Age-Right Play

Age-Right Play

Author: Susan L. Lingo

Publisher:

Published: 2008-05-01

Total Pages: 112

ISBN-13: 9780976069645

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Play is serious business! And with the help of the interactive activities, games, songs, imaginative role playing, and more included in Age-Right Play, you'll have loads of playtime learning to offer your young children. With Age-Right Play, you'll discover how children at different ages learn best and what activities and games nurture life skills, explore developmental stages, and recognize the importance of building life-skills socially, verbally, emotionally, creatively, physically, and cognitively. Give infants, toddlers, preschoolers, and kindergartners a jump-start on developing important skills to help them grow!


Making Play Just Right: Unleashing the Power of Play in Occupational Therapy

Making Play Just Right: Unleashing the Power of Play in Occupational Therapy

Author: Heather Kuhaneck

Publisher: Jones & Bartlett Learning

Published: 2022-05-19

Total Pages: 505

ISBN-13: 1284262901

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At the heart of Making Play Just Right: Unleashing the Power of Play in Occupational Therapy is the belief that the most effective way to ensure pediatric occupational therapy is through incorporating play. The Second Edition is a unique resource on pediatric activity and therapy analysis for occupational therapists and students. This text provides the background, history, evidence, and general knowledge needed to use a playful approach to pediatric occupational therapy, as well as the specific examples and recommendations needed to help therapists adopt these strategies.


Human Rights in the Age of Platforms

Human Rights in the Age of Platforms

Author: Rikke Frank Jorgensen

Publisher: MIT Press

Published: 2019-11-19

Total Pages: 391

ISBN-13: 0262039052

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Scholars from across law and internet and media studies examine the human rights implications of today's platform society. Today such companies as Apple, Facebook, Google, Microsoft, and Twitter play an increasingly important role in how users form and express opinions, encounter information, debate, disagree, mobilize, and maintain their privacy. What are the human rights implications of an online domain managed by privately owned platforms? According to the Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, adopted by the UN Human Right Council in 2011, businesses have a responsibility to respect human rights and to carry out human rights due diligence. But this goal is dependent on the willingness of states to encode such norms into business regulations and of companies to comply. In this volume, contributors from across law and internet and media studies examine the state of human rights in today's platform society. The contributors consider the “datafication” of society, including the economic model of data extraction and the conceptualization of privacy. They examine online advertising, content moderation, corporate storytelling around human rights, and other platform practices. Finally, they discuss the relationship between human rights law and private actors, addressing such issues as private companies' human rights responsibilities and content regulation. Contributors Anja Bechmann, Fernando Bermejo, Agnès Callamard, Mikkel Flyverbom, Rikke Frank Jørgensen, Molly K. Land, Tarlach McGonagle, Jens-Erik Mai, Joris van Hoboken, Glen Whelan, Jillian C. York, Shoshana Zuboff, Ethan Zuckerman Open access edition published with generous support from Knowledge Unlatched and the Danish Council for Independent Research.


The Mason's Wife

The Mason's Wife

Author: Julie Isard-Brown

Publisher: novum pro Verlag

Published: 2016-06-30

Total Pages: 406

ISBN-13: 3990481177

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Walter McWilliam asks his grandmother, Sarah McWilliam where she grew up. She then tells her story, from when she helped her mother, Mary Foulkes, a midwife. Through midwifery she meets her future husband, Robert McWilliam, a stonemason from Scotland. His wife, Agnes, dies after giving birth to their third child; the baby also dies a few days later. Sarah takes on the role of nanny to Robert's two children and finally marries him, giving him four more children. The family move up to Scotland, where two more children are born. Robert dies after getting into a fight defending his daughter Mary's honour, leaving a devastated Sarah in Scotland. The story ends with the parish of Robert's birth, Kirkmaiden, paying Lesmahagow to keep Sarah off the streets.