Education Books


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

Education
The Morning Meeting Book (Strategies for Teachers Series)
Published in Paperback by Northeast Fndtn for Children (1999-01)
Author: Roxann Kriete
List price: $19.95
Used price: $21.88
Collectible price: $29.91

Average review score:

Morning Meeting Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-07
This book helped me set up a brain-friendly morning for my fifth grade students. Each morning there is a greeting, sharing, and activity and a message. I adopted the middle school term CPR, Circle of Power and Respect. My students look forward to CPR each day! I highly recommend this book for any teacher of grades K-8!

Book review
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-01
This is a helpful informative book, especially helpful for new teachers.
However, I would also recommend it for experienced teachers for some new ideas.

Morning Meeting Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-23
This book is simple and clear in focus and structure. It has great strategies and suggestions for implementation in classrooms of various grade levels. This is a great resource if you are looking to improve your classroom community and overall communication skills of your students.

What a way to start the day!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-07
Wonderful, applicable strategies to build community in every classroom! In every school building! Great resource full of ideas.

Be prepared for YOUR morning meeting!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-19
I am a 6th grade teacher moving to 2nd grade this year. This book was a HUGE help in preparing me to organize my morning meeting. It is an easy read and has lots of helpful tips. I can't wait to start school this year and start my morning meetings!
If you are an elementary teacher, buy this book! You won't regret it!The Morning Meeting Book (Strategies for Teachers, 1)

Education
Mrs. Spitzer's Garden
Published in Hardcover by Harcourt Children's Books (2001-05-14)
Author: Edith Pattou
List price: $17.00
New price: $2.98
Used price: $2.13

Average review score:

A touching story for any teacher!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-15
This beautiful story about a teacher who cares for her flower garden (tilling the soil, watching for weeds, catering to each flowers different needs, as well as noticing the differences between the various flowers) makes a great gift for any teacher, care giver, etc. The symbolism is so true between the flowers and children! It's a very sweet story!

the perfect gift
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-19
I found this book at our local library. My kids never got the concept of the book. But it is perfect for grown ups! I am going to have each of the kids and parents from my kids preschool class sign the inside cover. Then, along with the book, we will give the teachers a large plant for their yard. That way, they will have two reminders of the influence they have had on our class.

Mrs. Spritzers Garden
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-20
I bought this book to give a fabulous pre-school teacher. If you have a teacher that has really made a difference to your young child- this might be the book for you.

Lovely book about teachers
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-12
Mrs. Spitzer is a teacher at Tremont Elementary School in Room #108. That's an important number because each year, at summer's end, the school principal brings Mrs. Spitzer a packet of seeds. All year Mrs. Spitzer tends to the seeds. She waters them, feeds them, and makes sure they have sun and room to grow. And she watches them carefully because she doesn't want pests or weeds to intrude.

And at the end of the growing season, Mrs. Spitzer is happy because she sees her seeds bloom. When the year is over, her job is complete, but the seeds that grew into beautiful flowers will keep on growing and maturing, thanks to her help.

Mrs. Spitzer knows about children and plants. She knows that they often need the same things to bloom.

When I first opened Mrs. Spitzer's Garden I thought it was a children's book (it can be enjoyed by children) but it really is a lovely thank you to that special teacher who loves and cares for your child during the school year. That teacher is much like a gardener. Very much like Mrs. Spitzer.

This is a thoughtful gift to the teacher who has touched a child's life. The illustrations are warm, cozy and inviting.

Armchair Interviews says: The perfect gift for your child's favorite teacher!

THE PERFECT GIFT FOR YOUR FAVORITE TEACHER
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-07
Tuesday, May 8th is National Teacher Day. What a perfect gift for your favorite teacher or your child's favorite teacher.

MY favorite teacher is my daughter who teaches first grade. This book is wonderfully written and beautifully illustrated. The illustrations will be enjoyed by young and old alike. The story line is charming and caring.

Mrs. Spitzer starts each new season with new seeds she has planted. Throughout the year she watches them grow and blossom. What a lovely story this book tells about teaching and children.

I can't wait to give this gift to my daughter. I am sure it will be one she will treasure for years to come.

Thank you!

Pam

Education
My First Book Of Mazes
Published in Paperback by Kumon Publishing North America (2004-02-05)
Author:
List price: $6.95
New price: $3.61
Used price: $1.99

Average review score:

Wonderful maze book for 3-4 year olds
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-23
I recently bought this book for my son's 5th birthday. He loves maze books. I also bought the Kumon animal mazes for 4,5,6 year olds. He was not as challenged with this first book but loved the animal one. When you open the book on the left is a more challenging maze and on the right is an easier one. Half of the right sided mazes are colorful 3-D looking scenes and the other half are animal shaped mazes.

Perfect!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-22
So much fun! The mazes get more difficult as you go along. Perfect for a 4 year-old. I might buy another one, so he can do them again.

Great way to teach mazes
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-09
I brought this book for my 4 year old granddaughter, and she loves it. The pictures that appear in the maze make it easy to teach the concept of mazes. For example, the first maze has a hedge bordering all sections of the maze. My granddaughter understood following a path when I told her "you can't jump over or go through the hedge". She had so much fun that she just about finished the book in one sitting.

Great Book For Four Year Old
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-02
Purchased for my niece and she loves these mazes. Each page is double sided with an easy maze on the front and a harder maze on the back. She finds the harder maze a little difficult so I place numbered clues throughout the maze for her to follow.

She prefers working with the the pages out of the book, which you can do if you work on it a little. Instead of cutting, you can pull the front cover all the way back until the seam is exposed, and remove the pages one by one without ripping any pages.

Great for building pencil skills!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-04
My son loves these mazes. I've had great luck with all of the Kumon books. This one is really great for teaching pencil skills. It holds my son's interest and the book is structured to give a high success rate - staring with simpler mazes and progressing. I'm a teacher and I'm very impresed with this and all of the other Kumon books I've tried.

Education
My Life on the Rock: A Rebel Returns to the Catholic Faith
Published in Paperback by Ascension Press (2002-03)
Author: Jeff Cavins
List price: $12.99
New price: $8.25
Used price: $3.97

Average review score:

A heartfelt faith memoir
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-03
My Life on the Rock: A Rebel Returns to the Catholic Faith by Jeff Cavins is a poignant story of a young man searching for God. Running from the faith of his childhood, his journey brings him full circle to finally embrace that faith once again with startling enthusiasm and zeal. He recalls as a child yearning to know God and vaguely sensing that there was something more to life than just the normal childhood preoccupations of sports, school, and making other people laugh with his knack for comedy. He faced several painful and humiliating experiences, but with each event he was drawn ever more deeply by this desire for a knowledge of the divine.
His spiritual journey began with Catholic baptism and the typical religious education of a suburban Catholic attending public school in America in the 1960's and 70's. He had a spiritual conversion experience as a young adult, got married, and entered a Christian Bible college. Later he became pastor of a large church, and finally came back into the Catholic Church after instruction and spiritual direction from priests, a bishop, and his own father. He recounts with much candor and humility his feelings, hopes, and fears throughout the years of searching and ends the book with a positive eagerness for the continuation of the story. A very uplifting read, to be sure.

My Life on the Rock
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-04
My husband and I just loved this book. It is very easy interesting and easy to read. It kept us glued to the pages. Jeff Cavins writes about his journey out of the Catholic faith, being a Protestant minister and then his journey back into the Catholic faith. He is a very well educated man, but writes in a very readable, down-to-earth fashion. It's a great book and I would highly recommend it for any Catholic who wants to be inspired about their faith, anyone questioning their faith, or for anyone who has left the Catholic faith.

Loved this book, but don't agree 100% with Jeff's conclusion
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 24 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-08
I loved this book, could not put it down! I too was born and raised Catholic, but have since left that faith and am involved with a Four Square Church now. Jeff's journey was very compelling and I so enjoyed his love for the Lord it was cool to read about the courage he showed doing God's will over his own on several occasions durning very hard times. I can only imagine what his family had to have gone though. I didn't agree with a few of his conclusions, and I didn't appreciated when he slighted worship services in a gym or high school and referred to returning to the Catholic Faith as "coming home..." but being a former Catholic - it greatly helped me to understand why they hold the rituals, traditions and worship of Saints, Mary, and the Priests, even if they are not biblicy sound.

A True Journey-
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-27
Sometimes books that you read touch your heart in ways you can't explain. This book did for me. As Jeff explained why he left the church, becasue he wanted more of relationship with Jesus. But didn't feel he got that in Catholic Church. But life sends you in many roads and for him he went back to his faith. As Catholiic I understand that love of God. It inspire me on why I am Catholic becasue of the Euchrist. Because it was in the bible, I can receive his preious body everyday. And that to me is the Journey.

A touching book
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-16
Jeff's story of his life and his eventual return to the Catholic church was very touching and heartfelt. Jeff made the book very personal, and he presents his journey in a very heartfelt and comfortable manner. I greatly appreciated his honesty and sincerity, and his zeal for the Church is contagious.

Education
New Grub Street (Webster's English Thesaurus Edition)
Published in Paperback by ICON Group International, Inc. (2008-05-29)
Author: George Gissing
List price: $29.95
New price: $29.95

Average review score:

Insight into the Victorian Writing/Publishing Scene
Helpful Votes: 17 out of 19 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-01
I'm beginning to realize that George Gissing is an author who is relatively unknown by the general public but who is frequently studied/referenced by academics. The main reason why I think this is true (and this relates to the book at hand) is that Gissing himself had more of an academic temperament than a writing temperament. He was very adept at analyzing the world around him and commenting on it to a point of depressing realism, but he wasn't a storyteller. In fact, he struggled with creating enough storylines in order to support himself. Thus, while his books give impressive looks at Victorian life, they don't always leave a reader fully satisfied.

Why do I say this so confidently? Well, as Gissing was particularly self-aware and as he was particularly oppressed when writing "New Grub Street," in this novel he writes about what it's like to be a writer in London in the 1880's and 1890's. He essentially writes about his own life and those he find around him, all of whom are trying to make a living on writing.

Gissings seems to portray himself through the main character, Reardon. When the story opens, Reardon is struggling. His sophisticated wife is getting fed up with their impoverished lifestyle and with her husband's inability to write decent material. Reardon, a sensitive soul, is floundering under mounting pressure and stress. He is torn between his desire to write sophisticated, meaningful material and the public demand for "fluff." The more stressed laid on him, the less he is able to create and stick with any plausible fiction novel. He becomes more and more fererish and unable to work, and he is devastated as he loses his wife's love and respect.

Around this central character Reardon, Gissing builds a very full and weighty cast of characters. A small sampling of these characters are:
- The embittered, older column writer/reviewer, Yule, whose temperament has made so many enemies during his career that he is still laboring hard to support his small family at the end of his life.
- Yule's daugher, Marion, who is very clever but who is also very vulnerable. Her education has made her too good for many positions and marriages but her lack of money makes her a poor match for the educated class.
- Reardon's friend Milvain, who is an ambitious young man who has no problem writing exactly what the masses want. He knows his talents, he knows the market, and he knows his stuff won't last for posterity. But he is determined to live a comfortable life, make a strategic marriage and become a semi-respected man.
- Biffen, another friend of Reardon's, sympathizes most with Reardon's situation and condition. Two peas in a pod, these men spend long hours discuss meter, prose and ancient poetry.

I found myself continually amazed at Gissing's amazing ability to get into the head of many individuals in his large cast and to see how the world makes sense through each's eyes. Gissing also provides us with a wealth of information about the Victorian publishing scene. It was amazing to read that writers and publishers then were struggling with the same issues writers and publishers are struggling with today.

Additionally, Gissing gives you an unglorified look at poverty and the impoverished educated class of London at that time. While Dickens' works on the poor is idyllic and sentimental, Gissing simply relates the life he has known. There is nothing exceptional or amazing, and Gissing seems to argue that poverty takes character out of a man rather then build up a man's character.

Overall, I found this to be a fascinating piece...though perhaps a slow read. For those interested in publishing, writing, realistic portrayals of Victorian England, or other such topics, this is a fantastic work.

Gissing's shade would smile
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-26
Poor Gissing! I suspect his miserable, self-destructive life fuelled his wonderful novels much as (we now know) Dickens's traumatic "blacking-factory" experience explains so much of the nightmare world of those gargantuan fictions. Gissing greatly admired Dickens, and like Dostoyevsky, seems to have appreciated the grim side of Dickens most. Not much humor in Gissing; but there is the same shabby poetry one used to see in Bloomsbury back in the 1960s. The same wonderful appreciation of futile, obsessive scholarly lives. Gissing is a great poet and sometimes a rather fine moralist. His pictures of London rival those of the Master (Dickens --and Dore). Don't miss him. Start with "Workers in the Dawn" and "The Nether World"--his passion more than compensates for his crudities. Remember: he was also a very accomplished classicist--more of a scholar than any other major Victorian novelist! A not insignificant fact.

The Hateful Spirit of Literary Rancour
Helpful Votes: 34 out of 38 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-28
George Gissing's 1891 novel, "New Grub Street," is likely one of the most depressing books I've ever read. Certainly, in its descriptions of literary life, be it in publishing, or in my own realm of graduate scholarship, the situations, truths, and lives Gissing portrays are still all too relevant. "New Grub Street" itself points to the timelessness of Gissing's portrayals - as Grub Street was synonymous, even in the eighteenth century with the disrepute of hack writing, and the ignominy of having to make a living by authorship. One of Gissing's primary laments throughout the novel is that the life of the mind is of necessity one which is socially isolating and potentially devastating to any kind of relationships, familial or otherwise. "New Grub Street" gives us a world where friendship is never far from enmity, where love is never far from the most bitter kinds of hatred.

The anti-heroes of "New Grub Street" are presented to us as the novel begins - Jasper Milvain is a young, if somewhat impoverished, but highly ambitious man, eager to be a figure of influence in literary society at whatever cost. His friend, Edwin Reardon, on the other hand, was brought up on the classics, and toils away in obscurity, determined to gain fame and reputation through meaningful, psychological, and strictly literary fiction. Family matters beset the two - Jasper has two younger sisters to look out for, and Edwin has a beautiful and intelligent wife, who has become expectant of Edwin's potential fame. Throw into the mix Miss Marian Yule, daughter of a declining author of criticism, whose own reputation was never fully realized, and who has indentured his daughter to literary servitude, and we have a pretty list of discontented and anxious people struggling in the cut-throat literary marketplace of London.

Money is of supreme importance in "New Grub Street," and it would be pointless to write a review without making note of it. As always, the literary life is one which is not remunerative for the mass of people who engage upon it, and this causes no end of strife in the novel. As Milvain points out, the paradox of making money in the literary world is that one must have a well-known reputation in order to make money from one's labours. At the same time, one must have money in order to move in circles where one's reputation may be made. This is the center of the novel's difficulties - should one or must one sacrifice principles of strictly literary fame and pander to a vulgar audience in order to simply survive? The question is one in which Reardon finds the greatest challenges to his marriage, his self-esteem, and even his very existence. For Jasper Milvain and his sisters, as well as for Alfred and Marian Yule, there is no question that the needs of subsistence outweigh most other considerations.

"New Grub Street" profoundly questions the relevance of classic literature and high culture to the great mass of people, and by proxy, to the nation itself. For England, which propagated its sense of international importance throughout the nineteenth century by encouraging the study of English literature in its colonial holdings, the matter becomes one of great significance. The careers of Miss Dora Milvain and Mr. Whelpdale, easily the novel's two most charming, endearing, and sympathetic characters, attempt to illustrate the ways in which modern literature may be profitable to both the individual who writes it and the audiences towards which they aim. They may be considered the moral centers of the novel, and redeem Gissing's work from being entirely fatalistic.

"New Grub Street" is a novel that will haunt me for quite some time. As a "man of letters" myself, I can only hope that the novel will serve as an object lesson, and one to which I may turn in hope and despair. The novel is well written, its characters and situations drawn in a very realistic and often sympathetic way. Like the ill-fated "ignobly decent" novel of Mr. Biffen's, "Mr. Bailey, Grocer," "New Grub Street" may seem less like a novel, and more like a series of rambling biographical sketches, but they are indelible and lasting sketches of literary lives as they were in the original Grub Street, still yet in Gissing's time, and as they continue to-day. Very highly recommended.

Whither Arnold's "Sweetness and Light?"
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-02
I found Jasper Milvain, the "alarmingly modern young man," to be the most interesting character in Gissing's New Grub Street for a number of reasons, the most significant of which is that he evinces what can only be considered a modernist's consciousness in his approach to writing. That is, while it soon becomes clear to the reader that Milvain represents the antithesis of what Edwin Reardon personifies-i.e., the work of literature as an emanation of author's native genius-and thus one of the intercalated plots of the novel involves the incremental success of Milvain as a modern man of letters, and the concomitant gradual abjection of Reardon. In a manner of speaking, then, Milvain and Reardon's fates emerge from a common source, namely some sea change in the reading public's (the consumer's) preferences and tendencies.

Milvain identifies as vulgar the most lucrative market for the product of the man of letter's labor. The vulgarians, or "quarter educated," drive the market (479), and since they have been determined to desire nothing more than chatty ephemera, they have successfully opened an insuperable gulf between material success in writing and artistic success. Reardon's psychologically penetrating novels just aren't in demand. Therefore, there emerges quite an interesting conceptual shift within the nascent hegemony of the quarter-educated as established by their purchasing power: what was once considered healthy artistic integrity has transmuted into a peculiar kind of petit bourgeois hubris, if, in the new paradigm, the writer is more an artisan than an artist. Therefore, Reardon's artistically-compromised and padded three-volume novel, written with no other end in mind than to pander to the vulgar reader, nonetheless achieves only modest success because, the fact that it is indistinguishable from countless other similar works glutting the market aside, his novel is infected from his irrepressible integrity, and thus his novel becomes a strange sort of counterfeit, a psychological narrative masquerading as a popular novel. Reardon thus becomes a sort of Coriolanus among writers.

Milvain, on the other hand, is a sort of Henry Ford among writers; he reveals his particular genius when offering advice to his sister Maud about how to write religious works for juveniles: "I tell you, writing is a business. Get together half-a-dozen fair specimens of the Sunday school prize; study them; discover the essential points of such a composition; hit upon new attractions; then go to work methodically, so many pages a day" (13). In other words, Jasper has managed to streamline and to mechanize the writing process. He studies previous works, abstracts formulae from them, isolates the elements of these formulae, and then deploys and rearranges these elements to give his own writing a patina of originality. By treating writing as an exercise in manipulating formulae, Jasper exchanges "authenticity" (whatever that word means anymore) for the convenience and efficiency of not having to grapple with his own potentially mutable and recalcitrant genius. Jasper did not invent writing, just as Ford did not invent the automobile. But like Ford did with automobile manufacture, Milvain discovers those aspects of writing that lend themselves to mechanical reproduction. Thus he is able to capitalize on his time and effort, and effectively becomes the very machine Reardon believes himself to be but never actually becomes because of his lingering notions of artistic integrity (352).

Also of interest is the fact that Albert Yule is a sort of synthesis of Milvain and Reardon. Like Milvain, Yule attempts to streamline his own literary production by delegating some of the labor to his daughter Marian. However, like Reardon, Yule clings to the superannuated notion of the necessary individuality of writing: "[h]is failings, obvious enough, were the results of a strong and somewhat pedantic individuality ceaselessly at conflict with unpropitious circumstances" (38). In other words, Yule fails to recognize the obsolescence of the lone, learned genius within the realm of literary production. A market of vulgarians who demand occasional literary confections simply does not expect Works of individual genius. Moreover, even if they were in demand, works of individual genius are too ponderously inefficient to keep pace with the rate at which they are consumed. Therefore, Yule straddles the either/or proposition personified by Reardon and Milvain: One may preserve his artistic integrity and write "for the ages"--hence Yule, Biffen, and Reardon's fetishization of Shakespeare, Coleridge and authors of classical antiquity--and starve in the process, or one may write "for the moment" and actually turn a respectable profit.

The shadow of Charles Darwin indeed looms large over the events and characters of New Grub Street. The growth market brought about by the advent of the "quarter-educated" vulgar class, and their discretionary income coupled with their callow aesthetic sensibilities and truncated attention spans, represents a nascent economic, if not ecological niche, for certain social creatures to occupy. However, it's not simply a matter of being able to adapt one's skills to the tastes of these consumers. One must also be a prodigious enough writer to keep pace with an equally prodigious rate of consumption. Individuals like Milvain and Whelpdale are adequately adapted to this niche in that they satisfy the demands of this niche in terms of both content and output. Reardon panders to the vulgar taste only grudgingly and after long resistance and thereby cannot meet the production demands of this niche. Biffen absolutely refuses to pander at all. Alfred Yule does attempt to pander, but his mode of literary production is too inefficient to meet production demands, and he is also largely ignorant of vulgar literary taste. While more in touch with the vulgar reader than her father, Marian Yule is as inefficient in her literary production as her father. Therefore, each of the characters named above are equally maladaptive, albeit for various reasons, and thus their extinction by the novel's end strikes the reader as somehow inevitable. Whereas Milvain and Reardon's widow Amy are left to come together as the triumphant niche occupants and thus reproduce themselves in their offspring, should they decide to produce any.

Doesn't deserve obscurity
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-25
I recently read New Grub Street, and I must say I was stunned by how much I enjoyed it. Gissing's prose and characterization hold up remarkably well. He's sort of an urban Hardy, though far more accessible to today's reader. I'd recommend this to any serious reader. Oh, and this novel is ripe for adaptation. A BBC miniseries would be great.

Education
The New Wine Lover's Companion
Published in Paperback by Barron's Educational Series (2003-10-01)
Authors: Ron Herbst and Sharon Tyler Herbst
List price: $14.99
New price: $5.99
Used price: $1.90

Average review score:

The true encyclopedia of wine
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-22
This is the be all end all of information as far as wines are concerned. We keep a copy in the shop at all times for new employees, and when they encounter a question on a certain varietal or terminology, it answers all the customers questions. Highly recommended.

Excellent Resource
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-31
If you love food and wine, this book is the perfect companion to the Food Lover's Companion. It's the ultimate dictionary for wine terminology.

Everything I hoped for from the Oxford Companion, but in an easy to use format.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-31
This book was my favorite dealing with wine. It contains much of the same info as the Oxford Companion, but you can hold it in your hands and carry it about. It contains very useful information if you are learning about wine. Also has a great pronunciation guide for wine terms.

Best $15 bucks you will spend on a wine book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-11
Whether you are new to wine or are a Cork-dork, this book, written in an easy to understand manner, is an excellent resource. The New Wine Lover's Companion is a must-have for any kitchen or wine library.

It is a dictionary
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-10
I purchased this book as a gift and my husband loved it. Yes, It is a dictionary so no pictures just words! It is a great addition to the "Complete Wine Course" by Kevin Zraly. Its small format is great to take along to diners or wine tasting party.
Great value for the price.

Education
The Nuts and Bolts of College Writing
Published in Paperback by Hackett Publishing Company (2003-09)
Author: Michael Harvey
List price: $7.50
New price: $7.12
Used price: $5.54
Collectible price: $224.95

Average review score:

Should be bundled with high school diplomas
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-23
As a graduate student in Psychology I get to read and correct mountains of papers from intro-level classes. Now that I am about to get my degree and start teaching those classes, I realize that students need a book that shows them how to write a sentence. This is the book I have chosen for my Principles of Psychology classes. Harvey's concise style and recognition of the pompous style most young college students choose to write in is enlightening and entertaining. The small book is filled with great examples of what not to do alongside examples of how to fix the problem(s). Even though I have literally decades of technical and academic writing experience, the book has helped me to be more concise and to link my thoughts together in a more readable and efficient way. I highly recommend this book for students and especially for teachers. So what if you are not teaching English - if you require students to write, your students will produce better papers (that you have to read!) after using this book. It's required for my psych class!

A bit sparse in the spine
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-27
This is a helpful book, but lacks some key aspects needed in college level English classes. Example: paraphrasing is not covered. Quotes are covered extensively though. Good for the price, handy, light to carry, but could use additions.

Surpasses Strunk and White
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-28
I'm a fan of The Elements of Style. I still have the students in my freshman composition class read it each year for its clear, concise guidelines to writing with style.

There are two striking flaws to that book though. First, the writing guidelines appear, too often, to my students as being arbitrary. In The Elements of Style, the logic behind good grammar rules is occasionally neglected in order to keep things brief. Each rule is just the truth because the book says so. Second, style is clearly a product of culture, and a result, the version of style Strunk and White offers fails to be as appropriate today as it once was.

The Nuts and Bolts of College writing amends these two errors. Almost everything in The Elements of Style is present here, too, but Harvey has provided a context sufficient for developing an understanding of these stylistic principles. He organizes the book according to values clearly desirable in writing: clarity, flow, gracefulness, etc. By discussing a principle such "using the active voice" within the context of clarity, Harvey effectively communicates why such an approach produces better writing. It's not just another rule to follow anymore. Additionally, Harvey's examples and his updates to stylistic norms make the book very timely.

In all, it's very handy tool in a writing classroom. I think it's the best of its kind currently available.

Big help for college
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-21
Anyone who wants a no nonsense approach for how to write (in general), needs this book. It teaches you how to write clearly and concisely and cuts through all the garbage. The author provides clears examples for what not to do and makes comparisons between good and bad writing. I highly recommend this book.

excellent little book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-16
The Nuts and Bolts of College Writing goes over the fundamentals of good essay writing such as concision, clarity, flow, punctuation, and topic sentence for a paragraph and so on. It is an excellent reference book for college students and writers in general. The book however does not go into term or research paper writing.

Education
On Solid Ground : Strategies for Teaching Reading K-3
Published in Paperback by Heinemann (2000-03-07)
Author: Sharon Taberski
List price: $27.00
New price: $21.60
Used price: $13.15
Collectible price: $39.80

Average review score:

On Solid Ground
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-28
Great product- I received it quickly and was able to utilize it for a class I was taking.

A Worthwhile Read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-16
On Solid Ground is a comprehensive guide for teachers who would like to implement a reading workshop in their classrooms. I found this book to be a very valuable resource. The book also includes an appendix full of reproducible sheets that support instruction and organization.

A must have for every Reading Teacher
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-25
I just "happened" upon this book a few years ago, and since I first opened the cover, I have been amazed at how it "talks" to the reader. I was drowning in the beginning of my Reading Recovery year, and this book helped me to put teaching reading into not only a global perspectative but into plain language. Since that time, I have re-read this book every summer before I head back into the "regular classroom" in hopes that I will be renewed and refreshed when beginning with my new students. I have referred many teachers to this book and would recommend it as a MUST have in the Professional library of every teacher. NO you dont need to borrow a copy from someone. You need to buy one(and I didnt get paid to say that!) LOL You need to be able to mark it up and refer back to it all year long. My copy is now tattered and torn but what a wealth of information Ms Taberski has given me.

Excellent resource for new teachers
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-01
I am a first year teacher working in an elementary urban education classroom. I found this book to be a happy marriage between theory and practice. It is clear you are reading a book by a veteran teacher, not simply someone who theorizes about education. There are so many aspects to this book that I found useful. Taberski's chapter on assessing student needs and organization of classroom space were most helpful. Read this book and if you have a chance check out Sharon taberski at one of her workshops - she is an inspiration to us all. Be sure to check out the appendices at the end of the book - great reproducibles there!

This book changed my teaching for ever
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-25
After teaching for 22 years as a special ed. teacher, I read Sharon's book. It changed how I teach forever. Using Sharon's ideas, I decreased the amount of talking I do, increased the amount of reading my students do and saw tremendous change in even my most disabled students. One 4th grade student made 4 years growth in the first six months after I began to use Sharon's strategies and returned to her regular class. All students made significant improvements. I highly recommend her book and her ideas to every teacher of young children. You won't be sorry.

Education
Our Children Are Watching: Ten Skills for Leading the Next Generation to Success : Essential Handbook for Parents, Teachers, Managers and Those Governing
Published in Paperback by Barrytown/ Station Hill Pr (1996-09)
Author: Susan Ford Collins
List price: $13.95
New price: $1.94
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $14.99

Average review score:

Our Children Are Watching
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-25
The day this book arrived I read 6 chapters in 3 hours! This is a very inspirational book about leadership and success and is not just about your children. It would apply to anyone, any age, stay-at-home mom to CEO. I especially liked her personal stories, I felt like she was writing about me. I am living my dream and have never lost sight of my goals. After reading her book I feel like I have been more of a success than I had thought previously. This is a must read book for anyone. M. Craig - Successfull Internet Entrepreneur

I look forward to bedtime..
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1998-09-29
Susan Collins has become a bedtime friend. This doesn't just feel like I'm reading a book, it feels like I know her. I look forward to spending time with her each night. She makes me feel her successes can also be mine.

This book woke me up!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1998-09-29
My God, I must have stopped dreaming when I started to work. This book woke me up. Now I am remembering the things I told myself I'd do. And I will.!

Her stories make me laugh, cry and dream...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1998-09-29
I feel like I'm sitting right there talking to Susan. Her stories make me laugh, cry and dream. I've never been so deeply touched by a book!

Puts many, unil now, pieces together...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1998-09-29
This book puts many, until now, separate pieces together again‹training, management, leadership, parenting and personal growth. Making sense of them all.

Education
A Parent's Guide to Gifted Children
Published in Hardcover by Great Potential Pr., Inc. (2007-03-01)
Authors: James T. Webb, Janet L. Gore, Edward R. Amend, and Arlene R. DeVries
List price: $32.95
New price: $21.74
Used price: $21.75

Average review score:

Worth every penny
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-22
There are a lot of books about gifted children, but none as helpful as this one. I use this book as a reference. It can help with everything from dealing with schools to the emotional side of giftedness. The advice is practical and can be used instantly. Anyone who has just learned their child is gifted should start here. It may not be as useful to those who have already read the other literature out there.

A Mom's Choice Awards Recipient!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-20
The Mom's Choice Awards® honors excellence in family-friendly media, products and services. An esteemed panel of judges includes education, media and other experts as well as parents, children, librarians, performing artists, producers, medical and business professionals, authors, scientists and others. A sampling of the panel members includes: Dr. Twila C. Liggett, Ten-time Emmy-winner, professor and founder of Reading Rainbow; Julie Aigner-Clark, Creator of Baby Einstein and The Safe Side Project; Jodee Blanco, New York Times Best-Selling Author; LeAnn Thieman, Motivational speaker and coauthor of seven Chicken Soup For The Soul books; Tara Paterson, Certified Parent Coach, and founder of The Just For Mom Foundation(tm) and the Mom's Choice Awards®. Parents and educators look for the Mom's Choice Awards® seal in selecting quality materials and products for children and families. This book has been honored by this distinguished award.

Have a gifted child? Read this guide first!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-10
I learned about this book in Beestar online GT program. I had been very nervous before, because I did not know how to raise my gifted child. He is obviously smarter and very different from his peers. A great thing I learned from this guide is about communication - an important factor both in parenting and educating the gifted child. The author's great ideas are good not only for parents communicating with gifted kids, but also for parents communicating with the teachers. I was able to teach my son how to communicate effectively following this guide. It would not have been so successful without this book. Now my son is smarter than ever and more important to me, he is happy and confident... In short, if you have a gifted child, buy and read this book before anything else. It is truly a wonderful guide.

Not out of print
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-25
This is a comprehensive book for anyone who has a gifted child. It is also appropriate for anyone who works with gifted children (teachers, psychologists, etc.).

Amazon incorrectly lists this book as 'Out of Print'. It is not. It is available on the Barnes & Noble website, the Borders website, the publisher's website, etc. The only place it is not available, apparently, is Amazon.

Great resource for nervous parents
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-17
This book has been great at calming my fears as the parent of a gifted child. It talks about expectations for your child as well as how to handle certain challenging situations both at home and at school. Definite must have.


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