|
Showing 1 - 21 of
21 matches in All Departments
How many women can we assist have complete sovereignty over
themselves and make their own decisions? Details inside.
How many individuals in the US can we assist become
Multi-Millionaires?
Being cooperative, empathetic, and accommodating are great
qualities for teachers but can also lead to higher rates of
frustration and eventually burnout. In this empowering new book
from Brad Johnson and Jeremy Johnson, find out how becoming more
assertive can help highly agreeable teachers thrive. First, take
personality quizzes to find out how agreeable or assertive you are!
Then the authors delve into why that matters. You’ll find out how
assertiveness differs from aggression and passivity and why it is a
valuable tool for teachers, so you can stand up for your own needs
and rights while respecting the needs and rights of others.
Chapters cover establishing healthy boundaries, learning when to
say no, dealing with conflicts, becoming more self-aware,
leveraging your strengths, finding your voice, and more! Each
chapter is filled with practical strategies and examples, and ends
with a toolbox feature to help you build your skills. As you learn
to become more assertive, you’ll improve your interactions and
will feel more heard—and fulfilled—in your teaching role and in
life.
Being cooperative, empathetic, and accommodating are great
qualities for teachers but can also lead to higher rates of
frustration and eventually burnout. In this empowering new book
from Brad Johnson and Jeremy Johnson, find out how becoming more
assertive can help highly agreeable teachers thrive. First, take
personality quizzes to find out how agreeable or assertive you are!
Then the authors delve into why that matters. You’ll find out how
assertiveness differs from aggression and passivity and why it is a
valuable tool for teachers, so you can stand up for your own needs
and rights while respecting the needs and rights of others.
Chapters cover establishing healthy boundaries, learning when to
say no, dealing with conflicts, becoming more self-aware,
leveraging your strengths, finding your voice, and more! Each
chapter is filled with practical strategies and examples, and ends
with a toolbox feature to help you build your skills. As you learn
to become more assertive, you’ll improve your interactions and
will feel more heard—and fulfilled—in your teaching role and in
life.
|
Judging Bush (Paperback)
Robert Maranto, Tom Lansford, Jeremy Johnson
|
R774
R666
Discovery Miles 6 660
Save R108 (14%)
|
In Stock
|
There is no shortage of opinions on the legacy that George W. Bush
will leave as 43rd President of the United States. Recognizing that
Bush the Younger has been variously described as dimwitted,
opportunistic, innovative, and bold, it would be presumptuous to
draw any hard and fast conclusions about how history will view him.
Nevertheless, it is well within academia's ability to begin to make
preliminary judgments by weighing the evidence we do have and
testing assumptions.
In the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks and the initially
successful military campaign in Afghanistan, Bush and his
administration enjoyed nearly unprecedented popularity. But after
failures in Iraq and in the federal government's response to
Hurricane Katrina, Bush's approval ratings plummeted. Guided by a
new framework, "Judging Bush" boldly takes steps to evaluate the
highs and lows of the Bush legacy according to four types of
competence: strategic, political, tactical, and moral. It offers a
first look at the man, his domestic and foreign policies, and the
executive office's relationship to the legislative and judicial
branches from a distinguished and ideologically diverse set of
award-winning political scientists and White House veterans. Topics
include Bush's decision-making style, the management of the
executive branch, the role and influence of Dick Cheney, elections
and party realignment, the Bush economy, Hurricane Katrina, No
Child Left Behind, and competing treatments of the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan.
Contributors include Lara M. Brown, David B. Cohen, Jeffrey E.
Cohen, Laura Conley, Jack Covarrubias, John J. DiIulio, Jr.,
William A. Galston, Frederick M. Hess, Karen M. Hult, Lori A.
Johnson, Robert G. Kaufman, Anne M. Khademian, Lawrence J. Korb,
Patrick McGuinn, Michael Moreland, Costas Panagopoulos, James P.
Pfiffner, Richard E. Redding, Neil Reedy, Andrew Rudalevige,
Charles E. Walcott, and Shirley Anne Warshaw.
|
Judging Bush (Hardcover)
Robert Maranto, Tom Lansford, Jeremy Johnson
|
R3,375
Discovery Miles 33 750
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
There is no shortage of opinions on the legacy that George W. Bush
will leave as 43rd President of the United States. Recognizing that
Bush the Younger has been variously described as dimwitted,
opportunistic, innovative, and bold, it would be presumptuous to
draw any hard and fast conclusions about how history will view him.
Nevertheless, it is well within academia's ability to begin to make
preliminary judgments by weighing the evidence we do have and
testing assumptions.
In the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks and the initially
successful military campaign in Afghanistan, Bush and his
administration enjoyed nearly unprecedented popularity. But after
failures in Iraq and in the federal government's response to
Hurricane Katrina, Bush's approval ratings plummeted. Guided by a
new framework, "Judging Bush" boldly takes steps to evaluate the
highs and lows of the Bush legacy according to four types of
competence: strategic, political, tactical, and moral. It offers a
first look at the man, his domestic and foreign policies, and the
executive office's relationship to the legislative and judicial
branches from a distinguished and ideologically diverse set of
award-winning political scientists and White House veterans. Topics
include Bush's decision-making style, the management of the
executive branch, the role and influence of Dick Cheney, elections
and party realignment, the Bush economy, Hurricane Katrina, No
Child Left Behind, and competing treatments of the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan.
Contributors include Lara M. Brown, David B. Cohen, Jeffrey E.
Cohen, Laura Conley, Jack Covarrubias, John J. DiIulio, Jr.,
William A. Galston, Frederick M. Hess, Karen M. Hult, Lori A.
Johnson, Robert G. Kaufman, Anne M. Khademian, Lawrence J. Korb,
Patrick McGuinn, Michael Moreland, Costas Panagopoulos, James P.
Pfiffner, Richard E. Redding, Neil Reedy, Andrew Rudalevige,
Charles E. Walcott, and Shirley Anne Warshaw.
No doubt the 21st century will continue to surprise us, but the
battle for the soul of humanity appears to be quickening. Do we
have what it takes to save ourselves from ourselves? The internet
has fundamentally changed our experience of shared life, for good
and bad. The spiritual and ecological exhaustion of modernity is
watched and discussed in a public realm mostly controlled by
private interests, where our attention is easily hijacked and
vulnerable to manipulation. There is joy and hope in life as
always, but our species faces a capricious future. This anthology
is an attempt to perceive our contexts and opportunities more
clearly with an exploration of the metamodern sensibility: a
structure of feeling, cultural ethos, epistemic orientation and
imaginative outlook that is coalescing into an important body of
theory and practice. Leading metamodern writers, including Zachary
Stein, Bonnitta Roy, Lene Rachel Andersen, Hanzi Freinacht, Minna
Salami and John Vervaeke, reflect upon the conjunction of
premodern, modern and postmodern influences on the present to help
contend with our plight in the 2020s and beyond. Fourteen chapters
traverse a range of disciplines and domains to help the reader move
beyond critique into vision and method. The aim is to create and
inspire viable and desirable futures in this time between worlds,
where one pattern of collective life is dying and another needs our
help to be born.
Another Piece of the Puzzle is the third installment in my line of
poetry from the abused point of view. It shows the stages of
acceptance and finding strength to move past that stage of your
life.
Moonlight is a book about over coming a broken relationship. It's
how a person feels when they lose the person they love most and how
they cope with such loss. I searched long and hard to find the
perfect words to describe every emotion, every downfall, and every
happy moment in such a situation.
This book is a collection of poetry about love and how it can
change. It contains an array of dark, beautiful, and enchanting
emotions. Through the eyes of the author, to your understanding.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
|