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Six years after Brexit, it can feel like we're still having the
same conversations. This is the explainer we need to move on. And
we do need to move on, because in the meantime so much has changed.
The economic realities that are making the UK less competitive,
less productive and less well-off are ever more obvious - and more
and more people are finding out the Brexit they were sold was based
on falsehoods and fantasy. So what exactly went wrong with Brexit?
In this book, Peter Foster dispels the myths and, most importantly,
shows what a better future for Britain after Brexit might look
like. With clear-headed practicality, he considers the real costs
of leaving the EU, how we can recover international trust in the
UK, how to improve cooperation and trade with our neighbours, and
how to begin to build the Global Britain that Brexit promised but
failed to deliver. The politicians won't talk about it, so we need
to.
What knowledge will make you most effective as a teacher? New
teachers are often bombarded with information about the concepts
they should understand and the topics they should master. This
indispensable book will help you navigate the research on
curriculum, cognitive science, student data and more, providing
clarity and key takeaways for those looking to grow their teaching
expertise. What Do New Teachers Need to Know? explores the
fundamentals of teacher expertise and draws upon contemporary
research to offer the knowledge that will be most useful, the
methods to retain that knowledge, and the ways expert teachers use
it to solve problems. Written by an educator with extensive
experience and understanding, each chapter answers a key question
about teacher knowledge, including: * Does anyone agree on what
makes great teaching? * How should I use evidence in my planning? *
Why isn't subject knowledge enough? * What should I know about my
students? * How do experts make and break habits? * How can
teachers think creatively whilst automating good habits? * What do
we need to know about the curriculum? * How should Cognitive Load
Theory affect our pedagogical decisions? Packed with case studies
and interviews with new and training teachers alongside key
takeaways for the classroom, this book is essential reading for
early career teachers, those undertaking initial teacher training
and current teachers looking to develop their expertise.
This fascinating case study, first published in 1990, of how
policies work out in a real school setting is placed in the context
of the wider debate about multi-cultural, anti-racist education.
This book also makes suggestions for the shaping of future policy.
This book should be of interest to lecturers and students of
education and sociology.
What knowledge will make you most effective as a teacher? New
teachers are often bombarded with information about the concepts
they should understand and the topics they should master. This
indispensable book will help you navigate the research on
curriculum, cognitive science, student data and more, providing
clarity and key takeaways for those looking to grow their teaching
expertise. What Do New Teachers Need to Know? explores the
fundamentals of teacher expertise and draws upon contemporary
research to offer the knowledge that will be most useful, the
methods to retain that knowledge, and the ways expert teachers use
it to solve problems. Written by an educator with extensive
experience and understanding, each chapter answers a key question
about teacher knowledge, including: * Does anyone agree on what
makes great teaching? * How should I use evidence in my planning? *
Why isn't subject knowledge enough? * What should I know about my
students? * How do experts make and break habits? * How can
teachers think creatively whilst automating good habits? * What do
we need to know about the curriculum? * How should Cognitive Load
Theory affect our pedagogical decisions? Packed with case studies
and interviews with new and training teachers alongside key
takeaways for the classroom, this book is essential reading for
early career teachers, those undertaking initial teacher training
and current teachers looking to develop their expertise.
The issue of educational opportunity has long been of public
concern and a major focus for eduational research. As a result,
there is now a substantial body of research findings in this field,
both quantitative and qualitative.; This work relates to various
levels of the educational system and to different categories of
student, but particularly social class, gender, ethnicity and race.
The central trend has been to find persisting inequalities despite
reform at system, institutional and classroom levels. Furthermore,
the educational system is frequently portrayed as playing a key
role in reproducing wider social and economic inequalities.; This
book examines the status of educational inequality as a social
problem, explores the conceptual issues surrounding it, assesses a
representative sample of recent research, and seeks to clarify the
relevant methodological ground rules, thereby laying the basis for
future research in the field.
This fascinating case study, first published in 1990, of how
policies work out in a real school setting is placed in the context
of the wider debate about multi-cultural, anti-racist education.
This book also makes suggestions for the shaping of future policy.
This book should be of interest to lecturers and students of
education and sociology.
The Uncrowned King of Mont Blanc by Peter Foster is the biography
of scientist and mountaineer Thomas Graham Brown, whose
encyclopaedic knowledge of the mountain earned him the soubriquet,
and whose achievements in the Alps and Greater Ranges place him at
the forefront of British mountaineering between the two world wars.
Born in Edinburgh in 1882, Graham Brown first pursued a career in
the sciences as a physiologist - his exacting father demanding the
highest standards - and the results of his research, largely
unrecognised at the time, now underpin current understanding of the
nervous control of movement in animals and man. His mountaineering
career began in earnest after the First World War. From rock
climbing in the Lake District he progressed to guided climbs in the
Alps, where in 1927 he was fatefully introduced to Frank Smythe
with whom he made the groundbreaking first ascents of the
Sentinelle Rouge and the Route Major on the Brenva Face of Mont
Blanc. This resulted in an obsession with the mountain and a feud
between the pair that smouldered and flared for twenty years.
Ambitious, determined and uncompromising in his views, he never
left others feeling neutral: Geoffrey Winthrop Young thought him `a
vicious lunatic', yet Charles Houston felt closer to Graham Brown
`than almost anyone else I know'. Graham Brown's life was one of
turbulence in his career, relationships and in the mountains,
whether on expeditions to Mount Foraker, Nanda Devi and Masherbrum,
or most frequently, the Alps. Peter Foster has drawn upon diaries,
letters and extensive archival research that illuminate the highs
and lows of Graham Brown's scientific and climbing careers, and
explores the imbalance between the significance of his achievements
and the lack of recognition he received. But, above all, The
Uncrowned King of Mont Blanc allows one to hear Graham Brown's
voice: querulous, opinionated and, to the discomfort of his many
adversaries, almost always right.
The Jaguar was an iconic aircraft to come from Anglo-French
collaboration and one of the first to be conceived with a predatory
attack and low-level strike capability. First planned as a trainer,
it emerged as a fighter bomber taking much from the TSR2 concept
when a string of cancelled projects identified a gap in
strike/attack capability; it soon evolved into a supersonic
aircraft ready for reconnaissance and tactical nuclear strike
roles. Retired before its time, for France in 2005 and for the RAF
in 2007, it is still revered both by those that operated it and
those that stared in wonder. The end for the Jaguar in the United
Kingdom was sudden and rushed with the big cat going out with a
meow rather than a roar. However, it survived on other continents
providing a growl and bite in maintaining sovereignty for several
decades on. This book is a stunning pictorial tribute to those
final days.
In Why We Bite the Invisible Hand, Peter Foster delves into a
conundrum: How can we at once live in a world of expanding
technological wonders and unprecedented well-being, and yet hear a
constant drumbeat of condemnation of the system that created it?
That system, capitalism, which is based on private property and
voluntary dealings, is guided by the "Invisible Hand," the metaphor
for economic markets associated with the great Eighteenth Century
Scottish philosopher Adam Smith. The hand guides people to serve
others while pursuing their own interests, and produces a broader
good that, as Smith put it, is "no part of their intention."
Critics. however, claim that the hand is tainted by greed, leads to
inequity and dangerous corporate power, and threatens not merely
resource depletion but planetary disaster. Foster probes
misunderstanding, fear and dislike of capitalism from the dark
satanic mills of the Industrial Revolution through to the murky
concept of sustainable development. His journey takes him from
Kirkcaldy, the town of Smith's birth, through Moscow McDonald's and
Karl Marx's Manchester, on a trip to Cuba to smuggle dollars, and
into the backrooms of the United Nations. His cast of characters
includes the man who wrote the entry for "capitalism" in the Great
Soviet Encyclopaedia, a family of Kirkcaldy butchers, radical
individualist Ayn Rand, father of evolutionary theory Charles
Darwin, numerous Nobel prizewinning economists, colonies of
chimpanzees, and "philanthrocapitalist" Bill Gates. Foster suggests
that the key to his conundrum lies in the field of evolutionary
psychology, which offers to help us understand both why some of
what Adam Smith called our complex "moral sentiments" may be
outdated, and why so many of our economic assumptions tend to be
wrong. We are hunter gatherers with iPhones. The Invisible Hand is
counterintuitive to minds formed predominantly in small close-knit
tribal communities where there were no extensive markets, no money,
no technological advance and no economic growth. Equally important,
we don't have to understand the rapidly evolving economic "natural
order" to operate within it and enjoy its benefits any more than we
need to understand our nervous or respiratory systems to stay
alive. But that also makes us prone to support morally-appealing
but counterproductive policies, such as minimum wage legislation.
Foster notes that politicians and bureaucrats -- consciously or
unconsciously -- exploit moral confusion and economic ignorance.
Ideological obsession with market imperfections, income gaps,
corporate power, resource exhaustion and the environment are useful
justifications for those seeking political control of our lives.
The book refutes claims that capitalism's validity depends on the
system being "perfect" or economic actors "rational." It also notes
the key difference between capitalism and capitalists, who are
inclined to misunderstand the system as much as anyone. Foster
points to the astonishing rise in recent decades of radical,
unelected environmental non-governmental organizations, ENGOs.
Closely related to that rise, Foster examines with one of the
biggest and most contentious issues of our time: projected
catastrophic man-made climate change. He notes that while this
theory is cited as the greatest example in history of "market
failure," it in fact demonstrates how both scientific analysis and
economic policy can become perverted once something is framed as a
"moral issue," and thus allegedly "beyond debate." Foster's book is
not a paean to greed, selfishness or radical individualism. He
stresses that the greatest joys in life come from family,
friendship and participation in community, sport and the arts. What
has long fascinated him is the relentless claim that capitalism
taints or destroys these aspects of humanity rather than promoting
them. Moreover, he concludes, when you bite the Invisible Hand...
it always bites back.
Follow Calinor to another world, where she, along with two friends,
will take you on an adventure full of magic and hope, as they
search for the Lost Pixie Tribe. Battle with them an array of
mystical monsters, witches and wizards, as they journey ever
onwards towards their goal. You will meet new aquaintances along
the way and share in the excitement as the three would-be heroes
face one challenge after another.
Concentrates on Tornado Reconnaissance, looking at the two
squadrons, II(AC) and XII, the systems they employed, and their
worth to the overall structure, interspersed with personal tales of
front line operations. This book explains the concept of the
internal recce system, TIRRS and covers the replacement systems JRP
and Raptor.
This is the most comprehensive guide to the current uses and importance of case study methods in social research. The editors bring together key contributions from the field which reflect different interpretations of the purpose and capacity of case study research. The address issues such as: the problem of generalizing from study of a small number of cases; and the role of case study in developing and testing theories. The editors offer in-depth assessments of the main arguments. An annotated bibliography of the literature dealing with case study research makes this an exhaustive and indispensable guide. `This is a worthwhile book which will be useful to readers. It collects together key sources on a topic which is a "hardy perennial", guaranteeing its relevance for academics, researchers, and students on higher level methods programmes. The editorial contributions are by well-known authorities in the field, are carefully-constructed, and take a clear position. I would certainly want this book on my shelf' - Nigel Fielding, University of Surrey
'This relatively short book ... repays reading as a whole after
which it will be a valuable reference for particular aspects of
observational methodology' - EERA Bulletin Observing Schools
discusses the nature and purposes of observational research in
schools. It covers the different observational techniques which can
be used, and their advantages and disadvantages, bridging the gap
between qualitative and quantitative approaches. The preparations
which must be made before observation, the process of observation
itself, and the recording and analysis of observations are
discussed in detail. The book also explores how assessments can be
made of observational accounts and discusses the ethical issues
raised by this kind of research. These discussions are illustrated
throughout by examples drawn from recent observational work
conducted on a variety of aspects of school life.
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