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Winner of: National Science Teachers Association/Children's Book
Council, Outstanding Science Trade Book Award A humorous, exciting
tale of an ordinary girl who makes an extraordinary scientific
discovery—a blind fish that walks When seventh-grader Alexis
catches an unusual fish that looks like a living fossil, she sets
off a frenzied scientific hunt for more of its kind. Alexis and her
friend Darshan join the hunt, snorkeling, sounding the depths of
Glacial Lake, even observing from a helicopter and exploring a
cave. All the while, they fight to keep the selfish Dr. Mertz from
claiming the discovery all for himself. When Alexis follows one
final hunch, she risks her life and almost loses her
friend. Walking Fish is a scientific adventure that
provides a perfect combination of literacy and science.
This book explores questions of care in higher education. Using
Joan Tronto’s seven signs that institutions are not caring well,
the authors examine whether students and staff consider
universities to be caring institutions. As such, they outline how
universities systematically, structurally, and actively
‘undercare’ when it comes to supporting students and staff, a
phenomenon which was amplified by the COVID-19 pandemic. Drawing on
scholarly ideas from the sociology of care, higher education,
social justice, and feminist critique, and in dialogue with
empirical insights gathered with people who work and study in
universities in Australia, South Africa, and the UK, the book
questions why people care, as well as why adopting a caring
position in higher education can be viewed as radical. The authors
conclude by asking what we can do to counter that view by thinking
carefully about the purpose, power, and plurality of care, before
imagining how we can create more caring universities.
Meet a judo champion, a chess grandmaster, a spacewalking astronaut, a World War II spy, and more. . .
What do all these people have in common?
They are all inspiring Jewish women―mensches who rocked the world!
Being literate in the twenty-first century means being an empowered
receiver, user and creator of diverse text types communicated
across multiple and rapidly changing modalities. English and
Literacies: Learning to make meaning in primary classrooms is an
accessible resource that introduces pre-service teachers to the
many facets of literacies and English education for primary
students. Addressing the requirements of the Australian Curriculum
and the Early Years Learning Framework, English and Literacies
explores how students develop oracy and literacy. Reading, viewing
and writing are discussed alongside the importance of children's
literature. Taking an inclusive and positive approach to teaching
and learning for all students, it explores the creation of texts
using spelling, grammar in context and handwriting/keyboarding
skills, as well as the need for authentic assessment and reporting.
Finally, the text explores the importance of literacy partnerships
and how teachers can address literacy challenges across the
curriculum.
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Craft Roach (Hardcover)
Rachel Burke; Illustrated by Daniel Gray-Barnett
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R301
Discovery Miles 3 010
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Craft Roach is an exuberant story about an artsy little bug who
lives life a little differently. Written by Rachel Burke
(@imakestagram) and with art from best-selling illustrator Daniel
Gray-Barnett, Craft Roach is a fun, rhyming picture book about
standing out, fitting in and having the courage to be your most
joyful self. Craft Roach makes the other bugs feel very tense and
stressed. Standing out? Being seen? They do not think it best. But
Craft Roach sees things differently, has more than just an inkling
– that crawlies wouldn’t be so feared, if all of them were
twinkling... Craft Roach is a story that will change your mind
about cockroaches, and will delight and encourage young readers to
be bold and never dim their light. For ages 3 and up.
This book examines the educational systems into which students with
refugee backgrounds are placed when relocated into their new
homelands. It discusses the current climate of neo liberalism which
pervades schooling in many western countries and the subsequent
impact on curriculum focus and teaching strategies. The authors
propose ways in which these students can be educated with policies
and perspectives which respect diversity and uniqueness, using
among others a primary school in regional Australia dedicated to
holistic education as an example. Informed by postmodern
perspectives on education and its purposes and drawing on the
interdisciplinary wisdoms of critical scholars, this book presents
a theoretical introduction to the educational landscape as found in
many of the countries in which students with asylum seeker and
refugee backgrounds are placed as the result of forced resettlement
in new homelands. It discusses the impact of reductionist
pedagogical and epistemological policies which are the foundations
of neo liberalism. It challenges educators and policy makers to see
beyond superficial differences and competition and to focus instead
on the very significant impact of trauma and loss that these
students have experienced as children and young people. The book
dares educators at all levels of policy and practice to become
truly human again and to consider the role of educational love and
care that formed the cornerstones of educational endeavours for
authentic pedagogues for decades. The book concludes with a
research-based study of a school in a regional Australian town
which not only educates with an ethic of pedagogical love and care,
promoting a sense of belonging and emotional wellbeing for all
students, 30% of which are of asylum seeker and refugee
backgrounds, but celebrates high academic standards needed for
student success, as well.
You're one glittery pompom away from having a better day! Inject some colour and fun into your life with these super-cute craft projects using flowers, sequins, tinsel, glitter and pompoms galore.
No prior skills are required to make these glittering beauties. The projects include gem-covered party socks and collars, tinsel jackets, confetti-covered tights, pompom totes, necklaces and earrings and flower-bedecked headphones, crowns and brooches.
Teaching you how to achieve maximum cuteness for minimum effort, Be Dazzling brings a welcome splash of razzle-dazzle to every crafter's life.
Bluma is a young tooth fairy who is allergic to her own fairy dust.
She faces many problems during this night of tooth collecting, but
her biggest challenge is Brian's fairy trap. Bluma can succeed in
collecting his tooth only with the help of the boy's grouchy
hamster, and a few things she has collected through the night.
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Blu-ray disc
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Discovery Miles 1 580
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