You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
Written by an expert author team of BTEC teachers and professionals, this Student Book includes: Full coverage of all three components, structured and updated to match the 2022 specification Content broken down into one-hour lessons to help with your planning and delivery Plenty of case studies and examples that students can relate to Additional features including key terms, 'did you know' sections and plenty of assessment practice.
Shannon is thrilled when her mom becomes pregnant. After years of hoping and praying, Shannon will be a big sister. They will be a normal, happy family. Shannon likes normal. As an experienced middle-schooler, she knows that she does not want to stand out, to be weird or different. But when her baby brother is born, things do not go according to plan. God does not seem to be following the rules. And Shannon does something that is so out of character, not even she can explain it. Sent away to Camp Outlook, Shannon has several bizarre experiences, crushes on the student minister, and starts to re-consider how important being "normal" really is.
Most archaeologists and bioarchaeologists receive little or no training in the recognition of skeletal remains of fetuses, infants, and children. Yet many research sites may contain such materials. Without a framework for identifying the bones or the excavation techniques suited to their recovery, archaeologists may often overlook subadult skeletal remains or even confuse them with animal bones. The Osteology of Infants and Children fills the need for a field and lab manual on this important topic and provides a supplemental textbook for human osteology courses. Focusing on juvenile skeletons, their recovery and identification, and siding in both field and lab settings, the volume provides b...
The author of Sisters of the Sari presents a richly emotional journey of two women drawn together by an unexpected and unwanted bond… Lesley McCoy works in a day-care center, and she is planning to start a family of her own. Her husband, David, is a homebody whose job as a wilderness guide takes him away for long periods—but when he’s home, he’s the best partner Lesley could imagine. Kendra McCoy is a successful businesswoman whose husband, Eric, is an analyst who specializes in Middle Eastern politics. He supports her enthusiasm and drive to succeed, and is the perfect partner—when he’s home between assignments. While trying to identify a man who collapses in a Portland, Oregon, coffee shop, two wallets are found: one belonging to David McCoy, the other to Eric McCoy. Devastated by their comatose husband’s betrayal, Kendra and Lesley reluctantly join forces in an attempt to piece together a true picture of the man they both fell in love with. Instead, they uncover a vast web of deceit as they learn their husband lived a third life neither of them suspected.
Winner, Fiction Award, Saskatchewan Book AwardsFinalist, Book of the Year/First Book Award/Saskatoon Book Award; Saskatchewan Book Awards The Maleness of God is a collection of tough, brilliantly crafted stories that pull no punches about the rugged terrain in the emotional landscape of men and women. These women struggle with relationships - with husbands, and lovers, and parents who won't let them go. They fight with society's, and their own, judgement of their worth should they happen to be childless adults. Here are women who discover daily how difficult it is to share the planet with that other sex. But here too are women who connive, who hurt, who are confused about their own feelings and motivations. Women who come to realize that men's feelings, as incomprehensible as they may sometimes be, are as real, as mysterious and as compelling as their own. "Baker's stories are funny, sad, and thought-provoking. But what makes them memorable is their humanity, their rightness - the nuances of experience that provoke in the reader the urge to say, 'Yes!'"-The Winnipeg Free Press
Foreword INDIES 2020 Book of the Year Award (BRONZE Winner for Religion) "[A] powerful work. . . . Provides a road map for any Christian seeking greater racial justice."--Publishers Weekly Reconciliation is not true reconciliation without justice! Brenda Salter McNeil has come to this conviction as she has led the church in pursuing reconciliation efforts over the past three decades. McNeil calls the church to repair the old reconciliation paradigm by moving beyond individual racism to address systemic injustice, both historical and present. It's time for the church to go beyond individual reconciliation and "heart change" and to boldly mature in its response to racial division. Looking thro...
For the next seven days, Silas Johnson, Jr. distances himself from the woman he loves, 22-year-old singer Brenda Baker. A lawyer living in Washington, D.C., Silas is 24 and suddenly confronted with tragic childhood memories that he has managed to suppress for the past six years. Now Silas must have answers and resolution before he can move forward with Brenda. Dreams, sexual indiscretions, flashbacks, and questions about God and faith combine to assist Silas in his attempt to understand, make peace with, and finally bring closure to a haunting past of incest and molestation that has been couched in Christianity.
Written by a highly experienced and respected author team, this book focuses on the knowledge you will need in order to obtain the qualification, and will support you through your assessment and the start of your career.
Fort William Henry, America's early frontier fort at the southern end of Lake George, New York, was a flashpoint for conflict between the British and French empires in America. The fort is perhaps best known as the site of a massacre of British soldiers by Native Americans allied with the French that took place in 1757. Over the past decade, new and exciting archeological findings, in tandem with modern forensic methods, have changed our view of life at the fort prior to the massacre, by providing physical evidence of the role that Native Americans played on both sides of the conflict. Intertwining recent revelations with those of the past, Starbuck creates a lively narrative beginning with ...