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The book is called "Implementing Standards-Based Mathematics Instruction: A Casebook for Professional Development". As the title indicates, it contains a number of "cases" for teachers to study and discuss, as they learn to implement high-level mathematics tasks successfully. The strength of the book is that it is organized around QUASAR's "Mathematical Tasks Framework". This framework trains teachers to analyze mathematics tasks as being at any of a number of levels: Doing Mathematics; Procedures With Connections; Procedures Without Connections; Unsystematic Exploration; Nonmathematical Activity.
QUASAR has found that tasks tend to degrade, i.e., they can be designed at a high level ("doing mathematics" or "procedures with connections") but migrate to a "lower" level either when the teacher initially sets up the lesson, or as the lesson procedes (the "implementation" phase). Their data (which I've seen in other studies, not this case-book) demonstrates that student achievement is enhanced when the task is designed, set up, and IMPLEMENTED at a high level. The case-book describes factors that cause a high-level task either to be implemented at a high level, or to degrade. Then, it provides cases (i.e., classroom teaching episodes described in great detail)in which one or the other happens, and helps teachers analyze why. Not only are the cases themselves very useful for learning: the process of analyzing the cases gives teachers the skills they need to analyze their OWN lessons.
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If you never read another Christmas regency novella, may I recommend Mary Balogh's "The Porcelain Madonna". This exquisitely written (what else would you expect from Mary Balogh?), emotionally tender and moving story is the best I have ever read in the Christmas setting, either contemporary or historical. The painfully tragic story of the difficult, prickly but kind hearted Darcy Austin, the Earl of Kevern, and the gentle, sympathetic Julie Bevan, is full of healing, joy, compassion and love. Their personal "go between", the little boy from the slums, Charlie Cobban, is also a memorable character whose family, through the birth of yet another mouth to fill, brings real peace and healing to the bereaved Earl.
I simply cannot speak highly enough of this charming little story - it is the sort you will want to turn to again and again when you need a little inspiration and comfort.
The other stories are also good; I was quite surprised by Emma Lange's as I don't know her and she presented a well written study of a large family which is mindful of Georgette Heyer's "A Civil Contract". Marjorie Farrell is a favourite of mine; she writes very well and her contribution, "Christmas Rose" tells a poignant story of a couple who have drifted apart through the curse of infertility (told within the proper context of the times and painfully realistic). How a foundling child first brings them together, then drives a wedge between them and then ultimately brings them peace and joy is also a wonderfully heartwarming illustration of what Christmas really means.
I do recommend this collection. It's worth the effort to obtain an out of print copy. What a star is Mary Balogh!
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My favorite character was Peggoty Small. I like her becuase she told Oliver Toliver what she tought. She wasn't afriad to tell him about her feelings, she just told him flat out what she thought. Even though she hurt Oliver's feelings, she old him anyways because she thought he should know the truth. This book teaches kids how to make friends, and how to share what you have with others.
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"I am certain that my early beginnings and the paths I traveled . . . have opened my heart to the misery and pain of others," says Katherine Scherzer Wenger in conversation with Marjorie Agosin in her book UNCERTAIN TRAVELERS. Wenger, born in Romania in 1950, arrived in New York in 1963 and is now a psychotherapist in Boston. Although her family survived World War II and she was born after the war was over, that struggle for survival still dominates her life. "Though not having directly gone through the Holocaust, I believe that the reverberations of that event resonate in our soul if not in our conscious mind," she says. "There is still a longing in me to find a meaningful way of living a Jewish life." It is this experience of exile and identity that Agosin explores in her mesmerizing account of her discussions with nine amazingly perceptive Jewish women immigrants to the United States. These women arrived in this country from Europe and Latin America between 1939 and the 1970s and each has become stellar in her chosen field despite daunting odds. Yet no matter how far they have traveled from their roots, their past colors their perceptions of the present. "I think the way many immigrants experience their lives is that they leave things behind. And once they leave the thing behind, it somehow disappears." says Susan Rubin Suleiman who was born in Budapest in 1939 and came to this country in 1950. "I think you have to be able to return and discover that those things don't disappear. People don't die just because you leave them." Suleiman is now a Professor of Romance and Comparative Literatures at Harvard and author of several books. Yet she is determined to preserve her memories. "We move on and yet maintain the connection to the past that we have now reestablished, or are trying to reestablish," she says. Agosin's own background makes her eminently suited to undertake the challenge of revealing the diverse experiences of exile. Although she was born in Maryland, her family returned to Chile before she was a year old and stayed there until they immigrated to Athens, Georgia in 1971. Agosin, a poet and writer who has published several previous books is now a professor of Spanish at Wellesley College. "Uncertain Travelers is a book of conversations with women like myself," says Agosin. "Educated Jewish women with complex itineraries who have traveled much and landed at last in the United States in the second half of the twentieth century." The main theme of this book is the challenges in each woman's journey from one culture to another. They discuss food, friendship, work, language, writing, anti-Semitism and politics with penetrating wisdom and each interview reflects the very personal response of the traveler to her own distinct set of experiences. The initial discussion is with Zezette Larsen, who recalls hiding from the Nazi's in a Catholic convent in Belgium, her deportation to Auschwitz-Birkenau and her eventual move to New York City in 1951. Despite barriers that would have defeated a lesser personality, Larsen managed to earn a masters degree in social work at Rutgers, spend time in Israel and then move to Massachusetts where she became the executive director of Jewish Community Housing for the Elderly in Newton. When she discusses her future now that she is in her late sixties she says, "I think there is a whole world out there that we have to take care of. And that, it really is so much easier not to, and to close your eyes. But that is so dangerous." The book launches the Brandies Series on Jewish women sponsored by the International Research Institute on Jewish Women. This series plans to illuminate the challenges and achievements of Jewish women throughout history. If Marjorie Agosin's book UNCERTAIN TRAVELERS is any indication of the quality of this project, it will be an invaluable contribution to the body of literature we have reflecting the contributions of Jewish women throughout history.
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In her preface, Agosin explains that this book commemorates the 50th anniversary of the United Nations Declaration of Human Rights. Agosin notes in the preface that poets "have become the voices that ask for compassion for the voiceless victims. They see beauty amidst the horror and find the courage to speak against injustice." The poems in this book exemplify this mission.
Some of the most striking selections in this book include "The Obedient Girl," about a girl who encounters the general who tortured her family; "The President," a bitter satire of military dictatorship; "El Salvador," the story of a Jewish woman from that troubled nation; and "Anne Frank and Us," in which the speaker notes that the iconic title figure "visits me often." I recommend this book to those interested in women's studies, Latin American literature, Spanish language poetry, or human rights issues.
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