One of the challenges in higher education is helping students to achieve academic success while ensuring their personal and vocational needs are fulfilled. In this updated edition more than thirty experts offer their knowledge in what has become the most comprehensive, classic reference on academic advising. They explore the critical aspects of academic advising and provide insights for full-time advisors, counselors, and those who oversee student advising or have daily contact with advisors and students.
Rich Dad's Advisors: The ABC's of Building a Business Team That Wins: The Invisible Code of Honor That Takes Ordinary People and Turns them Into a Championship Team
Rich Dad's Advisors: The ABC's of Building a Business Team That Wins: The Invisible Code of Honor That Takes Ordinary People and Turns them Into a Cha
Great champions in sports, business and even families have one thing in common. It's a legitimate secret weapon. It is something that lies deep in the genetic code of winning organizations. It appears when pressure is high, when the stakes are critical and when everything is on the line. They know how to work as a team.
Networking with Millionaires... and Their Advisors
In The Millionaire Next Door, Tom Stanely identified the millionaires around you. In the Millionaire Mind, he told you how they think. Now, he tells you how to get their business.
The Nature of Learning: Using Research to Inspire Practice
This book is essential reading for all those interested in knowing what research has to say about how to optimise learning in classrooms, schools and other settings. It aims, first and foremost, to inform practice and educational reform. It will be of particular interest to teachers, education leaders, teacher educators, advisors and decision makers, as well as the research community.
Rich Dad's Advisors: The ABC's of Real Estate Investing An excellent example of the helpful financial audios produced by Robert
Kiyosaki's Rich Dad company, Garrett Sutton's can-do lesson is an
excellent lesson on how to rise above debt. He provides a largely
sympathetic lesson on why people dig such holes for themselves and why
creditors let them. The information is nicely condensed and includes
illustrations that people at all intellectual levels will connect with.
The writing and the matter-of-fact reading are proactive--he doesn't
celebrate or condemn anyone's goofy money decisions. Know yourself, get
your attitudes and behavior under control, and then use the author's
formulas and action steps to wrestle your credit report, account by
account, back into something respectable