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Resources Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Resources
Complete Idiot's Guide To Online Shopping (The Complete Idiot's Guide)
Published in Paperback by Alpha (2003-06-16)
Author: Preston Gralla
List price: $16.99
New price: $0.01
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $16.99

Average review score:

Discover how easy and SAFE it is to buy online.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-04-27
This book gives plenty of resourceful information including how to find great discounts and knowing when a site is secure enough to send your credit card information over the internet. Once you've read this book you'll want to keep it close by as a quick reference whenever you shop online.

A MUST for novice net shoppers!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-22
Great information and hints on how to use the Web for shopping. Specific internet addresses are included for best sites for cooking, electronics, etc. Easy to follow and locate your topic of choice.

Helps take away the reluctance to shop on-line
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-26
I highly recommend that anyone who would like to become an on-line shopper use this book as their first on-line purchase,then read it from cover to cover. The information provided will answer many questions about security, privacy, warranties, etc.

Learn How to Shop Online More Intelligently.
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-24
Preston Gralla, no stranger to the Internet scene, has written The Complete Idiot's Guide to Online Shopping to educate current and prospective online shoppers about the pros and cons of online shopping. Gralla offers plenty of sound advice people should read up on before spending their time and money shopping online.

The book features an incredible wealth of information including some of the better Websites to buy certain items from, where to find important decision-making information before making online purchases, how to avoid being taken in by online scam artists, sales tax information, using credit cards to make online purchases, user warrantees, return policies, and other important purchasing considerations!

Readers will receive a solid lesson on nearly every aspect of online buying. They can compare cars, homes, computers, cameras, and other items before parting with their money. They have access to a number of consumer organizations that can alert them about problem companies, dealers, and products. They also have access to one another!

One topic that has caught the attention of many online shoppers in recent times is the online auctioning of merchandise. Just about anyone can join in and submit online bids for just about anything imaginable under the sun. Beware though! As of this writing there has already been cases of online fraud and child involvement. This fascinating aspect of online shopping requires close scrutiny. Gralla devotes a lot of attention to this matter and so should we!

For those considering going into business for themselves, there is still plenty of time for them to join in the fun and thrill of going into business online. Web developers will gain important online marketing strategies from this book that can be used to create effective business Websites for themselves and for others!

Risks, fears, and concerns aside, online shopping has taken off and will no doubt achieve further popularity in the years to come. This book will help shape the lives of those involved with the various aspects of this fast growing industry, whether as consumers or as marketers. Prepare yourself to shop more intelligently. Make informed purchases. This outstanding book will guide you all the way. It will make a difference!

Resources
Complete Jewish Bible-OE
Published in Hardcover by Messianic Jewish Resources International (2007-05)
Author:
List price: $49.99
New price: $31.49
Used price: $36.13

Average review score:

DEA
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-07
This bible was everything I was looking for, in hopes of a different perspective of the bible. As a christian, it is my belief that we should know more about Jewish holidays, & how to pronounce bible words in the Jewish context, something you cant find in other translations of Gods word. I would strongly recommend this bible to people who are looking for a fresh outlook on Gods Word.

Pure Deciet
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-17
This book is deceitfully titled. The only Jewish Bible is the Tanakh. We do not believe or acknowledge the "New Testament" and we would never call the word of G-d old.

The more I see of garbage like this the more my opinion of Christians plummet.

Why did I Wait So Long? This Bible is a Must Have for Jew and Gentile alike.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-15
I am a Christian and have done many Bible studies and own many different versions of the Bible. All of them bring something slightly different to the study. This one blows my mind. It is completely new and exciting.

I love that the books are in the order that Jesus (Yeshua) knew them to be...well old testament that is. Names of towns are also in Hebrew. The author gives a wonderful Introduction and history of how this CJB came to be and how the Bible in general can be trusted as true.

I first received this Bible in the smaller size print of the book. Getting older it was too small so I returned and reordered it in this Large print edition. Let me say the large print is the size of say a hardback novel from the library. It's not that HUGE size for the sight impaired. It is what I call comfortable. So If you subscribe to Large print magazines or get library books in the Large print section this is not going to be big enough for you. Just don't want anyone disappointed. To me it is perfect.

I am interested in my Jewish roots...being grafted into the vine all things Jewish attract me. It is wonderful having the names of people in Hebrew just as Jesus would have said and read them.

It has a great pronunciation and dictionary in the back for quick reference on how to say the hebrew words and for some a definition.

I love that the focus is on Messianic prophesy.

This is going to be my favorite reading Bible. Probably not the one I carry to church as the order of the books is so different I'd be slow getting to the page we are on.

I highly recommend this to anyone seeking to know the God of All. Jews and Gentiles.

Why did I Wait So Long? This Bible is a Must Have for Jew and Gentile alike.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-15
I am a Christian and have done many Bible studies and own many different versions of the Bible. All of them bring something slightly different to the study. This one blows my mind. It is completely new and exciting.

I love that the books are in the order that Jesus (Yeshua) knew them to be...well old testament that is. Names of towns are also in Hebrew. The author gives a wonderful Introduction and history of how this CJB came to be and how the Bible in general can be trusted as true.

I first received this size print of the book. Getting older it was too small so I returned and reordered it in the Large print edition. The days it was gone I was missing it.

I am interested in my Jewish roots...being grafted into the vine all things Jewish attract me. It is wonderful having the names of people in Hebrew just as Jesus would have said and read them.

It has a great pronunciation and dictionary in the back for quick reference on how to say the hebrew words and for some a definition.

I love that the focus is on Messianic prophesy.

This is going to be my favorite reading Bible. Probably not the one I carry to church as the order of the books is so different I'd be slow getting to the page we are on.

I highly recommend this to anyone seeking to know the God of All. Jews and Gentiles.

Complete Jewish Bible - OE
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-21
Good quality - paper is a little different and a few pages misssed the cut. Arrived in good time.

Resources
The Conquest of Nature: Water, Landscape, and the Making of Modern Germany
Published in Hardcover by W. W. Norton (2006-06-12)
Author: David Blackbourn
List price: $29.95
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Average review score:

It's a key component of any comprehensive collection on German issues and background.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-05
THE CONQUEST OF NATURE: WATER, LANDSCAPE, AND THE MAKING OF MODERN GERMANY is a recommended pick for any library strong in modern Western history in general and German history and culture in particular. Both college-level and general-interest lending collections will appreciate the fine reproductions of paintings, maps and photos which go into a survey linking culture, politic and environmental issues in German history to modern times. It's a key component of any comprehensive collection on German issues and background.

A brilliant masterpiece
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-24
In this masterful and original account the author takes the reader on a virtual tour de force examination of the way in which nature was changed, conquered, preserved, destroyed and manipulated in Germany between the time of Fredrick the Great and the present. The author notes that to "write about the shaping of the modern German landscape is to write about how modern Germany itself was shaped." It begins with the tale of the draining of the Oderburch, a great swamp on the river Oder from Oderberg to Lebus. This swamp along with others was progressively drained and settled in the 18th century. Colonists were brought in and the wolves were hunted to extinction. This was a frontier like any other and the author compares it to other conquests of nature in the New World and South Africa. It was a "conquest from barbarism". This use of science and technology to tame the wild beast of nature is as old as man itself but found a special expression in Germany.

The next section of the book examines the taming of the Rhine river and the harnessing of it to agriculture and the state. The book takes the reader on a wonderful journey alongside the German engineers and statesmen and visionaries who tried the utmost to control flooding and build ports and canals such as Wilhelmshaven. Land reclamation followed. Once again people had to settle and colonize the new areas. The same was being done across Europe, for instance South of Rome where in the 1920s and 1930s colonists would be set to colonizing the Malarial swamps.

But where once colonizing and reclamation were peaceful pursuits they eventually turned sinister with the advent of Nazism and the decision to reclaim the East for German settlers. The idea was that the `barbaric' Slavic peoples could be harnessed as well or removed from the swamps they were `indigenous' to. Propaganda saw them as growing out of the swamps themselves. The `dead space' of the Pripet marshes. Everywhere German `model villages' were designed to replace the `natural' villages that seethed with disease and closed spaces in the `east'.

A brilliant book that weaves together so many topics and is hard to put down, the subject seems staid, but is fascinating.

Seth J. Frantzman

An excellent environmental history.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-13
There are many fine environmental histories of North America but seemingly very few of Europe. Following a brief description of how the end of the Ice Age produced the sodden, water-filled plains of central and northern Germany, this book explores how man created the modern German landscape by straightening the Rhine River and "reclaiming" the southern coast of the North Sea and other watery regions. The maps are useful. Great stuff, I wish there were more books on the transformation of the European environment over the past 12,000 years.

Changing the Face of Germany
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-01
This is quite a book.

There are a number of books on how the he U.S. Army Corp of Engineers has modified rivers like the Mississippi in the United States (with more or less success, witness Katrina). This is the first one I've seen on what was done in Northern Europe. The projects in Germany were monumental in scale, taking some 250 years to accomplish. This is part of what made Germany into a nation.

It is quite interesting as it talks not only about what was done but about other aspects such as the health, econonic, cultural, and political aspects. The Nazi's for instance looked at the work done as proof of the natural superiority of the German people.

With all of the success of the projects, the book at the end turns to the problems the efforts have caused: flooding, fish habitat destroyed. In essence all of the problems we are having with these same areas in the United States.

Resources
Conservation in the Internet Age: Threats And Opportunities
Published in Paperback by Island Press (2002-09-01)
Author:
List price: $32.50
New price: $25.85
Used price: $9.65

Average review score:

Imporant and interesting insights
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-01
The book fills an important void by asking whether the Internet and might affect land use in the United States-particularly whether it could have dramatic and largely negative consequences on large habitats in previously rural areas.

At first glance, this connection is not obvious. But, as Levitt notes, virtually every significant innovation in transportation and communications technologies (such as highways, telephones, and electricity) have spurred decentralization.

Starting from this premise, the various contributors offer readable, in-depth analyses of whether the Internet is having such impacts and, in an interesting twist, how organizations concerned about habitat preservation can tap the power of the Internet to further their goals.

The result is a volume that should be read by anyone interested in the intertwined fate of rural communities and the natural habitats that surround them.

An interesting and important book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-01
The book fills an important void by asking whether the Internet and might affect land use in the United States-particularly whether it could have dramatic and largely negative consequences on large habitats in previously rural areas.

At first glance, this connection is not obvious. But, as Levitt and his collaborators notes, virtually every significant innovation in transportation and communications technologies (such as highways, telephones, and electricity) have spurred decentralization.

Starting from this premise, the various contributors offer readable, in-depth analyses of whether the Internet is having such impacts and, in an interesting twist, how organizations concerned about habitat preservation can tap the power of the Internet to further their goals. The result is a volume that should be read by anyone interested in the intertwined fate of rural communities and the natural habitats that surround them.

CONSERVATION IN THE INTERNET AGE - FASCINATING
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-18
A very valuable and thought-provoking read, both personally and professionally. The book's historical sweep is impressive. Its range of contributors is also very broad and impressive - while I follow a good bit in the environment and conservation, this book offers many perspectives that I had not considered previously. A good book for those who love the dynamics of history, are fascinated by technology and its leaps, who protect and manage natural resources.

The book takes on the vexing questions of "When does change realize progress? And when does it not?" By juxtaposing nature and man's interaction with it, with the rapidly changing world of high technology, the book requires consideration of these questions. CONSERVATION IN THE INTERNET AGE makes one inclined to believe that people serious about the directions of land use and conservation need to be thinking about what Leviit calls "new networks." (I certainly didn't know what this meant before reading the book!) Overall, the book provides hope that new analysis and communications technologies will advance prudent long-term protection of land, water, and other natural resources.

A remarkably well-written book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-12
I am interested in both new networks, American history and conservation, so I was not surprised that the content of this book was so strong. I WAS surprised that it was so well-written and that the connections between the past and the future were so thoughtfully drawn. I really enjoyed this book.

Resources
The Consultant's Legal Guide [A Business of Consulting Resource]
Published in Hardcover by Pfeiffer (1999-10-15)
Authors: Elaine Biech and Linda Byars Swindling
List price: $55.00
New price: $18.19
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Average review score:

Indispensible A-Z Resource
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-27
Attention, consultants. This book is worthy of prime real estate on your book shelf. It's been my invaluable business resource for several years, and one I usually review even when I know we'll eventually have to consult our legal counsel. The topics cover key legal consulting issues from soup-to-nuts and in plain English. The chapters are set up so you can easily access the specific topic or issue at hand. Generous case studies provide real-world context. Highly recommended.

Nonprofit/charity sector consultants' reference book
Helpful Votes: 19 out of 19 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-25
This book is a well-crafted, easily readable treatment of an important topic for all consultants. The authors do an excellent job of stressing that consulting is a serious business without overwhelming readers with jargon and legal process.

The book's sixteen chapters cover basic and advanced topics, from retaining an attorney BEFORE starting a consulting practice to how to handle the legal problems that may come up despite the consultant's best efforts to avoid them through good planning. Concise narrative, entertaining case studies, and solid analysis are interspersed with examples of contracts and forms a consultant can use in their own practice.

The contracts and forms discussed and shown in the book are also included in a 3.5" floppy disk. The documents on the single PC-formatted diskette are stored in Word 6.0/95 format.

One of my personal pet peeves is sole-practitioner consultants who do not treat their consulting practice as a business. The first few chapters of the book address all the contracts, agreements, and situations that a consultant faces before dealing with a client -- leasing office space, contracting for insurance, banking, telephone, advertising, and other services. It's a useful reminder that a consultancy is more than a one-man-band, and that "being your own boss" involves significant responsibility and risk as well as significant freedom and personal satisfaction.

The chapter that discusses working with nonprofit clients is written from a for-profit perspective; the stereotypical case studies center on agencies with no budgets and volunteers making promises and representations the board can't or won't honor. This is unfortunate, since most nonprofits, like their for-profit brethren, are fiscally sound, responsible corporations that can and do retain consultants in a businesslike way and compensate them based on their value.

Whether you're a novice or experienced consultant, The Consultant's Legal Guide is valuable as both a tutorial and a reference/resource work to help your practice succeed.

-- Table of Contents -- Introduction -- Selecting an Attorney -- The Relationship of Ethics and the Law -- Setting Up a Consulting Practice -- Starting Your Office -- Contracts and the Law -- Employment Issues -- Working with Other Consultants -- Client Issues -- Clients Outside the Corporate Arena -- Unique Consulting Situations -- Protecting Work Product, Trade Secrets, and Intellectual Property -- Giving Credit Where Credit is Due -- Protecting Assets Through Insurance -- Buying or Selling a Consulting Practice -- Avoiding Legal Problems -- What to do When You Have a Legal Problem -- Glossary -- Index

Don't even think about calling your lawyer....
Helpful Votes: 27 out of 27 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-29
As a consultant, don't even think about calling your lawyer without having read this book first. Unless you like to pay legal fees, this book will prepare you to get much more input for less money from your attorney. Plus it will show you how to run your practice more effectively, and efficiently while protecting your intellectual property rights. No matter how many books you have read on consulting, this book plows new territory. A must for any consultant's library.

very comprehensive. Could save you a bundle of money.
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-02
She covers it all--could be worth many times over the price by one preventative measure in how you handle your consulting practice.

Resources
Consumer Guide to Home Energy Savings
Published in Paperback by American Council for an Energy-Efficient Econ (2000-01)
Authors: Alex Wilson, Jennifer Thorne, and John Morrill
List price: $8.95
New price: $6.99
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $11.95

Average review score:

A terrific book
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-26
I have a house under construction and I need information on windows types, heating and cooling appliance options as well as insulations. This book is over 5 stars. I borrowed a copy from a library and am planning to buy one for reference collections.

Consumer Guide to Home Energy Savings
Helpful Votes: 17 out of 18 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-11
If you want to replace your appliances in your home this is your book to find the most energy efficient products on the market. It rates the products as well as explaining how they work. Tons of information for the everyday consumer. We have used it to help us decide upon which kind of washer & dryer to buy as well as the installation of a heat pump, which replaced the 30 year old forced air furnace. It covers all the types of heating systems as well as cooling systems.
For the washer it compares vertical axis with horizonal axis right down to cost per load, electric and gas, wash and rinse cycle options and even laundry tips.
There is a whole chapter on lighting, both incandescent and compact florescent bulbs.
Hot water heaters are covered: gas or electric, storage types, demand, water pump, tankless, indirect and even solar. It discusses replacing & sizing water heaters for your home and how you use hot water, insulation and how to lower the water temperture. We went as far as to put a timer on our hot water heater so that it only heats water when we need it most, early morning for showers and evening for cooking and dishes.
It even covers windows, home insulation, energy audits and how to read the Energy Guide labels on all products.
We have found this book both informative and a keeper. We have had friends borrow it and some have even gone and purchased their own. This is our 2nd one, we almost wore out the first one which was the 7th edition. The new 8th edition brings us up to date. We gave the old one to friends who were happy to have it.

Practical energy savings information
Helpful Votes: 18 out of 19 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-19
This book covers both the house itself (insulation, windows, etc.) as well as appliances, furnaces, and lightbulbs. Written in 1999, it lists major appliances, windows, furnaces, boilers, and air conditioners by brand name and model number in table format showing the energy ratings of each one. This saves you the time of running around town or making dozens of phone calls to collect this info.

It also explains all the information contained on energy labels when you go shopping. In particular, I found the section on windows most beneficial. It details what tests are done to obtain the ratings, which tests are most relevant and which ratings you should pay particular attention to, as there are several ratings on each window.

It also was bold enough to say which things you should be spending your money on and which things are nice to have but not absolutely necessary.

Save money on energy bills with this big little book
Helpful Votes: 18 out of 20 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-14
I bought this book from amazon for research into healthy houses and I skimmed it for my deadline. I'm reading it closely now. Well written, easy to read, detailed, comprehensive. Even if you haven't a speck of money for new appliances, much less a new heating system, you can save money on energy. It's small--you can fit in your bag to take to the appliance store, but it's packed with stuff. Well worth the price.

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Contested Terrain: A New History of Nature and People in the Adirondacks
Published in Paperback by Syracuse University Press (1999-01)
Author: Philip G. Terrie
List price: $19.95
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Average review score:

This book is much better than Schneider's.
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 1999-03-03
I have always loved the Adirondacks, but after reading this astonishingly well-written book I have a new appreciation for this remarkable region. If you're a fellow Adirondacks-lover I HIGHLY recommend this book. Also, if you have time to read only one history of the Adirondacks, then this is the one to read.

outstanding
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-28
This is truly fine work. The relatively new genre of environmental history has produced the usual amount of academic turgidity, but many of these young historyians clearly love the land that they write abot, and have the skills to make discussions of the history of human interacton with natural systems into literature. If you enjoy Terrie, you should also pick up Bullough's Pond by Diana Muir.

This book examines the complexity of Adirondack History
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1999-08-31
The book introduces concepts and ideas that you will have thought of before, but never had actually examined in real images and arguements.

Has some great historical facts and stories.

Tells New Yorkers about what has happened in their state.

Decent Introduction
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-02
This wasn't the most exciting history book I've ever read but it was an informative and concise history of the region. The region known as the Adirondacks is a huge tract of wilderness in northern New York that, as Terrie describes it, is "an unintended mix of private land, villages, and state-owned wilderness." In the opinion of this lifelong frequenter of "The Dacks," it is one of the most beautiful places on earth. Terrie thoroughly explains the conflicting intentions for the region that have plagued it since it was first explored and settled in the 18th century. The conflict was between those who recognized it's unique natural beauty and wanted to preserve it as such, and those who saw it as just another land to be exploited for it's natural resources. More recently, the struggle continues as everyday residents of the region battle the bureaucratic Adirondack Park Agency for the right to grow economically, something which has been consistently denied to them, due to the stringent restrictions on any kind of development. Originally published in 1997, it is a bit dated, but for any fellow Adirondack lovers, I would say it's definitely worth checking out.

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The Corporate University Workbook: Launching the 21st Century Learning Organization
Published in Paperback by Pfeiffer (2005-01-24)
Author: Kevin Wheeler
List price: $100.00
New price: $77.28
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Average review score:

Great!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-02
I am a Consultant charged with setting up a corporate university for a 100 person company. The workbook provided me with the structure of a university and things to think about in creating a university. I didn't use the CD yet, but did love the book!

A must have workbook.
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-09
If you are involved in setting up or work for a corporate university, run, don't walk to your nearest book seller and purchase this workbook. Long overdue, The Corporate University Workbook, written in plan, easy to understand English, walks the reader through eleven chapters packed with business oriented explanations, strategies, checklists, exercises, case studies and rationales for designing, building and maintaining a world class corporate university. Destined to become a classic in the field, The Corporate University Workbook should be required reading and within arms reach of anyone responsible for establishing or fine tuning their organization's corporate university.

Philip McGee, Ed.D., THRD, Clemson University

A road map for talent development ...
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-12
From strategic visioning through measuring success, this practical workbook provides tools, guidelines and even a dozen templates in the enclosed CD. Mr. Wheeler shares best practices, from years of experience and research. With the lead from product advances shrinking, human talent will become a major competitive differentiator. I highly recommend for anyone challenged to support your organization's success through talent development.

A Must Read if You Want to Build a Corporate University
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-20
Kevin Wheeler makes it clear early on in his book that successful corporate universities must go beyond traditional training. Learning goes far beyond training, incorporating a wide range of informal learning processes and activities. This differentiates this book from much of what has been written in the past about corporate universities--focusing on mostly course-oriented training. Wheeler takes the reality of broad-based learning in organizations into account and provides a very detailed and practical guide for building a successful and flexbible corporate university. The book contains lots of templates and practical lists with questions and issues that must be addressed by someone building a corporate university. Each chapter begins with a review of an unsuccessful and a successful example of corporate universities, making it clear that success is by no means guaranteed. But the probability of success will no doubt be much higher for those who do their homework and not only read this book but complete the numerous exercises that Wheeler has carefully prepared to assist those ready to build a corporate university meant to transform an organization into a 21st century learning organization.

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The Craft of Christian Teaching: Essentials for Becoming a Very Good Teacher
Published in Paperback by Judson Press (1998-12)
Author: Israel Galindo
List price: $16.00
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Average review score:

This book is a must for all Sunday School Teachers
Helpful Votes: 16 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 1999-08-08
The book is exacly what the title says. If you want to become a better teacher or would like to know what to do when your asked to be one, this is the book. I now use this book as a foundation to prepare lessons, different methods, styles and motivational tactics.

from Clergy Journal
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-25
"Galindo's book is practical and helpful for those who want to become better and more effective teachers. Galindo is a careful writer and uses humor well to make his points. The book is full of helpful illustrations. The title comes from one of his workshop attendees who said that she took his class so that she "could become a very good teacher." For pastors or church educators-perhaps one in the same-this book offers an ample array of ideas. Teachers can easily apply Galindo suggestions. This book would make an excellent gift for a staff person or volunteer who oversees any church's educational ministries."
-excerpted from a review in Clergy Journal, March 2000

A great resource for church educators & homeschooling parent
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-04
This is a very accessible, practical book on basic Christian teaching-learning--from theory to "how to". We bought copies for all of our church teachers!

Very Good Where It Counts
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-14
I'm giving this book 5 stars despite some reservations I have about some of what Galindo offers here, particularly in the area of learning psychology. I'll discuss this more below, but in terms of specific methodologies and approaches to learning in a Christian context, I think this book is full of very good information that teachers and even preachers can refer to repeatedly in their pursuit of becoming very good teachers.

In discussing the craft of teaching, Galindo spends considerable time at the outset of the book discussing how people learn, and how learning itself is multi-faceted and fluid. Galindo interacts with many secular studies about the psychology of learning, what kind of teaching stimulates certain kinds of learning, retention levels, and the all important issue of application of learning. Galindo's extensive interaction with secular studies could be considered either a strength or a weakness in his approach. I consider it to be a strength, though it is noteworthy that at the same point in the book where Galindo is laying the groundwork for Christian teaching by relying heavily on secular studies, he also says that Christian teaching is unique and altogether different from non-Christian teaching. There's an appearance of inconsistency here that Galindo doesn't really deal with, but it's probably minor and I didn't think it ultimately undermined the good stuff he gets to later on in the book. The same could also be said of the notion that 'you can't teach anybody anything'. Galindo too often resorts to bumper sticker axioms in the first section of the book which are easily misconstrued and frankly lessen the impact of his otherwise serious treatment of the subject matter. But again, these things were more annoyances than anything else and do not significantly detract from the meat he offers later.

The strengths of the book are Galindo's assertion that Christian teaching is unique because we are not dealing in teaching merely about facts or events, but about relating to a Person, Jesus Christ. This should necessarily impact on how we conduct our teaching, according to him, and I think that's correct. In the second part of the book, Galindo puts the groundwork laid in the first section to use in suggesting very practical teaching methodologies and approaches to stress relational learning that emphasizes application and relationship. There's lots of good stuff in here that's very practical and should prove very helpful to teachers throughout the church, as well as to church leaders who are looking to strengthen their education programs. While it's true that the reader can get the impression that Galindo is unnecessarily downplaying traditional learning methods by so stressing relationality and application, I do think he's pretty much on the mark in making a case that in Christian teaching specifically, if learning in the classroom doesn't translate into application on the street, our teaching can't really be considered successful.

So while there is some minor chaff here that we could do without, there is a good harvest of healthy wheat in here that is worth paying attention to. Churches expend a lot of resources in their education programs, and I have yet to meet a single pastor who is totally satisfied with the results. That alone makes Galindo's book worth reading, and possibly worth providing to those people in the church whom God has called to teach.

Resources
Creating Stories That Connect: A Pastor's Guide to Storytelling
Published in Paperback by Kregel Academic & Professional (2007-03-06)
Author: D. Bruce Seymour
List price: $12.99
New price: $9.13
Used price: $5.03

Average review score:

Recommended
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-13
This book was recommended to me by another writer. I'm glad I bought it because it is a good lesson in the Why of story telling.

Insightful and Practical
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-10
Dr. Seymour shows the importance of storytelling from a biblical and practical point. He also provides a step by step process, along with examples that can help a pastor or teacher develop the skills in the art of storytelling.

An effective communication model
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-13
Dr. Seymour has provided his readers with an excellent overview of the why and how to incorporate effective storytelling in a presentation. His arguments concerning the necessity of adding storytelling to a didactic model of preaching or teaching are compelling. The major strengths of the book that set it above others in the field are the guidelines and personal illustrations he provides. This is an excellent tool for pastors, educators and others who are interested in developing more effective communication skills.

Not Just for Pastors
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-21
This book in an excellent resource for anyone who desires to communicate effectively. Dr Seymour guides us through what makes a "good story" and then helps us learn how to fashion and tell stories. Teachers, trainers and any others who work in the "learning/teaching" professions will find this book to be helpful.


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