Reading Program designed for students grade 5 - adult. Instructional level 2.6-4.5. Includes consumable activity sheets and stories contained in the Level II Teaching Guide.
Reading program designed for students grade 5-adult. Recommended instruction tool for Levels I-V. Includes program assessment, overview and description, instructions for implementing over 64 individual & cooperative learning activities, glossary of terms & the following pages that may be reproduced: program assessment, 8 rubrics, 4 rubric checklists, 5 progress charts.
Reading program designed for students grade 5-adult. Instruction Level: 4.6-6.5. Includes compound words, vowels controlled by r, diphthongs, past-present-future, suffixes beginning with a vowel, sound patterns, 107 activity sheets, and 10 stories.
Reading program designed for students grade 5 through adult. Instruction level: 2.6-4.5. Includes 181 sight words, contractions, consonant digraphs and trigraphs, vowel digraphs, 76 activity sheets, and 6 stories.
Sugar Legowski-Gracia wasn't always fat, but fat is what she is now at age seventeen. Not as fat as her mama, who is so big she hasn't gotten out of bed in months. Not as heavy as her brother, Skunk, who has more meanness in him than fat, but she's l
This book explains and assesses the ways in which micro, welfare and benefit-cost economists view the world of public policy. In general terms, microeconomic concepts and models can be seen to appear regularly in the work of political scientists, sociologists and psychologists. As a consequence, these and related concepts and models have now had sufficient time to influence strongly and to extend the range of policy options available to government departments. The central focus of this book is the 'cross-over' from economic modelling to policy implementation, which remains obscure and uncertain. The author outlines the importance of a wider knowledge of microeconomics for improving the effects and orientation of public policy. He also provides a critique of some basic economic assumptions, notably the 'consumer sovereignty principle'. Within this context the reader is in a better position to understand the 'marvellous insights and troubling blindnesses' of economists where often what is controversial politically is not so controversial among economists.