Open Books
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Used price: $34.00

back in printReview Date: 2008-05-13

Used price: $3.14
Collectible price: $27.16

A wild thriller Review Date: 2005-08-02
Halford's new "partner" Apple Valley gives him instruction on how to get out of town with cops everywhere. He knows his only hope for freedom is to reach his brother Hanford who assumes Halford is guilty. The trek to Huntsville, Texas is dangerous with cops ready to bust him at every point, two groups of goons chasing after him for the DVD or the money or both, and even a local church wants to literally bust him. Only Apple Valley seems to get him through roadblocks, but he wonders what the former stripper wants of him.
2,000 MILES TO OPEN ROAD is a wild thriller in which everyone seems slightly deranged (eccentric seems too gentle of a description). Thus the audience will have a good time hitching along with Apple and Halford as it seems like half of Nevada want him dead, the money he stole, and the DVD he needs to prove his innocence. Readers who enjoy a wild ride will want to sit cannonball with the lead duo as they are chased across the southwest.
Harriet Klausner

A salt collector's dream bibleReview Date: 2007-07-21
Used price: $42.42
Collectible price: $51.00

Great book, good conditionReview Date: 2007-07-21

Used price: $0.01

A practical, compassionate guide to change!Review Date: 1999-01-23

When its hard to talk about...Review Date: 2008-07-24
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A Gem of a BookReview Date: 2003-10-04
This is a picture book, a children's book and a guidebook for parents, all in one. The story focuses on the building of a friendship between two young boys, one with and one without a disability. I actually purchased several copies of "About Handicaps" and shared them with friends and neighbors. Later, when I became a Disability Awareness Specialist, I used this book in an awareness program for third graders to help them become more understanding of their classmates who had a disability. This is a book that will educate your head and touch your heart. I can't recommend this book highly enough.

Used price: $17.99

Technical, commercial, and philosophical considerationsReview Date: 2007-12-06
In The Access Principle, John Willinsky argues that open access to research archives and journals has the potential to change the public presence of science and scholarship and to help inform civic discussion and policy making.
A professor at the University of British Columbia, Willinsky argues that a commitment to the value and quality of research carries with it a responsibility to extend the circulation of research findings as far as possible, to all who are interested in it, and to all who might profit by it.
Willinsky's case for open access is multifaceted. It draws on the spirit of copyright law,
the mandate of scholarly associations, the promise of global knowledge exchanges,
the public's right to know, the prospect of enhanced reading and indexing, the improved economic efficiencies of publishing, and the history of the academic journal.
Willinsky is careful to explain that `open access' does not mean `free access.' Open access articles cannot be read without a substantial investment in hardware, software, and networking. The open access movement does not operate in denial of economic realities, he says; it is simply acting on a scholarly tradition that has long been concerned with extending the circulation of knowledge.
Research knowledge has been transformed into a capitalized commodity and economic driver, he writes. The resulting corporate publishing concentration, with its relentless focus on knowledge capitalization and shareholder value, has allowed journal prices to increase well above inflation rates. University libraries cannot keep up, and even Tier 1 research institutions are dropping expensive journal subscriptions by the dozens and scores.
Online scholarly resources are now available in a variety of forms, yet it's the research article in particular that's at the center of a struggle, Willinsky says. The struggle is over online publishing and whether it will further contribute to, or whether it will begin to reverse, the current state of declining access to research within an otherwise expanding global academic community.
Willinsky argues that scholarly associations must ask themselves whether they will use this new publishing medium, already integral to the scholarly process, to extend and advance the circulation and exchange of knowledge. The associations need to consider the principles of access and the availability of open access publishing in the short term and the long term. They should consider cooperating with research libraries and better attune themselves to what's in the best interest of their members and authors, as well as the cause of research and scholarship which they serve.

Used price: $35.73

A passionate appeal for a new professionalism in teaching.Review Date: 2003-08-06
She notes that old professionalism has six characteristics:
1. exclusive membership
2. conservative practices
3. self-interest
4. external regulation
5. slow to change
6. reactive.
And, the ten characteristics of new (transformative) professionalism are:
1. inclusive membership
2. public ethical code of practice
3. collaborative and collegial
4. activist orientation
5. flexible and progressive
6. responsive to change
7. self-regulating
8. policy-active
9. enquiry-oriented
10. knowledge building.
Competencies and standards are a part of the future for all teachers and Sachs sounds warnings. She noted that in the UK standards evolved from competencies and noted that they represented a new control system. The section entitled: "Professional teaching standards and what do they mean?" is particularly good and Sachs suggests four usages of standards in the literature and discourse:
1. Standards as common sense (What can teachers do and what do they know?).
2. Standards for quality assurance (Accountability).
3. Standards for quality improvement (Developmental approach).
4. Standards, certification or control (Licensing and professional certification).
Teachers are oriented towards day-to-day teaching and the workload has made them industrially passive. Sachs's passionate plea is for the teaching profession to look beyond their work and put into place structures and a culture of teacher activism.
This is an important, useful, and well written book that sounds a warning to all of us involved in teaching and learning."

A Great Book By A Great Political Thinker!Review Date: 2002-07-20
Hitler and Spain is a very good book and is also very well researched. After reading it, I learned about many events and key people in the Spanish Civil War that I was not aware of prior to reading Hitler and Spain. Also, the footnotes at the end of the book are very well documented and are worth taking a look at. Dr. Whealey, if you are reading this in Athens Ohio, my hat is off to you for writing such a wonderful book. I am very excited about your new book on the American intervention in kosovo coming out this year.
Related Subjects: Asia Oceania Europe North America
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I teach people how to play slide, although I'm not at all scary doing it. This book is my secret weapon. It's simple and all in one tuning, but not too simple. They (the licks) are what musicians call "solid". By the time you work your way through the book, you hopefully have an ear, and trust me, that's what slide requires. Then you play with the licks and make them your own. Most people have figured out where to go by the time they finish. I always recommend stealing solos from harmonica players when they get through this book. I'm glad it's back.