To Kill a Mockingbird (Bloom's Modern Critical Interpretations)Published in 1960, and awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1961, "To Kill a Mockingbird" is required reading for many middle and high school students. The coming-of-age tale of its young narrator, Jean Louise "Scout" Finch, of Maycomb, Alabama, is interwoven with explorations of the issues of prejudice, racism, innocence, compassion, and hypocrisy. Libraries will welcome this indispensable and completely updated edition of Bloom's "Modern Critical Interpretations".
The author's objective was to provide participants of the Algebraic K-theory Summer School an overview of various aspects of algebraic K-theory, with the intention of making these lectures accessible to participants with little or no prior knowledge of the subject.
50 Activities for Creativity & Problem Solving
50 Activities For Achieving Change A complete guide outlining the process of accepting change, demonstrate the need for change, reducing conflict, improving communication skills and more. Training Objective Develop creative thinking Offer new approaches to problem solving
Do I Need It? or Do I Want It?: Making Budget Choices
Do you plan how much money you'll use to buy candy? Or how much you'll save for a new video game? Then you're budgeting! A budget is a plan for spending and saving. Budgets help people decide how to use their money wisely. What do you need to buy? What do you want? And how can you make a budget? Read this book to find out.
Rediscovering Biology was designed for high school biology teachers who have substantial knowledge of basic biology but who want to learn about important new discoveries of the last two decades. It was also designed so teachers could familiarize themselves with research methods and tools that will lead to new discoveries in the coming decade.