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Drawing from first-hand discussions and interviews, this essential
guide offers an in-depth, realistic overview of bringing up a child
with complex and specific needs to enhance current practice and
collaborative work with parents. The book supports the development
of effective child-centred planning and family-centred approaches,
by using the expert voices and lived experiences of parents to
inform critical discussion and build the skills of professionals.
Chapters provide strategies, guidance, and suggestions to
strengthen effective partnership work with parents, children, and
young people. Scenarios, key takeaways, and questions for
discussion are also woven throughout, offering a greater
understanding of the barriers faced by parents of children with
SEND and encouraging the reader to consider how they can more
effectively co-produce with families. True Partnerships in SEND
uses the voice of the parent and their lived experiences as the
basis for narrative, research and discussion and includes wider
concepts that can inform positive parent-professional interactions
globally. It will be essential reading for SENCOs, teachers, and
other education professionals working with children with SEND and
their families.
No industry has been as influential at shaping the popular notion
of what it means to be a witch quite as much as Hollywood. This
book traces the fascinating history of witchcraft and witches in
American film and television. From Joan the Woman and The Wizard of
Oz to Carrie and Charmed, author and film scholar Heather Greene
explores how these films helped influence the public image of the
witch and profoundly influenced how women negotiate their power in
a patriarchal society. Lights, Camera, Witchcraft uncovers
fascinating insights into the intersection of entertainment,
critical theory, gender studies, and spirituality.
Tucked away in a corner of the University of Texas Medical
Branch campus stands a majestic relic of an era long past.
Constructed of red pressed brick, sandstone, and ruddy Texas
granite, the Ashbel Smith Building, fondly known as Old Red,
represents a fascinating page in Galveston and Texas history. It
has been more than a century since Old Red welcomed the first group
of visionary faculty and students inside its halls. For decades,
the medical school building existed at the heart of UTMB campus
life, even through periods of dramatic growth and change. In time,
however, the building lost much of its original function to larger,
more contemporary facilities. Today, as the oldest medical school
building west of the Mississippi River, the intricately ornate Old
Red sits in sharp contrast to its sleeker neighbors.
"Old Red: Pioneering Medical Education in Texas "examines the
life and legacy of the Ashbel Smith Building from its beginnings
through modern-day efforts to preserve it. Chapters explore the
nascence of medical education in Texas; the supreme talent and
genius of Old Red architect, Nicholas J. Clayton; and the lives of
faculty and students as they labored and learned in the midst of
budget crises, classroom and fraternity antics, death-rendering
storms, and threats of closure. The education of the state's first
professional female and minority physicians and the nationally
acclaimed work of physician-scientists and researchers are also
highlighted. Most of all, the reader is invited to step inside Old
Red and mingle with ghosts of the past--to ascend the magnificent
cedar staircase, wander the long, paneled hallways, and take a seat
in the tiered amphitheater as pigeons fly in and out of windows
overhead.
Have you ever wondered what your animals are thinking? Have you
wanted to find a way to communicate and connect with them to
improve their health and behavior, and your relationship with them?
Heather Green learned early in life that she could sense what the
people around her were thinking, feeling, and experiencing. This
led her into the healing professions; first a nurse, and later a
counselor. But something always seemed to be missing. Then the
horses came. And all the pieces fell into place. For the Love of
Horses is a book for horse people, animal and nature lovers,
healers, counselors, and those on a path of healing and spiritual
transformation. Riders will learn how to enhance their partnership
with their horses, healers will gain a new view of what it means to
be there for their clients, people with wounds they never thought
could mend will find hope. Green takes the reader on a journey
shrouded in mystery, destined for clarity and wholeness. Part
memoir, part inspirational coaching, part instruction manual, this
book tells the story of one woman's discovery of her life's
mission. Those whose stories interwove with hers along the way come
to life in these pages. The horses can be heard. And the promise of
this book is that the world can change and thrive.
The silent scourge that held a generation in fear . . . From the
1930s to the 1950s, paralytic poliomyelitis ("polio") threatened
the lives of children and adults in Texas, arousing the same kind
of fear more recently associated with AIDS and other dread
diseases. Harris County had the second-highest rate of infection in
the nation, and the rest of the Texas Gulf Coast was particularly
hard-hit by this debilitating illness. At the time, though little
was known at first, the medical responses to polio changed the
medical landscape forever, giving rise to the development of
rehabilitative therapies, the modern intensive care unit, and a
wave of discoveries in virology that transformed the field. Polio
also had a sweeping cultural and societal effect. In addition to
engendering fearful responses from parents trying to keep children
safe from its ravages and an all-out public information blitz aimed
at helping a frightened population protect itself, polio exacted a
very real toll on the families, friends, healthcare resources, and
social fabric of those who contracted the disease and endured its
acute, convalescent, and rehabilitation phases. In The Polio Years
in Texas: Battling a Terrifying Unknown, Heather Green Wooten draws
on extensive archival research as well as interviews conducted over
a five-year period with Texas polio survivors and their families.
The picture that emerges is a detailed and intensely human account,
not only of the epidemics that swept Texas during the polio years,
but also of the continuing aftermath of the disease for those who
are still living with its effects. Interested general readers,
public health and medical professionals, and historians will derive
deep and lasting benefits from reading The Polio Years in Texas:
Battling a Terrifying Unknown. Heather Green Wooten earned her PhD
in medical humanities from the University of Texas Medical Branch
at Galveston. She is an educator and independent historian living
in League City, Texas.
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