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El libro presenta desde las bases éticas que permiten afrontar la responsabilidad de educar a niños y niñas en sus primeros tres años de vida, hasta los principios de la buena dirección y gestión aplicados a la escuela 0-3. También presenta una revisión de los principios normativos que regulan las escuelas 0-3, el importante tema del liderazgo, consejos para orientar la escuela hacia una mayor calidad, guías para conducir la imprescindible relación familia-escuela y modelos de actuación en la resolución de conflictos. Aunque en las últimas décadas se ha escrito mucho sobre dirección escolar, lo cierto es que la escuela 0-3 ha quedado relegada, hasta la fecha, de esta importante disciplina. Esta obra quiere salir al paso de esta falta de marcos teórico-prácticos de referencia en la escuela 0-3, y aportar algunos fundamentos sólidos que ayuden a mejorar la dirección de la escuela 0-3.
The Splendor and Opulence of the Past traces the career of Jaume Caresmar (1717–1791), a church historian and a key figure of the Catalan Enlightenment who transcribed tens of thousands of parchments to preserve and glorify Catalonia's medieval past in the face of its diminishing autonomy. As Paul Freedman shows, Caresmar's books, essays, and transcriptions—some only recently discovered—provide fresh insights into the Middle Ages as remembered in modern Catalonia and illustrate how a nation's past glories and humiliations can inform contemporary politics and culture. From the ninth to the sixteenth centuries, Catalonia was a thriving, independent set of principalities within what would...
Cuban-Americans are beginning to understand their long-standing roots and traditions in the United States that reach back over a century prior to 1959. This is the first book-length confirmation of those beginnings, and its places the Cuban hero and revolutionary thinker José Martí within the political and socioeconomic realities of the Cuban communities in the United States of that era. By clarifying Martí’s relationship with those communities, Gerald E. Poyo provides a detailed portrait of the exile centers and their role in the growth and consolidation of nineteenth-century Cuban nationalism. Poyo differentiates between the development of nationalist sentiment among liberal elites and popular groups and reveals how these distinct strains influenced the thought and conduct of Martí and the successful Cuban revolution of the 1890s.
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