
significant value to society through their teaching. A must-read
for private music teachers of all levels, both beginning and those
with established studios, as well as the music performance
graduates who so often become private studio teachers, The Savvy
Music Teacher provides practical advice in down-to-earth language
that includes real-life experiences from successful
teacher-entrepreneurs, a focus on large-scale income streams not
usually covered in books for studio teachers, and sample documents
(including contracts and marketing materials) on the book's
comprehensive companion website.
One of our great urbanists and one of our great public health
experts join forces to reckon with how cities are changing in the
face of existential threats the pandemic has only accelerated
Cities can make us sick. That's always been true-diseases spread
more easily when more people are close to one another. And cities
have been demonized as breeding grounds for vice and crime from
Sodom and Gomorrah on. But cities have flourished nonetheless
because they are humanity's greatest invention, indispensable
engines for creativity, innovation, wealth, and civilization
itself. But cities now stand at a crossroads. During the global
COVID crisis, cities grew silent; the normal forms of socializing
ground to a halt. How permanent are these changes? Advances in
technology mean that many people can opt out of city life as never
before. Will they? Are we on the brink of a post-urban world? City
life will survive, but individual cities face terrible risks, argue
Edward Glaeser and David Cutler, and a wave of urban failure would
be absolutely disastrous. In terms of intimacy and inspiration,
nothing can replace what cities offer. But great cities have always
demanded great management, and our current crisis has exposed
fearful gaps in our capacity for good governance. In America,
Glaeser and Cutler argue, deep inequities in health care and
education are a particular blight on the future of our cities;
solving them will be the difference between our collective good
health and a downward spiral to a much darker place.
From New York to New Delhi, COVID-19 has had a devastating impact
on our urban world, turning the physical proximity which is central
to the creative energy of the city into a potentially deadly threat
to our health and well being. Yet most of us live or work in
cities. They are a vital part of both local and global economies
and shape the lives we lead and our interactions with others. How
can we adjust to this new reality and what lessons can we learn
from the past? In this urgently relevant book, leading experts
Edward Glaeser and David Cutler, examine the history and future of
the global city. They argue the biggest threats are those we have
created ourselves - inequalities in housing, health, work and
education - and that we need to address these as a matter of
urgency if our cities are to continue to thrive and drive economic
growth and prosperity. They conclude by proposing some practical
measures that governments and citizens need to act on to ensure the
survival of the city around the world. .
In our era of financial uncertainty and disruptive technological
change, the music industry is in crisis. One career path that holds
great promise, however, is independent music teaching. For a host
of reasons, demand exists in every corner, providing one of the
most stable, promising career options available to musicians
regardless of instrument, genre, or background - at least, in the
hands of a savvy music teacher. In this book, author David Cutler
offers hands-on advice for creating a music career that is
meaningful, artistically fulfilling, and financially
self-supporting. The book's overriding goal is to ensure a steady
income for its reader and to give the reader tools to use that
income to provide financial independence. Cutler walks the reader
through the process of setting up a profitable and sustainable
career plan, and then through the practical aspects of getting out
of debt, spending responsibly, investing, and saving for
retirement. Cutler also sheds light on the logistics of running a
teaching studio, providing helpful documentation and tips for
everything from bookkeeping to time management. Lastly and most
importantly, Cutler explores situations for increasing a teacher's
impact. Rather than simply creating wealthy teachers, the
overriding goal of their book is to cultivate leaders who add
significant value to society through their teaching. A must-read
for private music teachers of all levels, both beginning and those
with established studios, as well as the music performance
graduates who so often become private studio teachers, The Savvy
Music Teacher provides practical advice in down-to-earth language
that includes real-life experiences from successful
teacher-entrepreneurs, a focus on large-scale income streams not
usually covered in books for studio teachers, and sample documents
(including contracts and marketing materials) on the book's
comprehensive companion website.
In the United States, the soaring cost of health care has become an
economic drag and a political flashpoint. Moreover, although the
country's medical spending is higher than that of any other nation,
health outcomes are no better than elsewhere, and in some cases are
even worse. In The Quality Cure, renowned health care economist and
former Obama advisor David Cutler offers an accessible and incisive
account of the issues and their causes, as well as a road map for
the future of health care reform--one that shows how information
technology, realigned payment systems, and value-focused
organizations together have the power to resolve this seemingly
intractable problem and transform the US health care system into
one that is affordable, efficient, and effective.
In 2012, we find ourselves just passing the 50th anniversary of the
Eisenhower Commission Report (1961) and approaching the same
anniversary of the Community Mental Health Act (1963). These
landmark events launched the community mental health movement. The
Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and the President's New Freedom
Commission (2003) have continued this work by establishing funding
sources and highlighting the importance of recovery and excellence
in care. Modern Community Mental Health: An Interdisciplinary
Approach integrates each of the key concepts contained within the
presidential reports and landmark legislation into the context of
today's community service delivery system. This pathfinding
textbook promises to revolutionize community mental health training
by responding to the realities of modern health care delivery
systems, presenting an integrated, interdisciplinary paradigm of
care. Extraordinarily broad in coverage, it will open a door of
possibilities to those caring for the mentally ill in the
community. Recognizing that community-based services must be truly
collaborative in order to be effective and efficient, the editors
have assembled a cast of contributors from among the brightest
lights in community practice. Chapter authors, who are currently
doing interdisciplinary work successfully on a daily basis, will
collaborate on writing teams to offer their insight into the
problems and triumphs that are part of this approach. They will
cover not only macro issues such as the economics of behavioral
healthcare, reimbursement models, and quality improvement, but the
specific skills necessary for competent practice such as treatment
planning, clinical documentation, risk management, and partnering
with members of a team that may include social workers,
psychiatrists, psychologists, and nurses. Twenty additional
chapters will provide detailed roadmaps to practices and programs
that have been shown to be effective when delivered in a community
setting-such as supported employment, assertive community treatment
(ACT) teams, crisis intervention training (CIT), family
psychoeducation, and supported housing-and will be grounded in
educational benchmarks, healthcare reform opportunities, and
cultural competencies. By definition community mental health
practice is never static. As communities change, the profession
changes, and in recent years changes in funding have drastically
impacted the system of care. We need empirically supported
interventions, to include the voice of the consumers and their
families, and have a way to educate current and future
professionals so that we all truly work together.
This volume describes and illustrates the microscopic anatomy of the "aroids", the large, economically important plant family Araceae, and also the basal monocot family Acoraceae.
From New York to New Delhi, COVID-19 has had a devastating impact
on our urban world - how can we adjust to this new reality and what
lessons can we learn from the past? In this urgently relevant book,
leading experts Edward Glaeser and David Cutler examine the history
and future of the global city. They argue the biggest threats are
those we have created ourselves - inequalities in housing, health,
work and education - and that we need to address these as a matter
of urgency if our cities are to continue to thrive and drive
economic growth and prosperity. They conclude by proposing some
practical measures that governments and citizens need to act on to
ensure the survival of the city around the world.
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