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During field and court-based sports, players are continually
required to perceive their environment within a match and select
and perform the most appropriate action to achieve their immediate
goal within that match instance. This ability is commonly known as
agility, considered a vital quality in such sports and may
incorporate a variety of locomotion and instantaneous actions.
Multidirectional speed is a global term to describe the competency
and capacity to perform such actions, to accelerate, decelerate,
change direction and ultimately maintain speed in multiple
directions and movements within the context of sports specific
scenarios, encompassing many of these agility, speed, and related
qualities. Multidirectional speed in sport depends on a multitude
of factors including perceptual-cognitive abilities, physical
qualities, and the technical ability to perform the abovementioned
actions. Multidirectional Speed in Sport: Research to Application
reviews the science of multidirectional speed and translates this
information into real-world application in order to provide a
resource for practitioners to develop multidirectional speed with
athletes, bringing together knowledge from a wealth of
world-leading researchers and applied practitioners in the area of
'speed and agility' to provide a complete resource to assist
practitioners in designing effective multidirectional speed
development programmes. This text is critical reading for
undergraduate and graduate sports science students, all individuals
involved in training athletes (e.g., coaches, physiotherapists,
athletic trainers) along with researchers in the field of sports
science and sports medicine.
Overcome your fears, phobias and anxieties with this simple,
innovative and effective 7-step method. If you’ve struggled to
deal with an overwhelming fear, phobia or anxiety –one that may
have prevented you from living your life to the full and taken a
toll on your mental health – then this is the book for you.
Written by Christopher Paul Jones, a leading specialist on phobias,
Face Your Fears: 7 Steps to Conquering Phobias & Anxiety is a
practical guide to taking control of your mental wellbeing and
treating common phobias, including fears of flying, spiders, public
speaking and heights, as well as claustrophobia, agoraphobia and
anxiety. Christopher’s innovative Integrated Change System, the
culmination of more than 20 years of research, offers a series of
easy-to-follow, guided exercises that will allow you to uncover the
source of your fears and work towards overcoming them. With this
proven approach backed by a mix of cutting-edge methods, removing a
phobia can be quicker and easier than you think.
Despite being the third largest economy in Southeast Asia,
Malaysian entrepreneurial activity is under-reported in the
scholarly literature. This book extends such research by examining
the impact of entrepreneurship on its economy and evaluating the
existing systemic problems. The Malaysian economy has benefited
from the density of knowledge-based businesses and utilization of
the latest technologies in the manufacturing and digital economies.
However, Malaysia faces ongoing challenges, namely concentration of
wealth in the city, high regional unemployment and workplace gender
inequality. In regional areas, there is an over-reliance on
agriculture and necessity based entrepreneurship. Consequently,
entrepreneurial activity has been encouraged with the creation of
eco-systems, seed corn funding and provision of entrepreneurship
education to offer entrepreneurial career choices. Providing
recommendations and best practice for driving entrepreneurship and
entrepreneurial behaviours, this contributed volume presents the
first opportunity to reflect on both the success stories and
systemic problems related to effective entrepreneurial behaviour in
a South East Asian context.
Sustainable entrepreneurship focuses on how the environment is
embedded within business practices. This book examines
collaboration strategies and initiatives for sustainable
entrepreneurs with a wide variety of partners, and demonstrates how
they can be used to increase overall performance and achieve global
competitiveness. Based on the latest empirical evidence from
emerging economies, the book's respective chapters address
sustainability issues in connection with knowledge creation and
learning, outsourcing, and the roles of universities, consultants,
and the public sector.
This book focuses on the role of subsistence entrepreneurs in
creating social and sustainable business opportunities on the
global marketplace. Subsistence entrepreneurs use scarce resources
to create new business opportunities, often in developing or
emerging economies. In addition, subsistence entrepreneurship is
increasingly being used as a way to facilitate market entry for
small and medium-sized business enterprises that focus on
collaborative innovation. The interdisciplinary contributions
gathered here will expand readers' understanding of the nature and
characteristics of subsistence entrepreneurs, as well as the
challenges they face. The central connection between subsistence,
sustainability and social entrepreneurship is also explored.
"What good does it do to say that the words of the Bible] are
inspired by God if most people have absolutely no access to these
words, but only to more or less clumsy renderings of these words
into a language? . . . How does it help us to say that the Bible is
the inerrant word of God if in fact we don't have the words that
God inerrantly inspired? . . . We have only error-ridden copies,
and the vast majority of these are centuries removed from the
originals." So contends Bart D. Ehrman in his bestselling
Misquoting Jesus. If altogether true, we have little reason to put
our confidence in Scripture. Add to this Ehrman's contention that
what we read in the New Testament represents the winners' version
of events, twisted to suit their own purposes and not at all a
faithful recounting of what really happened, and the case for
skepticism and unbelief gives every appearance of being on solid
footing. But are things really so bad off? Were the New Testament
documents widely distorted by copyists? Can we in fact have no idea
what was in the originals? Do we have no hope of knowing what
eyewitnesses said and thought? Are other documents left out of the
New Testament better sources for understanding early Christianity?
While readily conceding that Ehrman has many of his facts straight,
pastor and researcher Timothy Paul Jones argues that Ehrman is far
too quick to jump to false and unnecessary conclusions. In clear,
straightforward prose, Jones explores and explains the ins and outs
of copying the New Testament, why lost Christianities were lost,
and why the Christian message still rings true today.
This book apprises readers of the present conditions of former and
emancipated foster youth, provides evidence-based best practices
regarding their experiences, and proposes new policies for ensuring
better outcomes for these children upon discharge from foster care.
For most American youth, the transition to adulthood is gradual and
aided by support from parents and others. In contrast, foster youth
are expected to arrive at self-sufficiency abruptly and without the
same level of support. Such an expectation may be due in part to
what Loring Paul Jones has found in his research: that many of the
studies conducted thus far have been fragmented and incomplete,
often focusing on a particular state or agency that may follow
policies not applicable nationwide. This book connects the dots
between these disparate studies to provide child welfare
practitioners, policy makers, and students with a broader picture
of the state of American youth following discharge from foster
care. It examines not only child welfare policies but also related
policies in areas such as housing and education that may contribute
to the success or failure of foster youth in society. It
additionally draws lessons from successful programs to provide
readers with the tools needed to develop foster and after-care
systems that more closely mirror the support afforded to youth in
the general population.
During field and court-based sports, players are continually
required to perceive their environment within a match and select
and perform the most appropriate action to achieve their immediate
goal within that match instance. This ability is commonly known as
agility, considered a vital quality in such sports and may
incorporate a variety of locomotion and instantaneous actions.
Multidirectional speed is a global term to describe the competency
and capacity to perform such actions, to accelerate, decelerate,
change direction and ultimately maintain speed in multiple
directions and movements within the context of sports specific
scenarios, encompassing many of these agility, speed, and related
qualities. Multidirectional speed in sport depends on a multitude
of factors including perceptual-cognitive abilities, physical
qualities, and the technical ability to perform the abovementioned
actions. Multidirectional Speed in Sport: Research to Application
reviews the science of multidirectional speed and translates this
information into real-world application in order to provide a
resource for practitioners to develop multidirectional speed with
athletes, bringing together knowledge from a wealth of
world-leading researchers and applied practitioners in the area of
'speed and agility' to provide a complete resource to assist
practitioners in designing effective multidirectional speed
development programmes. This text is critical reading for
undergraduate and graduate sports science students, all individuals
involved in training athletes (e.g., coaches, physiotherapists,
athletic trainers) along with researchers in the field of sports
science and sports medicine.
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