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In this revised edition, Carl Glickman and coauthor Rebecca West
Burns synthesize their decades of experience in teacher education
and supervision into a comprehensive guide to supporting teacher
growth and student learning. Embedded in every page are the
essential knowledge, skills, approaches, and methods that leaders
need to drive instructional improvement. Official school leaders
and classroom teachers striving to be the best will learn how to
put the school's goals and priorities into practice by: Selecting
the right structure for differentiating teacher professional
learning to improve outcomes for students. Implementing the
technical and procedural skills needed to support teacher learning
while observing, assessing, and evaluating instruction. Identifying
appropriate relational skills for communicating and working with
teachers. Applying the best interpersonal approach to stretch each
teacher based on their own developmental level. Making the most of
teachable moments with immediate response skills. Understanding how
to support teachers' social-emotional wellness as an essential
component of improving practice. In addition, each chapter provides
detailed scenarios and case studies that illustrate exceptional
leadership, and the Appendixes offer connections to dozens of
promising practices.We are in a new era of teaching and learning,
and a new kind of leader is needed to guide successful and
extraordinary schools. Leadership for Learning: How to Bring Out
the Best in Every Teacher gives preK-12 leaders the powerful tools
they need to ensure that competent, caring, qualified professionals
who want to improve teaching and learning are in every classroom.
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The Judge
Rebecca West
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R1,046
Discovery Miles 10 460
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Given the increasing diversity of the United States and students
entering schools, the value of teacher learning in clinical
contexts, and the need to elevate the profession, national
organizations have been calling for a re-envisioning of teacher
preparation that turns teacher education upside down. This change
will require PK-12 schools and universities to partner in robust
ways to create strong professional learning experiences for
aspiring teachers. University faculty, in particular, will not only
need to work in schools, but they will need to work with schools in
the preparation of future teachers. This collaboration should
promote greater equity and justice for our nation's students. The
purpose of this book is to support individuals in designing
clinically based teacher preparation programs that place equity at
the core. Drawing from the literature as well as our experiences in
designing and coordinating award-winning teacher education
programs, we offer a vision for equity-centered, clinically based
preparation that promotes powerful teacher professional learning
and develops high-quality, equity-centered teachers for schools.
The chapter topics include policy guidelines, partnerships,
intentional clinical experiences, coherence, curriculum and
coursework, university-based teacher educators, school-based
teacher educators, teacher candidate supervision and evaluation,
the role of research, and instructional leadership in teacher
preparation. While the concepts we share are research-based and
grounded in the empirical literature, our primary intention is for
this book to be of practical use. We hope that by the time you
finish reading, you will feel inspired and equipped to make change
within your own program, your institution, and your local context.
We begin each chapter with a "Before You Read" section that
includes introductory activities or self-assessment questions to
prompt reflection about the current state of your teacher
preparation program. We also weave examples, a "Spotlight from
Practice," in the form of vignettes designed to spark your thinking
for program improvement. Finally, we conclude each chapter with a
section called "Exercises for Action," which are questions or
activities to help you (re)imagine and move toward action in the
(re)design of your teacher preparation program. We hope that you
will use the exercises by yourself, but perhaps more importantly,
with others to stimulate conversations about how you can build upon
what you are already doing well to make your program even better.
'Impossible to put down' Observer 'One of the great books of the
century' Times Literary Supplement Rebecca West's epic masterpiece
not only provides deep insight into the former country of
Yugoslavia; it is a portrait of Europe on the brink of war. A heady
cocktail of personal travelogue and historical insight, this
product of an implacably inquisitive intelligence remains essential
for anyone attempting to understand the history of the Balkan
states, and the wider ongoing implications for a fractured Europe.
Italian writer and filmmaker Gianni Celati's 1989 philosophical
travelogue Towards the River's Mouth explores perception, memory,
place and space as it recounts a series of journeys across the Po
River Valley in northern Italy. The book seeks to document the "new
Italian landscape" where divisions between the urban and rural were
being blurred into what Celati terms "a new variety of countryside
where one breathes an air of urban solitude." Celati traveled by
train, by bus, and on foot, at times with photographer Luigi
Ghirri, at others exploring on his own without predetermined
itineraries, taking notes on the places he encountered, watching
and listening to people in stations, fields, bars, houses, squares,
and hotels. In this way the book took shape as Celati traveled and
wrote, gathering and rewriting his notes into "stories of
observation" (9). Celati attempts to find meaning by seeking the
uncertain limits of our ability to discern everyday surroundings.
"Every observation," as he puts it, "needs liberate itself from the
familiar codes it carries, to go adrift in the middle of all things
not understood, in order to arrive at an outlet, where it must feel
lost." At the forefront of the then-nascent spatial turn in the
humanities, Towards the River's Mouth is a key text of what in
recent years has been variously termed literary cartography,
literary geography, and spatial poetics. Its call to carefully and
affectionately examine our surroundings while attempting to step
back from habitual ways of perceiving and moving through space, has
resonated as much with literary scholars and other writers as with
geographers and architects. By now a classic of twentieth-century
Italian literature, it has in recent years garnered increasing
attention, especially with the growth of ecocriticism and new
materialism within the environmental humanities. This edition,
translated into English for the first time, features an
introduction that places Towards the River's Mouth in the context
of Celati's other work, and a selection of ten scholarly essays by
prominent figures in comparative literature and Italian studies.
Supervision in teacher education is entering an exciting time. In
the last decade, national reports calling for the transformation of
teacher preparation have advocated for greater school-university
collaboration and increased clinical preparation of teachers
(AACTE, 2018; NCATE, 2010). Thus, institutions with teacher
preparation should be increasingly concerned with the clinical
component of their teacher certification programs (AACTE, 2010;
2018; NCATE, 2001; NEA, 2014). However, supervision in teacher
preparation has historically been held in low regard, (Beck &
Kosnik, 2002; Feiman-Nemser, 2001; The Holmes Group, 1986; Hoover,
O'Shea, & Carroll, 1988; Soder & Sirotnik, 1990) even
though research has shown that high-quality supervision promotes
teacher candidate learning (Bates, Drits, & Ramirez, 2011;
Burns, Jacobs, & Yendol-Hoppey, 2016; Darling-Hammond, 2014;
Gimbert & Nolan, 2003; Lee, 2011). In fact, university
supervisors "may be the most undervalued actors in the entire
teacher preparation equation when one considers the knowledge,
skills, and dispositions they must have to teach about teaching in
the field" (Burns & Badiali, 2016, p. 156). Despite this
research, the function of supervision has often been relegated to
adjunct faculty or even removed the university-based supervisor
altogether in some colleges/ schools of education (McIntyre &
McIntyre, 2020; NCATE, 2010; Slick, 1998; Zeichner, 1992, 2005).
These practices are incredibly problematic for actualizing
clinically based teacher education. Thus, the road to transforming
teacher education must involve addressing such long standing
misperceptions about what supervision is, what purpose it serves,
and how it can be renewed from an afterthought to become the
driving engine of high quality teacher preparation. Advancing
Supervision in Clinically Based Teacher Education: Advances,
Opportunities, and Explorations aims to elevate supervision and
supervisors, as undervalued actors, by disseminating high-quality
manuscripts on this critical area of study. The chapters in this
book tackle the persistent issue of devaluing and marginalizing
supervision in some institutions of higher education by sharing
current research, illuminating challenges of supervising in the
current high stakes accountability climate, and offering innovative
ideas that can improve supervision in clinically based teacher
education.
Like most all of Rebecca West's reportage, A Train of Powder
approaches great literature. Written between 1946 and 1954, these
accounts of four controversial trials explore the nature of crime
and punishment, innocence and guilt, retribution and forgiveness.
The centerpiece of the book is "Greenhouse with Cyclamens," a
three-part essay on the Nuremberg trials written with precision,
clarity, and daring insight. She also reports on two particularly
brutal murder trials - one for a lynching in North Carolina, the
other for a "torso murder" in England - and the espionage trial of
a British telegrapher. Throughout, the question of guilt inspires
Ms. West to feats of psychological detection wherein unerring
craftsmanship and a powerful narrative sense combine to a high
purpose - the pursuit of truth. "An astonishing book.... As
compelling as Court TV but without the frisson of voyeurism (and
with the compensatory satisfactions of West's breathtakingly lucid
prose style), these elegant narratives remind us of the
preciousness and fragility of our right to trial by jury."-Francine
Prose. "It is her unique magic to combine impressionism and
precision, as if Monet and Ingres could somehow be fused. Time and
again a passage begins as a sort of iridescent cloud, and
culminates in a diamond point."-Telford Taylor, Saturday Review.
"Rebecca West...has raised journalism to a high art, breathing into
it a depth, a poetry, a subtlety, and an understanding and
compassion for human beings and their endless follies and tragedies
that give it a legitimate place in contemporary
literature."-William L. Shirer.
Written on the brink of World War II, Rebecca West's classic
examination of the history, people, and politics of Yugoslavia
illuminates a region that is still a focus of international
concern. A magnificent blend of travel journal, cultural
commentary, and historical insight, "Black Lamb and Grey Falcon"
probes the troubled history of the Balkans and the uneasy
relationships among its ethnic groups. The landscape and the people
of Yugoslavia are brilliantly observed as West untangles the
tensions that rule the country's history as well as its daily life.
From the time that George Bernard Shaw remarked that "Rebecca West
could handle a pen as brilliantly as ever I could and much more
savagely", West's writings and her politics have elicited strong
reactions. This collection of her letters -- the first ever
published -- has been culled from the estimated ten thousand she
wrote during her long life. The more than two hundred selected
letters follow this spirited author, critic, and journalist from
her first feminist campaign for women's suffrage when she was a
teenager through her reassessments of the twentieth century written
in 1982, in her ninetieth year.
The letters, which are presented in full, include correspondence
with West's famous lover H. G. Wells and with Shaw, Virginia Woolf,
Emma Goldman, Noel Coward, and many others; offer pronouncements on
such contemporary authors as Norman Mailer, Nadine Gordimer, and
Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.; and provide new insights into her battles
against misogyny, fascism, and communism. West deliberately
fashions her own biography through this intensely personal
correspondence, challenging rival accounts of her groundbreaking
professional career, her frustrating love life, and her tormented
family relations. Engrossing to read, the collection sheds new
light on this important figure and her social and literary
milieu.
Teacher education in the United States is changing to meet new
policy demands for centering clinical practice and developing
robust school-university partnerships to better prepare
high-quality teachers for tomorrow's schools. PROFESSIONAL
DEVELOPMENT SCHOOLS (PDSs) have recently been cited in national
reports as exemplars of high-quality school-university partnerships
in the clinical preparation of teachers. According to the National
Association for Professional Development Schools, PDSs have Nine
Essentials that distinguish them from other school-university
collaborations. But even with that guidance, working across the
boundaries of schools and universities remains messy, complex, and,
quite frankly, hard. That's why, perhaps, there is such diversity
in school-university partnerships. For the last thirty years,
educators have been fascinated yet puzzled with how to build PDSs.
Clinically Based Teacher Education in Action: Cases from PDSs
addresses that perplexity by providing images of the possible in
school-university collaboration. Each chapter closely examines one
of the NAPDS Nine Essentials and then provides three cases from
PDSs that target that particular essential. In this way, readers
can see how different PDSs from across the globe are innovating to
actualize that essential in PDS development. The editors provide
commentary, addressing themes across the three cases. Each chapter
ends with questions to start collaborative conversations and a
field-based activity meant to propel your PDS work forward.
Rebecca West's never-before-published "Survivors in Mexico
"brings""to readers a daring and provocative work by a major
twentieth-century author. An exhilarating exploration of Mexican
history, religion, art, and culture, it explores the inner lives of
figures ranging from Cortes and Montezuma to Diego Rivera, Frida
Kahlo, and Leon Trotsky.
"Witty and entertaining, substantive and reflective, insightful and
well documented, in splendid and uncommon prose, Rebecca West's
travelogue . . . is a model of British sophistication and knack for
seeing the other."--Jorge G. Castaneda, "New York Times Book Review
"
"An enthrallingly readable book . . . full of sharp impressions and
stimulating insights."--Merle Rubin, "Los Angeles Times Book
Review"
"Luscious reading. . . . The book succeeds beautifully as a
travelogue thanks to West's intellect and experience, with Mexico
serving as the vehicle for it all."--Sam Quinones, "Washington Post
Book World "
'Spellbinding . . . Probably her best fiction' - Sunday Times The
soldier returns from the front to the three women who love him. His
wife, Kitty, with her cold, moonlight beauty, and his devoted
cousin Jenny wait in their exquisite home on the crest of the
Harrow-weald. Margaret Allington, his first and long-forgotten
love, is nearby in the dreary suburb of Wealdstone. But the soldier
is shell-shocked and can only remember the Margaret he loved
fifteen years before, when he was a young man and she an
inn-keeper's daughter. His cousin he remembers only as a childhood
playmate; his wife he remembers not at all. The women have a choice
- to leave him where he wishes to be, or to 'cure' him. It is
Margaret who reveals a love so great that she can make the final
sacrifice. Books included in the VMC 40th anniversary series
include: Frost in May by Antonia White; The Collected Stories of
Grace Paley; Fire from Heaven by Mary Renault; The Magic Toyshop by
Angela Carter; The Weather in the Streets by Rosamond Lehmann; Deep
Water by Patricia Highsmith; The Return of the Soldier by Rebecca
West; Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston; Heartburn
by Nora Ephron; The Dud Avocado by Elaine Dundy; Memento Mori by
Muriel Spark; A View of the Harbour by Elizabeth Taylor; and Faces
in the Water by Janet Frame
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The Fountain Overflows (Paperback)
Rebecca West; Introduction by Andrea Barrett
bundle available
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R619
R520
Discovery Miles 5 200
Save R99 (16%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The lives of the talented Aubrey children have long been clouded by
their father's genius for instability, but his new job in the
London suburbs promises, for a time at least, reprieve from scandal
and the threat of ruin. Mrs. Aubrey, a former concert pianist,
struggles to keep the family afloat, but then she is something of a
high-strung eccentric herself, as is all too clear to her daughter
Rose, through whose loving but sometimes cruel eyes events are
seen. Still, living on the edge holds the promise of the
unexpected, and the Aubreys, who encounter furious poltergeists,
turn up hidden masterpieces, and come to the aid of a murderess,
will find that they have adventure to spare.
In "The Fountain Overflows," a 1957 best seller, Rebecca West
transmuted her own volatile childhood into enduring art. This is an
unvarnished but affectionate picture of an extraordinary family, in
which a remarkable stylist and powerful intelligence surveys the
elusive boundaries of childhood and adulthood, freedom and
dependency, the ordinary and the occult.
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The Judge (Paperback)
Rebecca West
bundle available
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R267
Discovery Miles 2 670
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The Fountain Overflows (Paperback)
Rebecca West; Introduction by Amanda Craig
bundle available
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R337
R277
Discovery Miles 2 770
Save R60 (18%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Rose Aubrey is one of a family of four children. Their father,
Piers, is the disgraced son of an Irish landowning family, a
violent, noble and quite unscrupulous leader of popular causes. His
Scottish wife, Clare, is an artist, a tower of strength,
fanatically devoted to a musical future for her daughters. This is
the story of their life in south London, a life threatened by
Piers's streak of tragic folly which keeps them on the verge of
financial ruin and social disgrace . . . 'A book bursting with love
and vitality' DAILY EXPRESS
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