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Today’s Youth, Tomorrow’s Leaders is for parents, teachers, caregivers, directors, educators, administrators and all who work with children to encourage learning. This book has examples of effective practices in early childhood education from different countries worldwide. This book will emphasize the different ways that adults can make difference in the lives of children so that today’s children will be well nurtured and will become effective citizens in future. The structure of the book is adapted to the new Early Childhood Common Core. The book has case studies, illustrations, pictures, and tables to help the readers. Each chapter will also have a summary at the end with discussion questions.
Remember when body piercing was radical? Now it's another fad practiced by suburban kids. Retro sixties and seventies? Done that; the self-indulgent eighties is the decade of the moment. But what about the trends of tomorrow? How do you find out what's in store for the youth generation before it hits the mainstream? Listen to the people who make it their business to track the trends: Janine Lopiano-Misdom and Joanne De Luca of Sputnik, an innovative market research firm that examines today's alternative youth cultures for clues to tomorrow's mainstream trends and markets. Street Trends offers an engrossing, provocative look at the hidden centers of urban street cultures, identifies important new trends emerging from the streets and predicts how they will impact the culture at large. Take veganism. It's a good bet that this hot fringe trend will negatively affect the booming meat industry. And MTV? Its glory days are numbered as more and more suburban kids, following in the footsteps of their more hard-core urban counterparts, tune in to the more thoughtful Discovery Channel. The accuracy of Sputnik's predictions has earned them a client base that includes high-profile companies such as Reebok International, PepsiCo., Levis-Strauss, Burlington Industries, Shiseido International, and the National Football League Properties. Venturing deep into the fringe subculture, Lopiano-Misdom and De Luca identify the latest trends to emerge from the street: The Bionic Being--the urge to take their bodies and minds to another place through herbs, exercise, drugs, implants and clothing Freestyling--the no-rules approach to everything they do, with an emphasis on spontaneity and creativity DIY--do-it-yourself--and entrepreneurial creed that finds succeeds outside the confines of the corporation Technorganics--a new generation utilizing technology to create traditions, customs and a sense of family and community The Immaculate Perception--the ultimate in hygiene, whereby kids go to new lengths to protect themselves against germs, pollution and a stressful environment to reach their own "purtopia" Intriguing, enlightening and relentlessly fascinating, Street Trends is the pipeline to the underground that businesses need to anticipate the consumer markets of the future.
As Americans experiment with dismantling the nation's welfare system, clichés and slogans proliferate, ranging from charges that the poor are simply lazy to claims that existing antipoverty programs have failed completely. In this impeccably researched book, Rebecca Blank provides the definitive antidote to the scapegoating, guesswork, and outright misinformation of today's welfare debates. Demonstrating that government aid has been far more effective than most people think, she also explains that even private support for the poor depends extensively on public funds. It takes a nation to fight a problem as pervasive and subtle as modern poverty, and this book argues that we should continue to implement a mix of private and public programs. Federal, state, and local assistance should go hand in hand with private efforts at community development and personal empowerment and change. The first part of the book investigates the changing nature of poverty in America. Poverty is harder to combat now than in the past, both because of the changing demographics of who is poor as well as the major deterioration in earnings among less-skilled workers. The second part of the book delves into policies designed to reduce poverty, presenting evidence that many though not all programs have done exactly what they set out to do. The final chapters provide an excellent review of recent policy changes and make workable suggestions for how to improve public assistance programs to assure a safety net, while still encouraging poor adults to find employment and support their families.
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