You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
In 2011, I began creating online tutorial videos on Youtube, with a vision to share my GCSE expertise in English language and literature. As I write, these videos have been viewed over 10 million times across 214 different nations. My GCSE English Youtube channel has over 60,000 subscribers. To accompany these videos, I have published over 20 revision guide eBooks-one of which you are currently looking at! My guide to the previous GCSEs in English language and literature sat at the top of the Amazon bestseller's list for over 45 weeks and achieved huge acclaim; this book aims to build on those strengths.In this ebook, you'll receive detailed guidance on every question in the AQA GCSE English...
Acclaimed English teacher Andrew Bruff has achieved twenty million views on YouTube with his English revision videos. This eBook sets out to explain, in detail, everything you need to know in order to understand William Shakespeare's 'Macbeth'. This eBook contains the complete original text, a translation into modern English and a detailed analysis of every scene.
Critical Methods in Political and Cultural Economy offers students and scholars the first methods book for the critical school of International Political Economy (IPE). What does it mean to ‘do’ critical research? How do we write about the evidence we present? This volume explores our shared critical ethic to demonstrate how methods are transformative and reimagines research strategies as both an embodied practice and a social process. By presenting methodologically informed ways of researching, enriched by real-life accounts from academics doing empirical research, the volume seeks to forge a new collaborative path that builds a critical ethic and modes of inquiry within International P...
Introduction -- Times for telling -- Practice and feedback -- Thin slices of learning -- Knowledge organizations -- Multimodal assignments -- Learning communities -- Authentic audiences -- Conclusion.
Congratulations on making the exciting decision to study English Language at A' level. Make no mistake, regardless of the title of the course, you are about to embark on a scientific study of language and its structures- don't let that put you off! This qualification will take you on a sociolinguistic, dialectological, psycholinguistic, and historical journey in one of the most commonly spoken languages in the world.Whether you have chosen to take the AS or A Level route, this guide will be both relevant and useful to you as the topics taught and assessment objectives covered are applicable to all examination boards.English Language at AS and A Level is different to the GCSE that you have been studying throughout KS3 and 4. There is lots of terminology to remember and apply in the analysis of the texts given, but don't let that phase you. Just as you once did not know the terminology for GCSE - yet have managed to learn it, apply it and succeed - you will do the same with AS and A Level.This guide has been designed to support you in your new learning and help make all the exam requirements explicit.
This Element reviews the varieties of capitalism approach (VoC) first developed by Hall and Soskice and subsequent extensions to emerging markets. The author suggests that by reinvigorating existing ideal types and creating new ones through an analysis of its five variables in a variety of countries VoC can be used to evaluate the viability of economic reforms across a wide range of countries. He argues that governments should base changes on lessons from other countries belonging to their ideal type. This Element illustrates the utility of VoC in understanding how reforms will differ across countries by examining how the future of work is likely to differ across nations depending on the degree to which the five institutions explored in this approach promote the standardization of tasks. It analyzes how these institutions shape degrees of standardization in the United States, Germany, and Brazil, offering suggestions for reforms in each of them.
A scathing critique of President Bush's legal advisors, who expanded the reach of his executive powers while creating highly controversial policies for fighting the War on Terror. Argues that these advisors, blinded by ideology, provided largely bad legal advice that caused great harm, and ultimately was unnecessary for national security.