Transferring Learning to Behavior: Using the Four Levels to Improve Performance
Since its creation in 1959, Donald Kirkpatrick's four-level model for evaluating training programs - reaction, learning, behavior, and results - has become the most widely used approach to training evaluation in the corporate, government, and academic worlds. However, trainers today are feeling increased pressure to prove whether instruction is worth its cost. And calculating and presenting results (Step 4) becomes tricky when, despite training, workers aren't fulfilling Step 3: applying what they've learned to their behavior. This book takes on this age-old challenge, first examining why learned concepts don't make it into practice, then offering solutions that will work in the real world.
ESL Reading and Spelling Games, Puzzles, and Inventive Exercises
The games, puzzles, and exercises within this book will help teachers make the most effective use of their time in helping ESL students learn essential reading and spelling skills while improving their English at the same time.
Reading Tree is used to teach reading in 80% of primary schools. The stories within it are about much-loved Biff, Chip and Kipper, their friends and family, and the exciting adventures they have together.
Plutarch's Advice to the Bride and Groom and A Consolation to His Wife
Added by: Kahena | Karma: 11526.39 | Fiction literature | 12 December 2011
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Plutarch's Advice to the Bride and Groom and A Consolation to His Wife: English Translations, Commentary, Interpretive Essays, and Bibliography
While perhaps best known for his Lives, Plutarch also wrote philosophical dialogues that constitute a major intellectual legacy from the first century A.D. This collection presents two important short works from his writings in moral philosophy. They reveal Plutarch at his best--informative, sympathetic, rich in narrative--and are accompanied by an extensive commentary that situates Plutarch and his views on marriage in their historical context.
From the moment a baby first discovers those silly little things at the end of her feet the giggling starts and the fun never stops! Kids dig, squish, and splash their way through the many secrets of their toes.