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"Despite experiencing our teaching in different times, we are both
oriented to traditional math teaching. It wasn't because we were
both taught that way, as some may believe, but because that method
worked for us and we have seen it work for our students. It is
efficient, effective, non-confusing and helped our students develop
mathematical reasoning, understanding, and confidence. Most
importantly it helped them to be successful." So begins the book on
traditional math, which provides a glimpse of what explicit
instruction looks like in the classroom for grades K through 8.
Barry Garelick and J.R. Wilson are retired math teachers who
describe the methods of traditionally taught math that they used in
their teaching. Their descriptions serve two purposes: 1) It
provides assurance to teachers who may already practice these
methods that they are not alone, and 2) For others, it may provide
some new ideas.
This important new book presents a comprehensive review of
practical alternative energy choices for the twenty-first century.
It addresses three critical energy-related topics that are causing
great confusion in public debate--global warming, the hydrogen
economy, and nuclear power--and gives readers an opportunity to
form a grounded, factually correct foundation for understanding the
energy challenge and develop their own informed and actionable
opinion.
This book describes several aspects of contemporary culture that
create both opportunities and threats to Christian mission. It
offers insights and practices that the church today must embrace in
order to live faithfully and witness effectively to the gospel.
Following a presentation of the church's history in relation to
Western culture, several chapters draw upon specific suggestions in
Alasdair MacIntyre's After Virtue--that we live in a fragmented
rather than a pluralistic world; how the church has compromised its
faithfulness by accommodating the mainstream of morality;
implications stemming from the collapse of the Enlightenment
project; and the need for a new monasticism together with forms the
life of the church must take to sustain a faithful witness in
contemporary culture. Jonathan R. Wilson is Associate Professor of
Systematic Theology and Chair of the Department of Religious
Studies, Westmont College, Santa Barbara, CA, and the author of
Theology as Cultural Critique.
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