Creative Bead Jewelry: Weaving, Looming, Stringing, Wiring, Making Beads
“One of the more...stylish beading books to appear recently. ...Taylor covers barebones information and guidance initially, then...builds up the reader’s knowledge and confidence by introducing progressively more difficult tasks, methods, and designs. Included are color photographs of results, black-and-white illustrations of techniques, and materials lists.” —Booklist.
Using the latest neuroscience research to enhance literacy instruction Wiring the Brain for Reading introduces teachers to aspects of the brain's functions that are essential to language and reading development. Marilee Sprenger, a specialist in learning and the brain, provides practical, brain friendly, strategies for teaching essential skills like phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension. The author's innovative approach aligns well with the Common Core State Standards for English Language Arts and is designed to enhance students' motivation and excitement in reading.
This manual is packed with invaluable advice for anyone fixing, extending, decorating, renovating or building their home or garden. Whether you want to know how to rewire your house, repair a faulty ball valve or wallpaper a stairwell, it's all here. The completely up-to-date text reflects new legislation, including the latest wiring requirements (Part P of the Building Regulations). All Projects involving new wiring work show the new electrical cable core colours. Clear symbols indicate electrical installation work that has to be notified to the local authority Building Control department.
Home wiring is serious business That’s why, especially if you’re not an electrician, you need the clear, well-ordered guidance in this book--the same one you may have seen in your father’s toolbox. Now fully updated to cover home networking and other 21st century developments, this all-new edition gives you the guidelines, rules, and step-by-step instructions you need to do the job safely and with confidence.
For years, the popular press and military pundits have misunderstood and ridiculed the electronic wall. Neither its sophistication nor the number of allied and civilian lives it saved during the Vietnam War are well known. The story can now be told of how military and civilian technicians, sitting in darkened rooms in a faraway country, monitored one of the most sophisticated electronic sensing systems invented. Working with electronic signals generated hundreds of miles from their computer screens, these technicians tracked the progress of enemy vehicle and troop movements flowing from North Vietnam, through Laos and Cambodia, and to destinations as distant as southern South Vietnam.