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No matter what you teach, there is a 100 Ideas title for you! The
100 Ideas series offers teachers practical, easy-to-implement
strategies and activities for the classroom. Each author is an
expert in their field and is passionate about sharing best practice
with their peers. Each title includes at least ten additional
extra-creative Bonus Ideas that won't fail to inspire and engage
all learners. Jennifer Murray provides a rich toolbox of supportive
ideas to promote and protect wellbeing for both you and your
pupils, and to help all to flourish. Activities such as 'care
treasure maps' and 'connection clubs' are easy to try and to
sustain, and all have been used to make a positive difference in
primary schools across the UK. There is a section dedicated to
teacher wellbeing as well as a broad range of strategies to use in
the classroom with your pupils, covering language, relationships,
physical movement, self-awareness, appreciation and awareness of
your environment and much more.
Risk assessment and risk management are essential across the public
sector to improve processes and outcomes. However, there is little
clarity over what this actually means. This lack of understanding
leads to a wide variation in risk assessment and management
practice and to miscommunications of risk across professions,
creating further barriers to interprofessional practice and
co-creation of value across the public sector. Despite these
challenges, there is a concurrent expectation that risk assessment
and risk management be carried out across the sector to the highest
standard, which inevitably becomes problematic. Conceptualising
Risk Assessment and Management across the Public Sector explores
concepts and applications of risk across the public sector to aid
risk professionals in establishing a clearer understanding of what
risk assessment and management is, how they might be unified across
the sector, and how and where deviations across professions are
needed. This book addresses these issues through providing a
theory-informed discussion on the conceptualisations of risk, risk
assessment, and risk management across the public sector, and
through identifying where shared values and where differences exist
across professions. Guidance on interprofessional risk practice and
risk communication to overcome barriers is offered using a
combination of theoretically underpinned approaches and exemplars
from practice, presented to have broad applicability across the
public sector rather than being siloed within a specific
professional grouping or theoretical paradigm.
Berlin and Chicago-based photographer Andrea Wilmsen challenges our
perception of interiors in her photographs of the Bode Museum in
Berlin, Germany. Her focus varies from fragmented views of
architectural details to carefully composed close-up details of
empty walls, creating unique portraits of the museum. Wilmsen is
inspired by the American philosopher and art critic Arthur C. Danto
and his book titled The Transfiguration of the Commonplace, which
questions what makes an object a work of art. Yet, she takes the
question further and is driven to uncover what makes art spaces
special stages for prestigious artworks. Wilmsen is driven by how
we prioritise certain works of art over others, and further, where
the boundaries lie between what we consider art and what is visible
outside of the works that are established as art in a
museum. Text in English and German.
When considered as an object the photograph exists physically in
the world, it belongs to someone; it gets held, it has weight,
value. I've been interested in this concept for some time. It was
this interest plus the recurrent use of my images online without my
permission that motivated the creation of the series Little
Romances. I have always made very personal work, my current
emotional state and interests get translated directly into my
images. Most all these images reflect questions and anxieties about
being a woman, navigating what that means; what is expected of me
as a mother, daughter, wife or lover versus what I'm capable of. In
sharing my work online, sometimes it is treated with respect, but
more often not. Not being asked for its use, and/or not being
credited; it's upsetting being treated that way especially with
such personal images. In Little Romances I photograph prints of my
photographs and they become a physical object; my object. I
surround them with elements from my garden or other personal items
not to evoke nostalgia or sentimentality but to deepen my physical
connection/claim to these images and distance them from the viewer.
The object-image becomes obscured, repurposed, diverted, so that
its original intent remains safe from viewing and at the same time
it explores a new narrative.
Smashed is a non-fiction collection of poetry written as a diary in
real time as mother and her young son take the long way out of a
marriage plagued by alcohol, crime, and domestic violence. The
writer openly shares her choices, mistakes, as well as capturing
experiences through her three year old's eyes. Through moments of
strength, weakness, hope, and failure this collection of poetry
will take you to the end, which is really their beginning.
Harnessing and controlling exposure to elements of the outside
world has helped researchers to make great strides in treating
disease. Additionally, recent advances in clinical approaches
suggest that re-exposing patients to their own memories and
experiences have resulted in improvements in the treatment of
mental illnesses. This book reveals the impressive range of
therapeutic techniques that are currently being refined to battle a
wide array of disorders.
Seminar paper from the year 2002 in the subject Business economics
- Trade and Distribution, grade: 1.1 (A+), University of Manchester
(Manchester School of Management), 11 entries in the bibliography,
language: English, abstract: This paper addresses the challenges
Proctor and Gamble (P&G) faced in the 1970s and 1980s, both to
its European organisational structure and to the imminent launch of
its new Heavy Duty Liquid (HDL) Vizir. It will be argued that the
company's European structure will have a direct impact on a
possible Vizir launch and on future product launches, using an
in-depth analysis of both the current P&G situation at that
time and feasible alternative strategies available to the
organisation. Chapter two will give a brief but concise overview of
the P&G situation in the 1980s; chapter three will discuss
three different approaches available to P&G in organising its
European operations, and recommend the most suitable approach;
chapter four will then examine the launch options for Vizir and
present the most favourable strategy; finally, chapter five will
summarise the findings and highlight the recommendations of this
report, briefly considering possible implementations and
evaluations of the suggested strategies.
The globalisation of culture and the shifting nature of national
identities have propelled the stakes of memory and identity to the
forefront of current intellectual debates. In recent years, the
works of the Algerian francophone author Assia Djebar have
reflected a growing preoccupation with the role of memory in
forging a sense of individual as well as collective identity. This
study traces the interrelated motifs of memory and identity in
Djebar's novels, arguing the centrality of these themes to her
literary project. An interdisciplinary theoretical framework
positions Djebar's corpus in the wider context of philosophical and
psychoanalytical debates on memory and identity. Djebar reveals
that much more is at stake in discussions of the interrelationship
between memory and identity than concerns of a mere cultural
nature. In postcolonial Algeria, repressed memories of Algeria's
colonial past are revealed as instrumental to the genealogy of the
current Algerian conflict; in this context, Djebar's poetics of
memory become a 'devoir de memoire', an appeal for a revised
Algerian historiography in which the individual takes pride of
place.
Noted vegans and vegetarians love Mark Reinfeld and Jennifer
Murray's food. Food Network host and author Ellie Krieger lauds
their recipes as "delicious, exciting, healthful, and] accessible
for everyone," while Deborah Madison notes their "appealing
recipes, good information about food and cooking in general and]
surprisingly realistic approaches to thirty-minute cooking." Now,
Reinfeld and Murray turn their skillets to the East, featuring over
150 vegan versions of favorite cuisine from India, Thailand, China,
and Japan. "Taste of the East" also offers inspired animal-free
recipes from Indonesia, Nepal, Vietnam, Korea, Tibet, Iran, and
Afghanistan.
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