Organizations Books
Related Subjects: United States
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Utopian Higher EducationReview Date: 2006-05-04
Easy yet informative read--important for educators/studentsReview Date: 1999-02-02
The Way Non-Traditional Education Was and Is.Review Date: 1999-02-04
Important books for educatorsReview Date: 2001-10-10
A perfect field guide for finding a great education todayReview Date: 1999-02-11

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"Where's My Stuff" bookReview Date: 2008-06-22
Definitely Recommend this one!Review Date: 2007-11-14
Definitely recommend it for someone who thinks its just about impossible to get organized, much like myself! haha
-Lisa, age 16, New York
A Real Winner!Review Date: 2007-08-29
Organized?Review Date: 2007-11-04
Looking Forward to Fifth Grade!Review Date: 2007-08-16
"Where's my stuff?" by Samantha Moss and Lesley Schwartz was so helpful to me as a student entering middle school.
The chapter called "School Stuff" had so many great ideas to get organized for fifth grade. It showed you 3 ways to organize your papers and notes. The chapter also taught me how to organize my study space at home. In addition, it showed me how to use my backback and set up my locker. The tips in this chapter are sure to make my year GREAT!
This is the ideal book for a child going into middle school!

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"Words for Warriors" is a must read for any leaderReview Date: 2008-03-08
I had just served a two year enlistment in the U.S. Army (most of it at school) and thought I was done with military topics.
I soon learned why that book was studied in management classes and is considered a classic study of competition and conflict in general.
The book by Ralph Puckett (Col. USA Ret) "Words for Warriors" like "The Art of War" is not just for military leaders.
Executives, managers and would be managers will find it an invaluable asset in learning how to lead. Whether it is leading a corporate board or a shift crew at a fast food restaurant, the reader will find topics relevant to the situation.
Col. Puckett is a professional soldier, a distinguished graduate of the United States Military Academy. He spent virtually his entire career leading troops in peace and war. He recounts many of his personal experiences, as well as those of other military professionals, and how each relates to the end product of "getting the job done." Sections such as training, taking care of soldiers (employees), personal life, strategy and goals are broken down into easy to read and understand incidents. The book is an easy read, and is clear and concise. In addition to being a very interesting and informative book, I would also recommend it as a reference book to be consulted often by anyone who wants to be a leader that "gets the job done."
A first hand account from a genuine heroReview Date: 2008-02-11
Let's get right to the action. On 25 November 1950, the Chinese Army had just entered the Korean War. First Lieutenant Ralph Puckett was there commanding the 8th Army Ranger Company, a unit composed of only 47 U.S. soldiers and 9 South Korean KATUSA nationals. During the evening of 25 November and early morning of 26 November, Puckett's Rangers fought off 5 head-on assaults of over 500 Chinese in hand-to-hand bayonet fighting and bugle led-charges which continued through the night. Chinese army losses were appalling. When, owing only to lack of artillery support, the Company was overrun by 6th charge, Puckett was severely wounded and against his protests was finally dragged to safety by his NCOs. By the next morning, only 26 Rangers were left standing. For their actions, his two NCOs were awarded the Silver Star, and Lieutenant Ralph Puckett himself was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross.
Here's the lesson from Words for Warriors. Puckett knew from the beginning that an officer's first responsibility is to his soldiers, and he must surround himself with talent. I can't tell you how many times I have seen that rule violated by officers whose first responsibility was to the protecting of their own careers. To wit, the sad, sad case of the recent prisoner humiliation and torture scenes at the Iraqi Abu Ghraib prison was not, in the words of politicians, the isolated act "of a few bad apples." To the contrary, it was a clear case of officers' abandonment of duty. This scandal would never have happened if the superior officers had followed Puckett's examples.
Puckett is decidedly neutral in passing out both praise and criticism. While he not hesitant to praise past and present generals, privates, and politicians who have done their duties well, he is also not afraid to point out where generals, privates, and politicians have screwed up. What's more, he's not afraid to list them by name, current leaders included.
Words for Warriors is a collection of 85 short thought-pieces, anecdotes, humor, and combat narratives. It is well-edited into sections, but any one chapter can be read as a stand-alone piece, and each story has its own lesson. And I'm forever grateful that Puckett has included an Index, so anyone can do a quick research on topics anywhere from Agincourt to Apaches to Afghanistan. (Puckett is also well-versed on the Near East.)
Words for Warriors is well-researched and footnoted, for Puckett can cite Chaucer as well as Cheney. He offers chapters which look realistically at the past and equally as well guarded to the future of the U.S. military and our country.
Oh -- and did I mention Ralph Puckett was awarded a second Distinguished Service Cross in Vietnam? To find out more about that one, read the book.
Frederick Malmstrom, Ph.D.
U.S. Air Force Academy
A "must" read for every competitor who wants to develop a strong successful team... and himself. Review Date: 2008-01-30
Col. (Ret.) Puckett is a superb communicator, and delivers delivers the hard-earned wisdom attained from his many years leading Rangers in preparation for battle in Korea and in the jungles of Vietnam. In 1950, fresh out of West Point, Lt. Puckett led the 47 men of the 8th Ranger Company ahead of the 25th Infantry Division, and repelled 5 assaults by much larger Chinese forces. Wounded severely in the battle, Puckett didn't order his men to pull back until the 6th assault. Too injured to move, Puckett stayed behind to fight. Later, two of his Rangers returned to drag him back to safety. After Korea, Puckett commanded the Mountain Ranger Division and organized a school for Columbia's Rangers."*
He received a Distinguished Service Cross for the action in Korea and a second in the Republic of Vietnam. Before he retired in 1971, Puckett was recognized as on the nation's most decorated soldiers, with 2 Silver Stars, 3 Legions of Merit, 2 Bronze Stars, the Commendation Medal, 10 Air Medals, 5 Purple Hearts, the Distinguished Graduate Award from West Point, and the infantry's Doughboy Award (joining the ranks of eminent leaders such as Gen. Colin Powell, Gen. Matthew Ridgway, LTG Hal Moore and H. Ross Perot).
As one who has survived brutal engagements and has seen the precepts of the great military leaders put to the test, Col. Puckett's zeal for building great leaders comes through on every page. In our family's consumer product business, this book would have really helped me in my early years to lead my 100-plus `troops' successfully.
WFW centers on the training of the Unit Leader, the most critical management position in any organization; if he fails, the entire organization fails. Managers of all fields will benefit from this inspiring collection of essays, and the focus on key subject areas (such as Command and Staff, Unit Training, Personal Development, and The Goal).
Col. Puckett's conversational tone will infect you with his passion for making subordinate officers strong and successful ... and give you an immersive experience of leadership principles in action. His personal story blended with the advice of military greats like Alexander, Napoleon and Eisenhower make the pages come to life and will remind you why Col. Puckett has received many of the highest leadership awards the Army bestows.
For the last 10 years, he has served as Honorary Colonel of the 75th Ranger Regiment - coaching Rangers in training and on the field in Afghanistan and Iraq. Col. Richard Clarke, commander of the 75th Ranger Regiment, says of Ralph Puckett: "No other Ranger in the history of the Rangers has influenced as many Soldiers as he has."
Words for Warriors will stay with me as an inspiration and a reference for years to come. In the words of famed Lieutenant General Harold G. Moore, this is "the absolute best book on military leadership that I have ever read."
Words For WarriorsReview Date: 2008-01-19
Charles Y. Massey
Consummate Wisdom from a Fearsome WarriorReview Date: 2007-12-23

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You will feel Zapped with energy after reading this book!Review Date: 2007-08-09
Note: This book doesn't really talk about discipline or methodologies or theories, but provides a practical approach of how to improve the quality of instruction, and increase student and teacher satisfaction. Through the fiction side of the book it allows you to observe a successful school and one that is failing and how the failing school becomes a success! I now am going to take my classes to a new level of energy b/c of this book!
Easy read! At first it doesn't seem like it is going to apply b/c it is building the story. Then it catches steam and flows with good stuff.
Zapp in EducationReview Date: 2006-08-28
A must read for all educatorsReview Date: 1998-05-08
This book should be required reading for every school administrator starting with the State Commissioner of Education.
One of the best books I have ever read!Review Date: 1998-10-20
Zapp! zapped me, its outstanding!Review Date: 1998-07-12

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It's people, people, people!Review Date: 2000-01-03
It's people, people, people!Review Date: 2000-01-03
the accelarating organizationReview Date: 2000-03-20
It is a must! A Classic! The theme of the new Century!Review Date: 1996-10-30
A "do-able" resource on the constantly learning organizationReview Date: 1998-11-24

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Good ideas for smaller groups with no experienceReview Date: 2006-08-22
I also recomend [...] which has a free fundraising program my organization of under 100 members utilized to raise over $11K last year.
Great Guide for BeginnersReview Date: 2005-10-16
Great Guide for BeginnersReview Date: 2005-10-16
Fund raising made easy Review Date: 2005-10-21
A Very Helpful Fundraising Text!Review Date: 2005-09-02

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Great Starter BookReview Date: 2008-05-09
A book that gives you more details of how Africans evolved into Afro Baptist, I would highly recommend Mechal Sobel's Been in the Storm Too Long." This book is excellent and can compliment this book. She deserves reading. She speaks truth.
A heritage worth exploringReview Date: 2003-04-23
Costen, in her book 'African American Christian Worship,' begins with a discussion of core theological beliefs that shape all of such worship. This core seeks to locate and connect the liturgy with the rest of life, such that the practice of worship has meaning that influences the rest of life, and vice versa. These core beliefs are rather interesting, and not at all out of line with what my own basic theology would contain. However, the liturgical practice in my own background does not always realise the larger connection between the shape of the worship liturgy and the larger universe.
There is a strong focus on personal experience as a primary spiritual element. Being interested in such spirituality, I was intrigued by her quote:
'Unlike the Western-oriented Christian, whose theology is rooted in Greco-Roman concepts and culture, African peoples tend to seek to know God personally rather than to know about God from doctrines and creeds.' (p. 20)
While I am a very creed-based Christian, I still seek those experiences and practices which help me to know God, as well as having respect for those practices and studies which talk about God. There has been a tension between these orientations in the more Euro-centric history as well as the African American history, with each side having a similar suspicion of the other. One of Costen's shortcomings in this book is that she ignores the whole of the Western contemplative tradition.
Costen elaborates on the historical aspects of African American worship, particularly as it continues to be informed by its origins as an expression of oppressed peoples. There is, however, no single pattern or form for African American worship; rather, the variety of African American worship that exists today across many denominational lines are all influenced to varying degrees by this background. For instance, 'all African American denominations (Protestant especially) can claim heritage in the Invisible Institution, regardless of when and where they enter denominational history.' (p. 87) However, this is shaped and influenced by a number of factors, including location, leadership, daily life of worshipers, and what Costen describes as the 'denominational ethos' of the worshipers. To think that there is one pattern of African American Christian worship is a mistake.
As someone coming out of the Anglican tradition, I was interested in the discussion of the role of the Church of England and British-based movements on the early African American experience. This is not a history of which I am very familiar, and it is not one emphasised in other historical texts I have studied.
Certainly, practices such as the Ring Shout are very removed from my experience and tradition. I wonder if the description and discussion in Costen's book does this practice justice, as I did not get a good sense of what exactly takes places and what feelings and connections to God are manifest in the practice. This is most likely another case of the necessary difference between reading about a practice and actually enacting and participating in the practice.
I was very interested in the idea of the Invisible Institution and the improvised architecture and accoutrements dedicated to worship. As one who often has to improvise meeting spaces, etc., I have had to deal with some of the difficulties discussed here, albeit none as difficult to deal with as official societal and legal suppression as was enacted against early African American self-directed worship experiences.
Perhaps the most important chapter for me was the concluding one, which discusses worship as empowerment. Costen states, 'In order for corporate worship to be authentic and empowering, it must be psychologically relevant to worshipers and commensurate with their lived experience.' (p. 123) Likewise, she writes, 'The most effective demonstration of true liturgy is what we do in obedience to God in Christ with our lives when we gather and when we scatter as a community in the world.' (p. 127) These quotes sum up for me the importance of worship in life, learning, and the hoped-for relevance of what takes place during our liturgical-worshipful times to our overall lives. This transcends the unique experience of any particular group such as African Americans, and becomes important for all people.
Rich Expression of True African American WorshipReview Date: 2000-07-15
History and Current Ministry UnitedReview Date: 2007-09-02
Costen's strength is her ability to tap into the history of African American Christianity. In fact, in many ways this book is just that--a history of African American corporate worship. Moving from the bitter waters of enslavement, to the Invisible Institution, to the Praise House, Costen shows both the actions and the theology behind those actions. She then beautifully ties together these historical foundations with the modern Christian worship experience of contemporary African American churches. For anyone wanting a well-researched history of the gathered African American Church, this is a great source.
Reviewer: Bob Kellemen, Ph.D., is the author of Beyond the Suffering: Embracing the Legacy of African American Soul Care and Spiritual Direction .
An Excellent Resource for African American Christian WorshipReview Date: 2000-07-19

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Extremely Helpful Book, Even for ProtestantsReview Date: 2004-05-14
Father Dubay challenges this view by arguing that God never calls anyone to singleness, because singleness in and of itself is not a life vocation that enables you to serve others. Instead, God calls some to marriage (serving primarily your family), and some to celibacy (serving others who are not of your family and devoting yourself to Jesus apart from the married state). The difference in terminology between singleness and celibacy might seem like splitting hairs to some, but I think Dubay is on to something in that the terminology we use affects our outlook. Furthermore, his emphasis on directing our lives toward self-giving counteracts the materialistic, self-centered messages from our culture.
Within the pages of this book, Dubay gives much advice concerning signs of a call to a celibate vocation, and paints a detailed picture of what a life of celibacy looks like. And Dubay's love for the Lord Jesus Christ shines through on every page he writes.
Obviously, this book is more accessible to Catholics than Protestants. However, I found the majority of this book to be quite useful and insightful. (Of course, there will be some points where evangelicals have strong disagreements with Dubay.) A book (as opposed to just a few words or a chapter in a book) is needed to address this subject from an evangelical Protestant perspective. Until then, Dubay's book is a valuable read.
Masterpiece of capturing the essence of celibate loveReview Date: 2000-03-24
Clear, solid, accessibleReview Date: 2007-02-04
An Incredible Book by an Incredible AuthorReview Date: 2007-03-08
As a member of a Secular Institute (for those unfamiliar with the term: being a member of a Secular Institute is having a vocation in the Catholic Church as a lay person - not a religious, priest, brother, sister - who takes the vows of a religious, i.e. poverty, chastity and obedience, but remains a lay person living in the world and living the vows within the context of a lay life), I especially appreciated Fr. Dubay's clarification of "vocation" as being not what one "does" in life (which is what a "career" is), but what one IS in the depths of one's soul, and his explanation of gospel virginity as being a "love affair", as opposed to the world's negative view that it is a "giving up" of something (marriage, sexual intimacy, family life, etc.), or that it is an unhealthy or unnatural way to live.
Fr. Dubay explains that everything we search for in life, even so much as a cold drink to satisfy physical thirst, is but an indication of our deeper quest for the Lord, and how a vocation of gospel virginity is not a "giving up" but a fulfillment of our deepest yearnings for God. For the person consecrated to gospel virginity, Fr. Dubay writes of the difference in how we live our lives if we live cognizant of the true nature of our vocation.
I think that this book would be an outstanding aid for those who may be struggling to understand their child's/family member's/friend's decision to live a life of gospel virginity. Further, I believe that anyone who feels they are being called to a celibate and chaste lifestyle would benefit by reading this book and gain great insights into why they feel attracted to gospel virginity.
Finally, for all those who are living a celibate lifestyle, whether diocesan priest, religious priest, religious brother or sister, nun, or consecrated lay person, this book will be an incalculable affirmation of our chosen lifestyle and love affair with the One who is Love itself.
OutstandingReview Date: 2003-08-26

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Appreciative Inquiry processReview Date: 2006-09-28
A good and detailed guide to AIReview Date: 2003-10-05
This book goes into great detail on the rationale for the approach and the step by step activities required to move through the process. It is a well set-out and thorough guide for practitioners.
For a guide to the range of techniques available and a comparison between them, refer to Napuk and Palmer: The Large Group Facilitator's Manual or Bunker and Alban: Large Group Interventions.
Cutting Edge ApproachReview Date: 2004-01-07
AI Summit Practitioner's GuideReview Date: 2003-09-30
Amazing practical how-to guide on AI SummitsReview Date: 2003-09-06
Related Subjects: United States
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