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Applied Behavior Analysis for Teachers

by Paul A. Alberto Anne C. Troutman

This text explains behavior theory and teaches aspiring educators how to apply it to classroom settings.

Critical Issues in Special Education, Third Edition

by Martha L. Thurlow Bob Algozzine James E. Ysseldyke

Critical Issues in Special Education is an analysis of important conceptual and practical issues that face special education professionals. Part One illustrates the background and status of special education through current analysis of fundamental guiding practices. Part Two focuses on key practices in special education services. Part Three provides an analysis of social, political, legal, and economic activity reflected in special education practice.

My Dog Ate It

by Saragail Katzman Benjamin

Hoping to stay in fifth grade forever by refusing to hand in his homework, Danny invents creative excuses for why his homework is perpetually missing, but his teacher and her magical talking dog devise a special plan.

Constructing School Success: The Consequences of Untracking Low Achieving Students

by Angela Lintz Lea Hubbard Irene Villanueva Hugh Mehan

Bolstering the academic success of low achieving students and providing a more egalitarian classroom setting are two constant challenges to our schools. This book describes the process of "untracking", an educational reform effort that has prepared students from low income, linguistic and ethnic minority backgrounds for college. Untracking offers all students the same academically-demanding curriculum while varying the amount of institutional support they receive. This book is a highly readable account of a successful school reform effort. It provides systematic research results concerning the educational and social consequences of untracking previously low achieving students, and will be of great importance to researchers in educational and social psychology.

Amber Brown is Not a Crayon

by Paula Danziger

A great read for kids.

Disguised as a Poem: My Years Teaching Poetry at San Quentin

by Judith Tannenbaum

Memoir of teaching poetry at a California prison. Includes some of the prisoners' poems.

A Boy I Once Knew: What a Teacher Learned from Her Student

by Elizabeth Stone

In 1995 Elizabeth Stone received an unexpected gift - a carton of notebooks, the journals of a former high-school student named Vincent. Dying of AIDS at the age of forty, Vincent willed his diaries to his former ninth-grade teacher, asking her to turn his life into a book. Stone weaves her own life story through excerpts from Vincent's diaries. As Vincent comes to terms with the deaths of friends and with his own approaching end, Stone is helped to make her own peace with loss and death as a part of life.

The World at His Fingertips a Story about Louis Braille

by Barbara O'Connor

Although this is a children's book, it is written in a style that will appeal to adults, as well. It is an interesting and very informative biography of Louis Braille, and includes a bibliography for further reading.

Molly's Pilgrim

by Barbara Cohen

Molly and her family have moved to America from Russia. her mother says they moved to find freedom. But the children in Molly's third grade class make fun of her accent and clothes. that doesn't seem like freedom to Molly at all. At Thanksgiving everyone has to bring a Pilgrim doll to class. The doll Molly's mother makes looks like a russian peasant girl. It doesn't look at all like the Pilgrims Molly has seen in her schoolbook. Molly is afraid she'll never fit in with her classmates now.

Stoner and Spaz

by Ron Koertge

FOR SIXTEEN-YEAR-OLD BEN BANCROFT a kid with cerebral palsy, no parents, and an overprotective grandmother, happiness is, watching Bride of Frankenstein for the umpteenth time.

Full-Court Pressure: A Year in Kentucky Basketball

by Dick Weiss Rick Pitino

A year in the life of the then-golden boy of college basketball, former Kentucky coach Rick Pitino.

What They Don't Teach You At Harvard Business School

by Mark H. Mccormack

Notes from a street-smart executive.

French School Sytem Elementary Curriculum (English Translation)

by French Ministry of Education Sylvie Lambert

English Translation of the official French Ministry of Education pre-elementary and elementary curriculum.

Wrightslaw: From Emotions to Advocacy - The Special Education Survival Guide

by Peter Wright Pamela Darr Wright

The Special Education Survivor Guide: A Must for Parents!

Lady from Savannah: The Life of Juliette Low

by Gladys Denny Shultz Daisy Gordon Lawrence

Based on extensive research, this is a detailed biography of Juliette Low and a portrait of her family and background. Known throughout her life as "Daisy," Low was born in Savannah, GA, in 1860 and grew up amid privilege and comfort. She married into the British aristocracy. In midlife, after her husband's death due to alcoholism, she determined that she wanted to make a contribution to the world and hurled herself into the British Girl Guide movement. In 1912 she brought the movement to the U.S. as the Girl Scouts. The book draws upon Low's rich correspondence and the letters and diaries of her parents and siblings. /

Louis Braille

by Stephen Keeler

a children's book about Louis Braille

Kirsten Learns a Lesson: A School Story (American Girls #2)

by Janet Shaw

Kirsten has a hard time in her new American school because she doesn't speak English very well. Miss Winston, her new teacher, is strict and not very understanding. Things get worse when Miss Winston comes to live with the Larson family. Kirsten's only escape is playing with her secret friend Singing Bird, the Indian girl. When Singing Bird suggests running away forever, Kirsten must decide where she belongs. Kirsten does learn some important lessons in school, but she learns something even more important about herself.

Teach Us (I Can Read! #6)

by Peggy Parish

Amelia Bedelia goes to the school to deliver a message, but the principal needs a teacher, and she is good with children. It was a most interesting day at school for the children. A delightful book.

The Craft of Teaching

by Kenneth E. Eble

This classic on college teaching offers fresh insights on how students learn and how to make the best use of the classroom for assignments, tests, grades and textbooks.

The Long Haul: an Autobiography

by Herbert Kohl Judith Kohl Myles Horton

In his own direct, modest, plain-spoken style, Myles Horton tells the story of the Highlander Folk School. A major catalyst for social change in the United States for more than sixty years, this school has touched the lives of so many people, Martin Luther King, Jr., Rosa Parks, Eleanor Roosevelt, and Pete Seeger. Filled with disarmingly honest insight and gentle humor, The Long Haul is an inspiring hymn to the possibility of social change. It is the story of Myles Horton, in his own words: the wise and moving recollections of a man of uncommon determination and dignity. [From the Book Jacket]

What Color Is Your Parachute? 2003 Edition

by Richard Nelson Bolles

The 2003 edition, revised and updated, of the best-selling job-hunting book in the world.

Good Moon Rising

by Nancy Garden

Lambda Literary Award winner Good Moon Rising is about two young women who fall in love while rehearsing a school play, realize they're gay, and resist a homophobic campaign against them.

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