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Is a bully harassing your readers at school? Mismanaged conflict can lead to damaged relationships, mistrust, and hostility. You can't change how you feel when someone says or does something you disagree with, but you can control how you react. Using real-life examples and quotations, this book discusses the causes and effects of conflict and provides research-based information on how to resolve it. Readers take a quiz to discover their communication style, and take the first steps to improve how they deal with conflict so they can begin to mend their relationships.
"Collection of essays on the contemporary educational experience of girls and women"--Back cover.
Teens have commonly shared experiences with jealousy. Everyone feels jealous or envious at one time or another, but if you constantly feel like the world is unfair to you, you may need some help keeping these negative emotions in check. This guidebook uses real-life examples and quotations to illustrate the causes and effects of irrational jealousy and envy and provides strategies and tips on how to overcome them.
Besides taking an emotional toll on you, loneliness can take a physical toll on your body as well. Studies show that lonely people have higher blood pressure, which can cause heart disease, than people who don't feel lonely. If you aren't a loner by choice, how can you cope? Using real-life examples and quotations, this book discusses the biological, emotional, and social effects of loneliness and provides research-based information on the best ways to overcome it. Readers take a quiz to find out if shyness is keeping them from making friends, and read tips on how to be more social.
Your heart is racing, your muscles stiffen, and you can't think clearly, you are so mad you want to scream and throw something. Exploding in anger is not the best way to deal with a problem, so how do you stop yourself from doing something you'll regret later? This guide provides the answers for your readers. It uses real-life examples and quotations to illustrate the causes of anger and its biological, emotional, and social effects. It also provides research-based information on how to handle it in a healthy way. Readers will take a quiz to find out if they anger easily and learn how to improve the situation.
Common stressors for young women include family trouble, issues with friends, academic and social aspects of school, insecurity, and life-changing events that come with becoming an adult. Using real-life examples and quotations, this book discusses what triggers stress and its effects on the body and mind. Readers take a quiz to determine their stress level, and learn healthful strategies to reduce the stress in their life.
In Writing Ethnographic Fieldnotes, Robert M. Emerson, Rachel I. Fretz, and Linda L. Shaw present a series of guidelines, suggestions, and practical advice for creating useful fieldnotes in a variety of settings, demystifying a process that is often assumed to be intuitive and impossible to teach. Using actual unfinished notes as examples, the authors illustrate options for composing, reviewing, and working fieldnotes into finished texts. They discuss different organizational and descriptive strategies and show how transforming direct observations into vivid descriptions results not simply from good memory but from learning to envision scenes as written. A good ethnographer, they demonstrate, must learn to remember dialogue and movement like an actor, to see colors and shapes like a painter, and to sense moods and rhythms like a poet. This new edition reflects the extensive feedback the authors have received from students and instructors since the first edition was published in 1995. As a result, they have updated the race, class, and gender section, created new sections on coding programs and revising first drafts, and provided new examples of working notes. An essential tool for budding social scientists, the second edition of Writing Ethnographic Fieldnotes will be invaluable for a new generation of researchers entering the field.
Love can be both the best thing and worse thing to happen to you. Maybe you can't seem to find it at all. Whether you're too afraid to approach your crush or you've been recently dumped by your lover, what do you do when you feel unloved? This book discusses the ups and downs of romance, and provides research-based information on the best ways to deal with crushes, dating, relationships, and breakups. Readers take a quiz to figure out if what they have is the real thing or if it's not right for them.
Parent-focused interventions impact primarily on families living in disadvantaged communities, but there has been relatively little research into the challenges of bringing up children in these environments. Parenting and Children's Resilience in Disadvantaged Communities explores how families living in these communities manage parent-child relationships during the middle childhood. Based on two linked studies, it examines the experiences and perspectives of parents and children living in disadvantaged communities in the West of Scotland, and highlights their points of view on the stresses and risks they face and the ways in which they deal with them. This book offers insights for practitioners and policy-makers working in parenting, social exclusion and young people.
Aristocratic parents, academic brilliance, smouldering romance with the prettiest girl on campus, a God-given gift that enables him to perceive people with an aura of colour -- growing up in the garden city of Bangalore in the sedate seventies, teenager Karan has everything going for him. At thirty-five, swept away by the unforgiving culture of Los Angeles, Karan s life is in shambles. The women he loved have deceived him; Dolly, the child he parented is taken away; his God-given gift is gone. Karan is penitent he once humiliated Danny, a friend who wanted to be much more. Seeking atonement, Karan returns to Bangalore, the burgeoning silicon megalopolis of the post-liberalization nineties. Living in the ancestral house, haunted by memories of the debacled death of his parents, he faces a new fear-- of being afflicted by promiscuous Lila s unfulfilled wanderlust. Karan reconnects with Arjun, Aarti, and Indu, rekindling the flames of friendship and love, trust and betrayal, and hope and despair. When tracing the whereabouts of Danny leads to a startling discovery, Karan must confront the truth through a complex interplay of agony, forgiveness and grief. Can Karan redeem himself? Does the love he always chased find him?