Organizations Books


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

Organizations
The Cornerstone: Classroom Management That Makes Teaching More Effective, Efficient, and Enjoyable
Published in Kindle Edition by Xulon Press (2008-07-03)
Author: Angela Powell
List price: $12.99
New price: $12.99

Average review score:

Great for the student teacher or new teacher
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-04
Lots of great ideas for a student/new teacher. Ideas to get ready for that classroom!

Classroom Organization Bible
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-04
I absolutely love this book! I have been teaching for 18 years and have never quite mastered the art of classroom organization. I found out about this book on the author's website when looking for classroom organization tips. This author is clear and exact. I only hope that she teaches middle school at some point and adds a chapter or two that would target organization problems more specific to secondary education teachers. Otherwise, I carry this book around and read it all of the time.

A Must Have for All Teachers
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-17
This is one of the, if not the, best books I have ever read on classroom management. All of the ideas are very user friendly and easy to implement. A couple of weeks ago I went to visit a fellow teacher at her lake house for the weekend. Of course I took my book to show her. Well, about an hour after I left I realized I left it there. As soon as I got home I ordered another one because I wasn't going to be able to get my book back until after school started, and I wanted to finish reading it now. My friend was very excited to find out she has a great new book!

I have personally used many of the ideas that Angela Powell describes in her book. Last year I taught a very challenging 4th grade class. I tried everything with no success and finally came across the Token System. It was easy to use and very effective. I am planning on using it again this year when school starts, instead of waiting until problems arise later in the year. In addition, Angela has managed to cover any and all questions a new teacher might have - from setting up their classroom to handling students who want to go to the water fountain all day long. But let me assure you - this book is definitely not just for new teachers. There are lots of great ideas for all teachers - newbies and seasoned veterans alike.

I feel very confident that you will not be disappointed if you order this book. It would be the best investment you could make in your classroom this year.

P.S. Angela also has an awesome website. Visit www.thecornerstoneforteachers.com.

Excellent
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-06
I was an avid fan of her website. For years I've used her ideas and enjoyed the fabulous pictures and easy explanations that accompany room set-up to management and organizational ideas. This book is the best resource you can have. The book is a foundation for any teacher of any subject. Powell doesn't say there is one way to do something. She'll give you some ideas she'd tried years ago, and tell you what's working for her now. We all know that often our classroom students dictate how our systems need to be set up. This book will be as valuable in 25 years as it is now. The documentation chapter is especially important in today's world. Thanks Thanks Thanks to Mrs. Powell.

Classroom Management made Easy
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-21
I have used Ms. Powell's website for years, as a newer teacher, to get ideas and information for making my classroom run as smoothly as possible. The book reads much like her website: she is speaking to you as if you were sitting in the same room having a conversation about management. The tone is friendly and conducive to passing along information about managing a classroom to make the most out of every second you have with your students. The ONLY thing I don't like is that there are no "reproducibles" included in the book -- you have to visit the site to get those. The upside of that, however, is that the downloads are word documents that you can customize which makes it easy to adapt the resources to your specific needs. I will definitely be recommending this book to my colleagues who are just entering the field.

Organizations
Courageous Conversations About Race: A Field Guide for Achieving Equity in Schools
Published in Hardcover by Corwin Press (2005-11-30)
Authors: Glenn Eric Singleton and Curtis Linton
List price: $80.95
New price: $72.84
Used price: $84.73

Average review score:

Graduate Student Recommends Courageous Conversations
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-04
Singleton and Linton impart guided wisdom for the courageous captains who navigate the waters of racism in the sea of school reform. They aid school leaders in the quest for achieving the goals of narrowing the racial divide of achievement, heightening racial consciousness, and ensuring equity. School leaders will find this to be an indispensable handbook for discussing race, dealing with racial issues, and establishing a common language in a professional and productive atmosphere.
The authors' diverse backgrounds provide the reader and practitioner with six conditions that form the basis for antiracist leadership: getting personal; keeping the focus on race; engaging multiple racial perspectives; fostering interracial dialogue in a safe environment; establishing a common language around race; and discussing aspects of whiteness.
Singleton and Linton provide samples of racial histories and provide school leaders with the tools to realize their visions of equity and closing the achievement gap.
Self-examination, personalized racial histories, and the intentional acts of persistence, practice, and passion will lead school leaders on a journey towards engaging in Courageous Conversations About Race. This has been the "pink elephant" that many avoid acknowledging in numerous staff lounges, school board meetings, and classrooms for so long. The authors guide us towards opening our collective eyes, touching, and unpacking the "pink elephant.

Truly Needed
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-03
Singleton has managed to present an incendiary topic in such a way that is palatable and astounding. "Courageous Conversations" creates a great outlet for discussion, and provides great opportunities for educators to actually be the student. It was a pleasure to read.

Courageous Conversations About Race
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-08
This is an outstanding book that every educator should read. It sheds light on one of the most serious problems in our society and in our schools and provides the impetus for action.

Truly a courageous book!
Helpful Votes: 22 out of 25 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-22
This is truly a courageous book! Richard Hernstein first broke Political Correctness's stranglehold on the discussion of race and educational achievement with his book The Bell Curve, and though that groundbreaking book was meticulously researched, the author suffered a hail of mindless political-inspired assaults. Now, the authors of this book have built on Hernstein's work, calling for meaningful dialogue on what changes need to be made to the American educational establishment to provide meaningful results for non-whites.

If you care about the future of America, then read The Bell Curve and Courageous Conversations about Race!

Very Important and much needed
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-28
WOW! I was fortunate to work with Glenn Singleton as he brought "Courageous Conversations" to my school district. His method of getting all of us to reflect on what we bring to the table is invaluable. When we are able to look at what race means to us and learn to 'listen" to other peoples stories we are able to grow. Get this book, it's life changing and life affirming.

Organizations
Crossing the Bridge : Church Leadership in a Time of Change
Published in Paperback by Percept Group Inc (2000-02-01)
Authors: Alan Roxburgh and Mike Regele
List price: $20.95
Used price: $49.99

Average review score:

Life lessons for any change agent.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-03
As pastors we live in a world that is changing. This book brings it out to the forefront what is changing and the choices that we have to make. I didn't walk away from reading this book all warm and fuzzy but I did walk away having a greater understanding of the issues involved in what is going on in my church and in the world and community around me.

Now revised / retitled
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-22
This excellent resource from Roxburgh has been significantly revised and reissued as The Sky Is Falling: Leaders Lost in Transition. Roxburgh calls for a new conversation between emergent and "liminals" (or those in various existing traditions).

Weaving Patterns of New Paradigm Church Leadership
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-17
This book does a marvelous job of weaving together change theory, a theological vision of the church, and a sense of the cultural and social setting in which today's churches live. Building on the vision of "missional church" cast in a book by that title (of which Al Roxburgh was a co-author), this book helps leaders develop a sense of their calling to cultivate congregations in that direction in a time calling for rudimentary rethinking about who the church is and rerooting of practices that embody that understanding.

In a time when books on change are sometimes mere how-to manuals, this one sees things deeper and broader. In a time when cultural analysis paralyzes, this book invites hope within even vague and chaotic times of transition. In a time when biblical vision is set aside for what works, this book works toward a habit of discerning the calling and sending of God

How to get there, when you don't know where you are going!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-16
This volume introduces the reader to some very helpful perspective on understanding the complexity of the postmodern world we now inhabit. While the "liminality" we find ourselves in at present between this new world and our present world prevents us seeing clearly where we are going, the authors provide some very helpful insights far charting a course. Those seeking to be leaders in the church in this postmodern milieu will find this a very valuable resource. The treatment of change is particularly strong - one of the best that is available in print for Christian leaders that I have seen.

Must reading for Mainline Church executives
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-05
This book gives hope and reality to stay focussed on mission and ministry in this time of enormous transition. The transition themes in the Bible are pivotal in staying connceted to the people of God who have crossed the bridge. Redefining leaders as poets, prophets, apostles, and pastors and notputting one type above another was liberating and very discerning. This book will be used in the SEPA synod for the training of future pastors and leaders and to transform existing leadrship. Biblical and postmodern ...all in one.

Organizations
The Crucifixion of Truth
Published in Paperback by Joshua Books (2005-03)
Author: tony BUSHBY
List price: $21.95
New price: $64.98
Used price: $64.97

Average review score:

Profound!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-21
The book will alter your world view of past present and future. It is one of the most important books I've ever read.

Should be required reading in all schools.

The book left me speechless!
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-02
So much wrong doing religion have done that it should abolished! Do not think that Islam is not touched in this book, you are for a double wammy! This book should taught in High School as a measure against bigotry. Mr. Bushby keep up the good work!

The truth is always hard to swallow
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-10
This book shows proof of the lies and fictitious stories told in the bible that millions believe to be fact. It's nice to see Tony did his homework and is allowing worn out followers of a dead and gone religion, or one that should be to know the truth. There is far more proof that we are visited by species from other worlds than anything the bible has to offer, and please don't give me the faith story, that is also a crock. The only faith you need to have is in yourself. The book is great, Buy it!!!

Earth Shaking
Helpful Votes: 24 out of 29 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-09
This book's subjects are areas that will shake the foundation of most of today's Christian religions. Mr. Bushby makes no precepts without ample references. It is NOT the book to buy for "light reading" as I would constantly check his references. (All checked out.) I am sure an autodefe during the "Inquisition" would have burned him before sundown!

Mr. Bushby did a great job on a monsterous subject.

Now I would like to see the same research done to the Koran (Qur'an). But that would be dangerous, unlike discussions of the Holy Bible.

A revelation of revelations and Christianity in general
Helpful Votes: 33 out of 36 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-02
In a fashion similar to the Bible Fraud and The Secret in The Bible, Tony Bushby continues opening the nooks and cranies of history that has been hidden from the mainstream.
In this book, the author opens doors that were once closed and reveals facts about the early church fathers and their story telling. This book exposes just how stories were changed into fact by the various councils and how they created christianity.
An incredible amount of research went into this book. A great resource highlightng many great works as its foundation.

Organizations
Culture Shift: Communicating God's Truth to Our Changing World
Published in Paperback by Baker Books (1998-11-01)
Author: David W. Henderson
List price: $22.00
New price: $3.33
Used price: $3.32

Average review score:

Extremely interesting view of American culture.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1998-11-30
This book is very thought provoking. I felt the same as the first time I read 1984, and Brave New World. I like his style. There are many quotations and interesting facts. It was a learning experience that I will ponder for a long while.

Worth The Money!!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-31
Jason Cruise Founder TodaysPreacher.Com

There are a lot of bad books out there today!! There is nothing worse than spending money on something that you can't use; but, this is not one of those books!!! Henderson's book was super, in my opinion. He is certainly up to speed on today's listener. He uses a constant theme throughout the book which he deems, "God's Word to a _______." For instance, Chapter 6 deals with "God's Word To A Distracted World"; Chapter 8 deals with "God's Word To A Disconnected World." This helps you see how God's Word can reach such a target.

In this work he covers the average person sitting in your audience; what has made them the type of listener they are; their different thinking patterns, etc. David Henderson sat under Haddon Robinson, the "teacher of preachers." You can see Robinson's solid, Biblical influence on Henderson; and, I think this only adds to the credibility of the author.

David Henderson knows how to help you "gain a hearing" with a crowd. The book really helped me better understand today's audience, and techniques to help reach them. I'd really recommend that you read this book ... I think you'll be a better preacher because of it!!!

Preach On Friends ... Jason Cruise

Great Analysis and Advice
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-05
In high school speech classes, we were taught to "know your audience." As an apathetic high schooler, I didn't really care what she meant, but it eventually made sense (once I actually decided to think about it). You wouldn't use sock puppets to explain math to accountants; you wouldn't use in-depth power-point presentations to explain math to first graders. With this in mind, why do many Americans still try to talk about Jesus using the methods used thirty years ago? Why do we use Christian "jargon" to explain Christianity to those outside the faith?

Henderson, as you might guess, contends that modern American Christians must change their approach to sharing the faith in order to fit modern America. The pattern of Henderson's book is straightforward: he examines a particular aspect/mindset/value of modern Americans; he then gives ideas about how a Christian might share Words of Eternal Life with such an American. Henderson's prose is both straightforward and enjoyable. He gets right to the heart of the American mindset, then illustrates it with descriptions from scenes from popular movies, personal anecdotes, jokes, etc.

In all, Henderson does the modern Christian a great service in writing "Culture Shift." Jesus tells Christains to tell others about him ("Go, therefore, and baptize all nations...") and Henderson can help us along the way through this book. Highly recommended.

Understanding the World
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-14
This book is not just about "Communicating God's Truth to Our Changing World," but also about better understanding the world we live in today. The author delves into various facets of the modern (American) life to show "Who We Are," (chapter 3-8), and "How We Think," (chapters 9-14). While doing so, he shows not only how deeply our culture has gone into a sort of postmodern chaos, but also gives examples of how he has been able to reach out to non-Christians and see their lives' changed for Christ. Henderson has definitely been affected in his writing by his mentor, the author of the foreword, Haddon Robinson, named one of the top ten preachers in America. This is mostly positive, including Dr. Henderson's "Concepts Worth Remembering" and "Recommended Reading" lists that are at the end of every major section. This book is very readable and helpful for any Christian who may want to know the current culture better as well as how to present the gospel of Christ in the 21st Century. I enjoyed the book for these reasons, but did not feel it was exceptional enough to warrant 5 big stars. However it is very good and any pastor or lay person who is actively involved in the life of their church would enjoy it.

WOW!!!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-08
David Henderson has a better understanding of today's culture than most college philosophy professors. He provides awesome insight of how to reach out to people who believe God is absent from their lives, and draw them into Christianity. The book also forces the reader to evaluate the sincerity of his own faith.

Organizations
Developing a Vision for Ministry in the 21st Century
Published in Paperback by Baker Books (1999-09-01)
Author: Aubrey Malphurs
List price: $17.99
New price: $9.02
Used price: $6.77

Average review score:

vision, the power to see!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-10
I must say that this book came right alone side of some other material I have been studying. I have develop a series of sermons
and to have had this book at this time, was comfirmation for me, that I was is God Will, as I address the concerns at our pastorate. Which allowed me and my congregation to be enhance and to expand our understanding of ministry as it concerns our needs and God's Will. Thanks again for being use of the Lord!

Excellent resource for forward thinking leaders
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 1999-10-05
No other book has motivated me to plan ahead and strategize more than this one. Both in personal life and in my ministry, this book points me to accomplishing what needs to be done. This book is invaluable. IT is worth ten times the money. Get it for yourself and see.

A Great Book with a Few Weaknesses
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-09
Malphus joins the growing ranks of authors whose goal is to help bring renewal to the church by teaching pastors how to develop a vision for ministry. In this, Malphurs was very successful. The author presents a six-step process to help pastors develop and implement a vision in the local church

Being a small church pastor I appreciate his emphasis on the small church. The use of the fictional Pastor Bob was an excellent tool of identification. It allowed the author to bring in the human element of discouragement, frustration and antagonism in a way that every pastor can identify with. Malphurs dealt adequately with the idea of opposition. The Deacon Bill character is a man we call can identify with.

His advice on how to obtain a vision was excellent, it was pragmatic and easy to use. This is in direct contrast with Barna's The Power of Vision (pgs. 81-1-84) that promulgated a process so tedious that only the most tenacious pastor would ever work his way through. His insight that vision will become a dividing rod in the congregation rings true- those who buy into it stay, those who do not, leave.

This was a pretty powerful book, but it was not without some weaknesses. It assumed that some of Pastor Bobs board were visionary people. In far too many churches, the maintenance mind-set is firmly entrenched in the power structure and visionary people are excluded. It is not unusual to have no men of vision on a church board, what then? Although he did not neglect the opposition to vision within the church, I think he did underestimate it. Peter Drucker makes it very clear that the people who have the most to lose by vision are the people who have invested the most into the organization. Barna's insight into the nature of opposition in his excellent book Turn Around Churches was far more realistic.

This book was packed full of helpful advice. I especially appreciated the distinction the author makes between leadership and management and that both are necessary in growing churches. Churches cannot grow without leadership and they cannot deal with the problems caused by growth without management. Thus the pastor must wear both hats.

Yes, this is a must read dealing with issues concerning vision that are not adequately covered in other books on the subject.

Ministry Vision Made Simple
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-22
Like most ministers, I have read several books on vision. Some titles were very inspiring, other titles were very confusing. The vast majority however, were not very enlightening. This book by Malphurs moves beyond establishing the need for vision and helps the reader grasp, communicate, and implement a vision.

Malphurs follows an easy-to-understand process beginning with the definition of a ministry vision and ending with the preservation of that vision. I recommend this book highly to all ministry professionals, especially pastors.

Developing a Vision for Ministry...
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-30
In a world of religion where many churches seem to simply "exist" without much understanding of their own purpose, the answer time and time again of "Why?" comes back to a people perishing because of no Vision. Aubrey Malphurs skillfully weaves together wisdom and experience with practical application of a much used and little understood term: Vision. With fresh, illuminating spiritual insight, he guides us upon a journey of discovery and awareness. This voyage exposes the snapshot which has been impressed upon the film of your spirit, and through the "light-room" of the Holy Spirit, brings forth a full blown picture of what God wants the ministry He has given you to look like, ready to battle, in the 21st Century. If you would not be ignorant of the wiles of the devil, this book is a must read!

Organizations
Direction: Discernment for the Decisions of Your Life
Published in Paperback by Beacon Hill Press of Kansas (2007-11-15)
Author: Cheri Cowell
List price: $14.99
New price: $7.90
Used price: $3.99

Average review score:

For thinking Christians
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-18
I've been asked by discouraged people why an "open door" turned out to be disastrous, or what to do when there's no clear answer on what to do. Cheri Cowell takes those questions and invites the reader to discover what Scripture says about finding direction. It's not a typical book, but one for thinking Christians that understand that faith isn't always easy, but trusting and discerning God's will is an ongoing venture. Highly recommended.

Priceless!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-20
I just want you to know how much I appreciated reading your book. It's worth much more than $15.00. As those commercials say "priceless." It was just what I needed at this time in my life.

Clear Direction
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-27
I needed this book! As one who is constantly second-guessing myself as to God's good, pleasing, and perfect will, I found direction within its pages. Instead of simply telling me what to do, Cheri Cowell leads me in the steps to drawing closer to God and knowing Him more intimately--which then allow me to hear His voice. The chapter on "Obstacles to Hearing from God" was especially helpful by pointing out the stumbling blocks in my own life that prevent me from discerning His will. I look forward seeing results as I continue to apply the prinicples within this book!

Helpful Book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-09
This was a very interesting book on how have discernment in making decisions for your life. It was different than most books on God's will and the process the author reveals is very thought provoking and it made a lot of sense to me. I have some decision coming up and while I'm not ready to make those decisions yet, this book is helping me with the process.

I'm going to keep this one in my library so I can refresh memory as more important life choices come my way! I highly recommend it.

Direction, what a perfect title
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-09
"This is one of, if not, the best inspirational book I have ever read, it puts into perspective, how God intends for us to communine with Him.
How He desires for us to return to the creatures He created us to be, before the fall of Adam and Eve.
I have had the influence of the Nazarene Doctrine, in my life since birth, and never have I heard the areas covered in this book, described so easy to understand.
If you read this and apply any of it to your own life, you will certainly become closer to being one with Him."

Jon Parsons, Lake Anna, VA

Organizations
The Education Mirage: How Teachers Succeed and Why the System Fails
Published in Paperback by iUniverse, Inc. (2003-10-12)
Author: Ira Winn
List price: $16.95
New price: $10.18
Used price: $4.25

Average review score:

Why is the Educational System Failing Our Students
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-04
In all probability, the topic of teaching and education elicits such an array of responses that we are sometimes at a loss to logically understand why the system very often contributes to apathetic and uninterested students.

Professor (Emeritus) Ira Jay Winn, author of The Education Mirage: How Teachers Succeed and Why the System Fails, deftly weaves together his thoughts, suggestions and solutions concerning the weaknesses that are prevalent within today's educational institutions.

Winn emphasizes that one of the primary objectives of teaching must be the fostering of creative thinking. In fact, he dedicates his book to his former students who, he states, "hopefully, learned the art of critical thinking and came to expect nothing less than a civilized dialogue."

The book divides itself into two parts, How Teachers Succeed and Why the System Fails.
Readers are constantly reminded that just regurgitating of facts is useless. You must emphasize problem-centered and inquiry-based teaching and learning, in order to stimulate and maintain the interest of students.

Drawing on his personal teaching experiences, Winn presents several alternative pedagogic techniques in order to present material in a way that will fuel the discovery process.
For example, what is the value of having students learn the names of Columbus' three ships? As Winn states, they are dead- ended insofar as discussion goes. Would it not be more beneficial if facts were associated with definitional problems and value questions?
Instead of focusing on the names of Columbus' three ships, why not ask the question, "what did Columbus hope to prove by sailing to the New World?"
Unfortunately, as pointed out, many teachers have not stopped to think about the important differences between questions of fact, definitional problems, and questions of value.

Winn displays a sharp eye in his analysis of what makes a good teacher, as he deals with the topics of lesson-strategy planning, discussion leading, when not to lecture, the use of case studies, testing and grading.

His solutions to fixing the problem are quite novel, particularly when he challenges the belief that high school must be an exclusively teen-age institution. According to Winn, "high school must be changed into adult common schools, common in the sense that they are open to all people regardless of age, so long as they have completed middle schooling."
Other topics explored in the second half of the book deal with public policy, teacher training, the environment of reform, the school crisis as a crisis of culture, and a brief critique of Allan Bloom's book, The Closing Of The American Mind.

By the end of the book, readers will well understand Winn's preface to the opening chapters when he quotes a Chinese proverb, "I listen and I forget...I see and I remember... I do and I understand!" It is too bad many of my teachers did not heed this advice when I was a student, and why today teachers still do not get the message.

No doubt, Winn has written a splendid in-depth book in which every educator, and even non-educators will discover something novel.
For those who wish to further explore the book's topics, a short bibliography is provided at the end of the book.

This review first appeared on the reviewers' own site:

21st Century Education: A New Vision
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-10
Review: THE EDUCATION MIRAGE by Prof. Emeritus,Ira Winn
ISBN 0-595-29142-2

More than a primer, Prof. Winn's analysis of educational do's and don'ts, his shattering myths about some long-gone, golden age of public educational achievement, and the dissection of "senders and receivers" in the knowledge industry will make readers question previously held educational beliefs as well as current practices. Above all, the writer connects the nation's lack of success solving our most critical social and political problems with failed educational assumptions and methodology-"stuffing turkeys" rather than "lighting lamps." Also indicted are gross materialism, mindless TV offerings, video and computer games, as well as our near-total reliance upon science-technology education, solely to prepare students for money-making jobs, the end goal. Squeezing art and humanities out of curricula has deprived students of adequate preparation to function as informed citizens in a democracy. Rarely do problem-solving and creativity enhance the learning experience because of reliance upon rote learning, worship of objective testing norms, or celebrating adolescent rites of passage. Nor does the swollen educational bureaucracy of overpaid administrators and underpaid teachers escape Winn's scrutiny, claiming our society does not value excellence in public education, now morphed into another "bottom line" commodity. Prof. Winn envisions educated adults working together to attack poverty, reduce excesses of global capitalism and dependence upon finite resources. For him, these issues are inextricably linked to values of mind and heart deriving from inspirational education.

Marian Blanton, retired community college instructor

Education Mirage
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-22
Prof. Winn's "Education Mirage . . ." is a revelation in the compendium of educational literature. This is a writing free from cant and pedantry. It is an idealistic and inspirational vision of how to be a teacher who is motivated by the important social, ethical, and historical perspectives of the time. His use of examples and techniques is always pithy and relevant and the general reader shall grasp what excellence in teaching means. I would suggest that this is a "must" read for every aspiring student teacher who wants to teach secondary, college, and university level. This is a work which is uniquely refreshing and original.

Ideale Gambera, Emeritus
Department of English and American Studies
City College of San Francisco

CREATIVE TEACHING AND EDUCATION REFORM
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-16
I regret that Ira Winn's new book, "The Education Mirage," was not available several years ago when I first started teaching. The book is a great help to all who wish to make their teaching more effective and their workload easier. The first part of the book is a detailed manual on what the author calls "creative problem centered teaching." It includes the art of questioning and the avoidance of unconsciously motivating student apathy, and an analysis of teacher types, Winn shows us how to get more students interested in the subject matter and involved in class discussions. Above all, he shows how to encourage and develop critical thinking in our students. The book even offers planning exercises and a self-test to measure the reader's comprehension of the modern teaching concepts presented. Winn finds the current mania for state-mandated testing counterproductive, a fig leaf for politicians and a force driving creative teachers to distraction and exodus from the profession.

The second part of the book is a collection of essays, analyzing the faults and weaknesses of the American educational system and offering a variety of suggestions for improving the system. The suggestions are not the standard recommendations for change that appear periodically in political debate, however. Winn proposes a host of reforms in the system, in educational institutions including the universities, in teacher and professor training and in the curriculum that are all highly innovative, even radical. For example, he finds that the highly educated are more often a greater danger to society and democracy than the less educated, because the former sit at the seats of power and too often prove arrogant and swayed by a money ethic. The result is that the planet's environment and the world economy bear an intolerable burden. He also finds that TV and computers have made the traditional teacher role outmoded, and thus he calls for intensive retraining in problem-centered methodologies.

Professor Winn is an EDUCATOR. I recommend this book to all who have a strong interest in education in America.

Why is the Educational System Failing Our Students?
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-04
In all probability, the topic of teaching and education elicits such an array of responses that we are sometimes at a loss to logically understand why the system very often contributes to apathetic and uninterested students.

Professor (Emeritus) Ira Jay Winn, author of The Education Mirage: How Teachers Succeed and Why the System Fails, deftly weaves together his thoughts, suggestions and solutions concerning the weaknesses that are prevalent within today's educational institutions.

Winn emphasizes that one of the primary objectives of teaching must be the fostering of creative thinking. In fact, he dedicates his book to his former students who, he states, "hopefully, learned the art of critical thinking and came to expect nothing less than a civilized dialogue."

The book divides itself into two parts, How Teachers Succeed and Why the System Fails.
Readers are constantly reminded that just regurgitating of facts is useless. You must emphasize problem-centered and inquiry-based teaching and learning, in order to stimulate and maintain the interest of students.

Drawing on his personal teaching experiences, Winn presents several alternative pedagogic techniques in order to present material in a way that will fuel the discovery process.
For example, what is the value of having students learn the names of Columbus' three ships? As Winn states, they are dead- ended insofar as discussion goes. Would it not be more beneficial if facts were associated with definitional problems and value questions?
Instead of focusing on the names of Columbus' three ships, why not ask the question, "what did Columbus hope to prove by sailing to the New World?"
Unfortunately, as pointed out, many teachers have not stopped to think about the important differences between questions of fact, definitional problems, and questions of value.

Winn displays a sharp eye in his analysis of what makes a good teacher, as he deals with the topics of lesson-strategy planning, discussion leading, when not to lecture, the use of case studies, testing and grading.

His solutions to fixing the problem are quite novel, particularly when he challenges the belief that high school must be an exclusively teen-age institution. According to Winn, "high school must be changed into adult common schools, common in the sense that they are open to all people regardless of age, so long as they have completed middle schooling."
Other topics explored in the second half of the book deal with public policy, teacher training, the environment of reform, the school crisis as a crisis of culture, and a brief critique of Allan Bloom's book, The Closing Of The American Mind.

By the end of the book, readers will well understand Winn's preface to the opening chapters when he quotes a Chinese proverb, "I listen and I forget...I see and I remember... I do and I understand!" It is too bad many of my teachers did not heed this advice when I was a student, and why today teachers still do not get the message.

No doubt, Winn has written a splendid in-depth book in which every educator, and even non-educators will discover something novel.
For those who wish to further explore the book's topics, a short bibliography is provided at the end of the book.

This review first appeared on reviewer's own site

Organizations
Essential Principles for Fundraising Success: An Answer Manual for the Everyday Challenges of Raising Money
Published in Hardcover by Jossey-Bass (2005-09-27)
Authors: G. Douglass Alexander and Kristina J. Carlson
List price: $27.95
New price: $13.35
Used price: $13.36

Average review score:

All in all, this was a good book. And I recommend it for any fundraising expert's resource shelf.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-03

I liked this book. I purchased a copy back in 2005 when I was learning everything I could about fundraising. It certainly covers many of the things I had learned (and was learning) during my stint as a consultant to nonprofits regarding capital campaigns. I found this book to be a marketing vehicle for the authors' Internet-based fundraising consulting firm. It has the feel of a blog since most of the book is written in question-answer format. And the questions and answers are lifted from work product produced by answering questions of patrons of the firm's Web site.

This book was a very easy read for me. It covered its topic well and flowed pretty good from beginning to end. It explains that successful fundraising requires the mastery of three key concepts:

1. Develop a Case Statement
2. Develop a Campaign Plan (Fundraising Plan)
3. Identify the strongest possible campaign leadership

Since I visualize a Campaign Plan as starting with an annual effort (annual campaign), I would have liked the book better if the chapters were reordered as follows:

5. Annual Campaign
4. Prospect Research
6. Direct Mail
11. Grants
12. Corporate Dollars
7. Special Events
8. Major Gifts
10. Planned Giving
9. Capital Campaigns

I'm used to the Range of Gift Table to be referred to as a Donor Pyramid (DP). And I didn't see a reference to DP anywhere in the book. This surprised me. I found Chapter 1 to be pretty good. I found Chapter 2 to be lacking in substance and good organization. There was content there, but it just did not help pull the book together. Why jump into capital campaigns at the outset? I would have liked the book much better if Chapter 2 were to be expanded and broken into 2 or three chapters. And it seemed like the blurb on prospect research was out of place by being included in Chapter 2.

I loved Chapter 3 about Nonprofit Boards. I thought it covered its topic very well. I think I would have liked the book better if each of the chapters had better introductions and conclusions. Since most chapters are not very long and the "blog entries" that filled the book were each headed by a boldfaced question, I don't think the chapter intros needed to include bulleted lists of the blog entry headings. All in all, this was a good book. And I recommend it for any fundraising expert's resource shelf. 4 stars!

Superbly thorough fundraising primer
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-08
The quest for funding is a high-pressure, never-ending process for nonprofit organizations large and small. Authors G. Douglass Alexander and Kristina J. Carlson break the process down into manageable pieces while covering each major avenue that fundraising professionals travel in the search for financial support. The authors use a question and answer format to explain and illustrate the premise outlined at the beginning of every chapter. Packed with useful, applicable information from cover to cover, this book deals with a range of topics including the basic principles of fundraising, annual and capital campaigns, special events, major gifts, foundation funding and stewardship. Such a comprehensive, well-organized analysis of any one subject is rare. We strongly recommend this book as a primer for any individual or group seeking guidance for a strategic approach to raising funds.

It's All There
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-24
I've served on the boards of a number of organizations that have developed very strong fundraising capabilities -- and some that have not. The latter group could catch up quickly by reading this book. Authors Carlson and Alexander have covered all the key topics in an easy to read and easily referenced format. Their depth of experience is evident throughout. Anyone involved in nonprofit fundraising should invest the time to read and appreciate these "essential principles."

A great PRIMER for any fundraiser . . . .
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-01
I just finished reading the book. After serving the non profit sector for over 20 years it is nice to have an easy to read, yet comprehensive publication for everyone to learn from. It will be required reading for all of our new hires at my organization. I cannot think of a better way to learn how to properly raise money in a variety of manners.

Jay

Best in Class for Board, Staff, and Those Who Do
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-23
Although others will be doing fund-raising for Earth Intelligence Network, to fill in whatever our parent sponsor cannot provide, I found this book to be extraordinarly useful to me, so that I could understand in detail what is expected and required.

Bottom line: Fund-raising is a *professional* *year-long* orchestrated, documented *demanding* endeavor. It is neither easy nor an after-thought.

Over-all this book is a best in class offering that is superbly organized, superbly presented, and clearly authoritative. I noticed right away on the jacket blurbs that both givers and seekers of funds were represented.

The quick summary (there is no substitute for reading the book in detail, and probably annually as well), is found in the 9 principles on page 6:

1) Face to face solicitation is the most effective means
2) Individual giving (not foundation or corporate) is the greatest return
3) Money FOLLOWS involvement
4) Challenge gifts can solve most fund-raising problems
5) The board must lead if others are to follow (in giving)
6) Make it personal
7) Believe in volunteers
8) Offer opportunities
9) Practice sequential fundraising, starting at the top (the big gift)

A few highlights that stayed with me:

+ Range of Gifts table very useful device for planning and presenting
+ Core concepts credited to Ms. "Be" Haas--the authors are respectful
+ Key ingredients are the case statement, sequential fundraising, and the strongest possible campaign leadership
+ Connect to donors (DEVELOPMENT) first, ask LATER
+ 80% of giving is individual
+ Board membership (another book, not this one, says put them on the stationary) is the most powerful signal
+ Focus on personalized, face to face wherever possible
+ Volunteers are both a form of giving, and a form of connecting to others
+ MAKE YOUR CASE--"Need" is NOT a case, "Impact" is...
+ Prospect research is a sub-discipline now
- Helps find donors who are both able to give and passionate about the cause you represent
- Philanthropic history is more important than total wealth
- Websites exist for "conducting prospect research"

The authors shy away from recommending specific individuals or institutes but they are very professional and provide more than adequate pointers to specialty websites that I would not have been able to find myself.

+ Ethics matters
+ Annual campaigns are life-blood of the organization
+ November-December are the hot months for end of year deductable giving
+ Philanthropy 400 is a key reference
+ Capital campaigns every ten years or so
+ Planning giving is a long-term strategy but hugely promising
+ Foundations are NEXT TO LAST with Corporations LAST.

The chapter on technology is excellent, and covers the basics:
01 Website including "donate now" button
02 Fundraising software, one size does NOT fit all
03 Avoid spam, know the STATE law, quality matters
04 Email delivery of newsletters or other value is good

Stewardship is its own sub-dsicipline, the nurturing and appreciation of those who give and cannot be forgotten or taken for granted.

I have a full two pages of notes, not for this review, but really great ideas tailored to our program that I would never, ever, have thought about without reading this book.

This is a great book, a serious book, one you cannot do without (IMHO).

Organizations
Essentials of Managed Health Care
Published in Paperback by Aspen Publishers (1997-01-15)
Author:
List price: $55.00
New price: $4.90
Used price: $0.13

Average review score:

Great Purchase
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-05
Definitely would buy again from seller. Book was Brand new and price was unbeatable! Book came right on time.

Essentials of Mnagaed Health Care
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-20
This text arrived in great condition and is a comprehensive look at all aspects of managed health care over the course of managed care history.

Excellent Overview of Managed Care
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-06
Excellent, comprehensive primer on the intricacies of managed care. Covers all the major topics, including delivery systems, public and private sector forms of managed care, regulatory and legal issues, medical management, information systems, and operational issues. Thoughtfully done by Dr. Peter R. Kongstvedt and contributors.

Obviously not the first shot at the material.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-10
The author created an invaluable tool to help begineers understand the rather complicated topic of managed care using a straightforward linear approach to the topic. All topics are covered early with references to indepth coverage found later in the volume.

Getting the book is just a tool though, you really gotta want to learn the material because as practiced as the author is at putting the pen to paper, it's a very difficult topic and therefore, read.

Management of Managed Care
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-18
The book was easy to understand and was written from the perspective of someone who is unfamiliar with the managed care topic. I recommend it highly


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