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An introduction to the sport of volleyball, including origins, techniques, game play, conditioning, drills, and the different characteristics of beach volleyball and other variants.
"This first-of-its-kind anthology of comic and serious monologues is specially tailored for actors age 55 and older. Leading American playwrights have penned characters who are fresh and reflective of older adults in the modern world. A convenient source book of monologues ideally suited for auditions or acting classes. The book also contains suggestions and exercises to use when preparing for an audition, plus listings of previously published and produced classical, comic and serious monologues for mature actors and actresses." -- p. [4] of cover.
An anthology of scenes and monologues featuring roles for mature actors over the age of 55.
"Succinct and thorough, Playwriting, Brief & Brilliant will, in just one hour of reading, tell you everything you need to know about playwriting. It guides you through the basics of dialogue, character, and plot. It gives tips for getting past writer's block. And finally, it provides practical advice on marketing your play."--BOOK JACKET.
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Gathering feedback about your design, demo, document, dashboard...any deliverable...can become chaotic. People at all levels (the belligerent buzzard, the prima donna peacock, the wise old owl) chirp opinions, squawk expectations and screech requirements. Let's hatch a new plan and turn that cacophony into a fine-tuned SQUACK. Despite hearing chaos and noise during review sessions, designers are expected to interpret and act on feedback. Feedback can weigh heavily on their shoulders. They have to use judgement and discretion to meet user expectations and business needs. It's their responsibility to filter through the noise to find the salient, valuable points to improve the deliverable. SQUA...
Writing in academe. Letting go of the dream ; Demystifying academic writing ; Craftsman attitude -- Using tools that work. Three taming techniques ; Securing time ; Securing space ; Securing energy -- Challenging writing myths. Draining the drama ; Demons in for tea ; The magnum opus myth ; The impostor syndrome ; The cleared-deck fantasy ; The hostile reader fear ; Compared with X ; The perfect first sentence ; One more source -- Maintaining momentum. Follow the lilt ; Beginnings and endings ; Finding the lost trail ; Effective feedback ; Handling revisions and rejections ; Working with stalls ; Relinquishing toxic projects ; Back-burner projects ; Breaks, summers, and sabbaticals -- Building writing support. Overcoming isolation ; Creating faculty writing groups ; Building campus writing support.
Publisher Description
From a scary board game to an evil robot costume to a creepy ice sculpture. Read this terrifying collection of horror for the ultimate fright!
Be prepared to enrich students who already know your planned curriculum. What's Next? provides the tools you need to preassess students and practical strategies to further their learning. Concrete examples from different content areas and grade levels illustrate the ideas in action. Written for singletons and teacher teams alike, this comprehensive resource allows you to test and choose the strategies that work best for your classroom. This book will show you how to: Recognize the purpose of question 4 within the PLC at Work® process: What do I do when they already know it? Rethink instruction to empower students to further their learning. Implement a variety of strategies for students to s...