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Exploring the presence of arsenic in our lives, from its occurrence in food to its use in medicine, this is a fascinating book for general readers.
Inclusive education is a critical issue at the forefront of educators’ minds. Transformative Inclusive Education tackles the subject by reimagining current practices in education and renovating teaching strategies. This collection demonstrates that inclusion is an educational reform movement that can only succeed if educational institutions and practitioners rethink the meaning, substance, and purpose of education and adopt the new missions, patterns of decision-making, understandings of teaching and learning, pedagogies, collaborative roles, and classroom practices that flow directly from the inclusive reform movement. Featuring contributions from a diverse array of scholars, practitioner...
Teaching Global Citizenship brings together perspectives from former and current teachers from across Canada to tackle the unique challenges surrounding educating for global awareness. The contributors discuss strategies for encouraging young people to cultivate a sense of agency and global responsibility. Reflecting on the educator’s experience, each chapter engages with critical questions surrounding teaching global citizenship, such as how to help students understand and navigate the tension at the heart of global citizenship between universalism and pluralism, and how to do so without frightening, regressing, mythicizing, imposing, or colonizing. Based on narrative inquiry, the contrib...
Jacob Harder (1819-1904), son of Peter Harder (1788-1853) and Maria Friesen (1795-1849), married Maria Abrams (1819-1902) in 1839. They had thirteen children. They lived in South Russia. They immigrated to Canada in 1875. Ancestors, descendants and relatives lived mainly in Russia, Manitoba, Mexico and Paraguay.
Popular author Dianna Booher uses 41 unforgettable vignettes of everyday situations to demonstrate the power that words have to hurt or heal.
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