A series of short, accessible books for teachers who are new to ELT or who are looking for new creative ways of teaching with limited resources. Containing lesson plans for teaching elementary to intermediate level students, the activities are simple and adaptable and come complete with ideas for board work and pictures teachers can copy.
Areas covered include maths, geography, biology, history, music, art, and drama. This book is aimed at teachers, teacher trainees (including CELTA and Trinity Cert TESOL), and teacher trainers.
Colonial America 1543-1763 (Discovering U.S. History)
Added by: Maria | Karma: 3098.81 | Non-Fiction | 6 September 2010
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"Discovering U.S. History" spans the complex and varied history of the United States from prehistoric times to the present day. Each title brings to life the people and events that have shaped the nation through a clear and entertaining narrative, interesting boxed insets, and lively full-color and black-and-white photographs and illustrations. Students will find these books valuable for reports, prime supplements to textbooks, or simply interesting reading.
Black--favorite color of priests and penitents, artists and ascetics, fashion designers and fascists--has always stood for powerfully opposed ideas: authority and humility, sin and holiness, rebellion and conformity, wealth and poverty, good and bad. In this beautiful and richly illustrated book, the acclaimed author of Blue now tells the fascinating social history of the color black in Europe.
John Bunyan was a major figure in seventeenth-century Puritan literature, and one deeply embroiled in the religious upheavals of his times. This Companion considers all his major texts, including The Pilgrim's Progress and his autobiography Grace Abounding. The essays, by leading Bunyan scholars, place these and his other works in the context of seventeenth-century history and literature. They discuss such key issues as the publication of dissenting works, the history of the book, gender, the relationship between literature and religion, between literature and early modern radicalism...