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Showing 1 - 13 of
13 matches in All Departments
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Good Red Herring (Paperback)
Susan Maxwell; Cover design or artwork by Steve Simpson
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R249
R167
Discovery Miles 1 670
Save R82 (33%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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An intriguing murder mystery set in an imaginary world, peopled by
vampires, dimorphs, luchrupans and the odd - very odd - Salmon
Farsade, an orphan with the ability to read auras. Salmon becomes
apprenticed to Muinbeo's most famous nocturnal detective, the
long-lived and sharp-toothed Inspector McCabe, and together they
try to sniff out who killed Fen Maguire - and why. 'Hard silver
light caught in her dark hair, the moon shadows giving her pointed
face a romance it lacked in life. He wedged his nose against the
clenched hand under the bent arm, against the blood-soaked earth
where her life had finally trickled away. The ghost of wind, which
only he could feel, stirred, and he raised his head. Cullen had
learned the odour of her dead body, and turned to inhale the story
of her death.'
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A Bus For Miss Moss (Hardcover)
Mairi Mackinnon; Illustrated by Steve Simpson
2
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R183
R134
Discovery Miles 1 340
Save R49 (27%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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A captivating story to inspire very beginner readers. Based on the
principles of synthetic phonics, supports the "Letters and Sounds"
programme used in thousands of UK primary schools. Adult and child
take turns to read, and the child's text uses only the letters s a
t p i n m d g o c k ck e u r, plus new letters b h l f and double
letters ff ll ss. Fun puzzles test understanding, and provide
opportunities for discussion and further reading practice.
Magaidh the owl takes Lachaidh the monkey on an adventure, to learn
there's more to the forest than meets the eye.
The goal of this collected volume is to explore roles that L2
writing specialists, IEP directors and instructors, writing center
administrators, and others within writing studies might play in
potential cross-campus dialogues on graduate student writing
support. This book is designed both for writing studies researchers
interested in new directions for graduate writing research and for
practitioners or program directors looking for practical directions
for their own programs. It includes a diverse chorus of voices on
graduate writing support--both seasoned, well-known researchers in
second language writing and composition studies and fresh new
voices and perspectives. Part 1, Graduate Writing: What Do We Know?
What Do We Need to Know? looks at graduate writing support
internationally, laying out what these courses and programs look
like currently, what gaps exist in current program design, and what
future work is needed. Part 2, Issues in Graduate Program and
Curricular Design, explores the nuts and bolts of graduate writing
support at both the classroom and program level. While this section
does feature specific programs offered from a variety of academic
units-IEPs, English or communication departments, writing centers,
etc.-the goal is to focus more on principles of design and concerns
(academic, administrative, budgetary, etc.) to consider in one's
own institutional setting. Part 3, Program Profiles, is a response
to the request from many within the graduate writing community for
more published examples of successful program models. The volume
includes five programs from around the world that highlight
particular ways programs were developed to meet specific
institutional needs-the University of Delaware, the University of
Toronto, the University of New South Wales, Chalmers University of
Technology in Sweden, and Yale University. The volume ends with
reflections on some of the emerging themes and strategies and tips
for programmatic responses to graduate student needs.
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