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Success Guides are powerful learning/revision tools designed to help students remember key information easier and better. The books present KS3 content in a new highly visual approach, using unique non-linear designs. Each topic is presented on a double page spread using: - Full size diagrams with integrated text - Spider diagrams - Mind Maps - Flow charts The new KS3 editions have been organised into National Curriculum levels (3-6, or 5-7*/8) in order to cater for differentiated teaching patterns (setted classes) in schools and to reflect student levels of performance in KS3 National Tests.
Covers the topics needed for KS3 Science levels 5-7.
This revision guide for Key Stage 3 English contains in-depth course coverage and advice on how to get the best results in the Year 9 National Test. It has progress check questions and exam practice questions.
Presented in a clear and accessible way, the 'Key Stage 3 Success Workbooks' cover everything students need to know for Key Stage 3, providing different styles of questions to test students' knowledge on any given subject.
Lists range from using positive assessment to increase students self-esteem to explaining various forms of assessment.
This volume contains everything students need to know for Key Stage 3 English. The text is laid out in 'sound bite' boxes to aid recollection, with clearly labelled diagrams to add visual clarity and further demonstrate the subject matter.
This book offers a unique perspective on one of the deepest questions about the world we live in: is reality multi-leveled, or can everything be reduced to some fundamental ‘flat’ level? This deep philosophical issue has widespread implications in philosophy, since it is fundamental to how we understand the world and the basic entities in it. Both the notion of ‘levels’ within science and their ontological implications are issues that are underexplored in the philosophical literature. The volume reconsiders the view that reality contains many levels and opens new ways to understand the ontological status of the special sciences. The book focuses on major open questions that arise at the foundations of cognitive science, cognitive psychology, brain science and other special sciences, in particular with respect to the physical foundations of these sciences. For example: Is the mental computational? Do brains compute? How can the special sciences be autonomous from physics, grounded in, or based on, physics and at the same time irreducible to physics? The book is an important read for scientists and philosophers alike. It is of interest to philosophers of science, philosophers of mind and biology interested in the notion of levels, but also to psychologists, cognitive scientists and neuroscientists investigating such issues as the precise relation of the mental to the underlying neural structures and the appropriate approach to study it.