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Relationship Development Intervention with Young Children: Social and Emotional Development Activities for Asperger Syndrome, Autism, PDD and NLD

Steven E. Gutstein, Rachelle K. Sheely

Relationship Development Intervention with Young Children: Social and Emotional Development Activities for Asperger Syndrome, Autism, PDD and NLD Steven E. Gutstein, Rachelle K. Sheely Amazon Price: $22.45
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By: Jessica Kingsley Publishers
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Subjects -> Health, Mind & Body -> Personal Health -> Children's Health -> Autism & Asperger's Syndrome

Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 7 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Excellent (Full of Activities) 5 out of 5 stars.
5 of 8 people found this review helpful.

Great for preschoolers with autism who are low to high functioning. You will come away with a least 5 new play activites here that will always work.

Intro to RDI 3 out of 5 stars.
4 of 4 people found this review helpful.

This book gives excellent advice to parents on ways for parents to help their autistic child develop socially. The principles are laid out clearly and activity descriptions are easy to follow. Unfortunately, for us, the beginner activities are nearly all too difficult for my child. As the book makes the objectives for each activity clear, parents can, if necessary, invent easier activities to meet them. I would recommend it but I understand the authors no longer do, saying that RDI has moved on since its publication and that the book no longer represents what RDI is about.

Editorial Review:

Friendship requires hard work even for the most able, and the odds are heavily stacked against those with an autism spectrum disorder. Designed for younger children, aged between 2 and 8, this set of activities emphasises foundation skills such as social referencing, regulating behaviour, coversational reciprocity and synchronized actions. This volume is also available as a set with "Relationship Development Intervention with Children, Adolescents and Adults" (ISBN 1-84310-720-1).

Wolf Brother (Chronicles of Ancient Darkness)

Michelle Paver

Wolf Brother (Chronicles of Ancient Darkness) Michelle Paver Amazon Price: $17.73
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By: Orion (an Imprint of The Orion Publishing Group Ltd )
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 56 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Really great book, slightly unusual setting 5 out of 5 stars.
1 of 1 people found this review helpful.

I read this book not too long ago, and I thought it was really great. If I've ever read a book set in this time, I think the Stone Age, then I've forgotten it. Wolf Brother is well written and believable. The story pulls you in, and keeps you reading until the end. It's a hard book to pick up, but once you pick it up it's even harder to put it down. If you start reading it will pull you in, making it nearly impossible to stop until you've finished. The characters are well developed; I especially liked the parts from Wolf's point of view. All in all, Michelle Paver has written a marvelous book that will leave readers frantically searching for the next book in the series.

Editorial Review:

Six thousand years ago. Evil stalks the land. Only twelve-year-old Torak and his wolf-cub companion can defeat it. Their journey together takes them through deep forests, across giant glaciers, and into dangers they never imagined.

In this page-turning, original, and spectacularly told adventure story, Torak and Wolf are joined by an incredible cast of characters as they battle to save their world, in this first book in the Chronicles of Ancient Darkness.

Fist Stick Knife Gun: A Personal History of Violence in America

Geoffrey Canada

Fist Stick Knife Gun: A Personal History of Violence in America Geoffrey Canada List Price: $20.00
By: Beacon Press
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 14 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

Rivetting exploration of the roots of violence 5 out of 5 stars.
6 of 8 people found this review helpful.

Canada grew up poor in the South Bronx in the '50s. Violence, then, as now, was a way of life. All boys fought - life was worse for those who refused. Violence and the rituals surrounding it established the social pecking order. In the preface to his memoir Canada says, "The difference is that we never had so many guns in our inner cities."

Canada's first memory of street violence came at age 4, when his two older brothers had a jacket stolen at the playground. The boys' mother sent them right back to fetch it, promising them a beating "ten times as bad as what that little thief could do to you," if they failed.

They left the house in tears and returned triumphant, with the jacket. Their mother sat them down and told them it was a lesson in not becoming a victim. The author, her youngest, was unconvinced.

Then a neighborhood boy who habitually refused to fight was "stretched" over a car and savagely beaten by a group of boys. "The lesson was brutal and unmistakable. No matter who you fought, he could never beat you that bad."

Canada's memoir is a thoughtful, moving portrayal of social behavior in a culture of violence. A quick study, Canada learned to use posturing, attitude and negotiation as well as his fists to minimize the number and severity of violent encounters.

But he is absolutely convinced that violence is a learned response, not innate. He and the other small boys, says Canada, were aghast at the prospect of fighting. Only fear of worse violence and a life of cowering in corners spurred them to fight.

Today, says Canada, the same imperatives operate. But guns have shattered the rituaized formality of the pecking order. Toughness is no longer determined by fighting skills or "heart" but by willingness to pull the trigger.
This is the book's most chilling precept. The streets are now ruled by those whose most important attribute is a lack of compunction about killing.

Canada's own experience as a gun carrier is a perfect illustration. Home from college he found a nearby street ruled by a gang of toughs so intimidating he would take a circuitous route to avoid them. So he bought a gun. Carrying it, he found his whole personality changed.

Instead of avoiding the block or even crossing the street he would swagger through the gang, his whole attitude provoking a challenge. But back at school in bucolic Maine he saw his behavior in a different light. Appalled at how close he'd come to shooting someone, he threw away the gun.

Those who don't leave the ghetto don't have the luxury of contemplation.

Canada has devoted his life to helping poor children and reducing street violence. Today he runs a program which offers classes and recreational activities which involve the whole community. The Rheedlen Center uses public school buildings, open 17 hours a day, in an effort to provide children and families with safety.

At the end of the book, Canada offers a program for solving the problems of violence in the inner cities. Chief among them is getting handguns off the streets by using buyback programs, registration at the place of manufacture (so any gun can be traced) and registration of ammunition.

Whether the reader agrees with his solutions or not, Canada's memoir is powerful testimony of a future of little hope without major change. It is also a riveting and convincing personal history.

Editorial Review:

Recreating his childhood world in the South Bronx and examining current crime legislation, the author offers an analysis of how a chain of events set in motion by 1960s drug laws has led to the child violence on the streets today. 40,000 first printing. Tour.

Amazing Grace: The Lives of Children and the Conscience of a Nation

Jonathan Kozol

Amazing Grace: The Lives of Children and the Conscience of a Nation Jonathan Kozol List Price: $23.00
By: Crown
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 67 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Out of Sight, Out of Mind 5 out of 5 stars.
3 of 3 people found this review helpful.

Jonathan Kozol has dedicated his work on bringing light to the inequalities that exist within our nation. These inequalities are best seen, unfortunately but not unexpectedly, along racial lines. "Amazing Grace: The Lives of Children and the Conscience of a Nation" is a book with a lot of questions, a lot of shocking information, but not a lot of answers; if only because the answers may not exist. It is a stunning look at the deep disparity between rich and poor within our nation.

Kozol focuses on the South Bronx ghetto of Mott Haven, the poorest borough in New York, clearly segregated from the middle and upper classes, where two-thirds of the population are Hispanic and one-third African-American. Through interviews with school children, teachers, ministers, and community members, Kozol paints a bleak picture of the equally bleak lives led by those who live in this area. He recounts stories of buildings where wires have been eaten through by rats that are the size of squirrels, of drugs being bought and sold openly on the streets (although the drug dealers have enough respect to break when school lets out), and of families too numerous to count who are being killed off one by one by AIDS. The way these children see the world is frightenly dead-on; they know when they're not wanted because it's proven to them everyday in the way they have to live.

"Amazing Grace" is not an easy read due to its topic matter. Kozol's style is matter-of-fact, made up of usually uninterrupted comments by those he's interviewed, sometimes with his questions thrown in, and his own comments and hypotheses as to how this can go on. But Kozol doesn't necessarily have answers or even blame. Surely, some blame has to go to a system that keeps the poorest people with the least chance for success segregated from others, a separation of the haves and have nots to the greatest degree. And certainly others would place the blame on the poor people themselves. Perhaps it's a combination of a lot of factors, not one or the other, but what is certain is that too little is being done (or maybe can be done) to make a difference before it is too late.

Editorial Review:

The author of Savage Inequalities, a New York Times best-seller, and Rachel and Her Children, winner of the Robert F. Kennedy Book Award, tells the stories of a handful of children who have--through the love and support of their families and dedicated community leaders--not yet lost their battle with the perils of life in America's most hopeless, helpless, and dangerous neighborhoods.

Child behavior

Frances Lillian Ilg

Child behavior Frances Lillian Ilg By: Dell
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 12 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Editorial Review:

The long-awaited revision of the bestselling and definitive child care manual from the internationally renowned Gesell Institute of Human Behavior.

Child Behavior

The classic child care manual from the
internationally renowned Gesell Institute

Since it was first published, Child Behavior has become classic reading for parents and professionals around the world. This authoritative guide offers the basics of child development, addressing exactly how children's bodies can affect their behavior. The authors not only discuss what to do to treat specific behavior problems but actually advise parents on how, in many instances, they can prevent many common and more serious problems. The authors' practical, accessible advice covers a variety of issues including:

  • Everyday activities such as eating, sleeping, and dreams
  • Intelligence and success in school
  • Stress and fears
  • Relationships with parents and siblings
  • Discipline
  • Talking about difficult subjects such as religion, death, adoption, and divorce
  • What to do if further help is needed, with a full explanation of diagnostic tests and treatments

The Tail of Emily Windsnap

The Tail of Emily Windsnap Amazon Marketplace: 6 new & used starting at $15.92

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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 53 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Perfectly Timed 4 out of 5 stars.
7 of 7 people found this review helpful.

*First things first, anyone who loves Harry Potter and thinks this book will be like it, is wrong. I found it completely different. (I myself don't care for HP). It was written differently and was about a totally different fantasy.*
I read this book with total fascination. I felt like I was going through the hardships with Emily Windsnap. The author could not have described the underwater terrain more clearly and I could really picture what was going on in my head. The feelings characters felt and expressions they made came naturallly to me when I read the descriptions. The author timed all of the dillemas, miracles, sad scenes, and action scenes just right. Even the feeling of suspense was there when you needed it! The tale is dramatic and encasing, I never doubted that what I was reading could actually happen. A perfectly timed, real, fun novel I hope you pick up.

Very poorly written book 1 out of 5 stars.
1 of 2 people found this review helpful.

As a teacher, I read several hundred children's and young adult books every year. This book was a huge disappointment. Poorly written with ridiculous situations that don't make sense (reading a paper book under the water? Not being able to scale an underwater wall? Has the author not heard of being able to SWIM over it?) and flat characters. There are some wonderful children's books out there about magical creatures. This is not one of them. :(

Actually, I should have known the book was bad. On the back cover, the only reviews are for the ARTWORK! The writing isn't even mentioned.

The Developing Person Through Childhood and Adolescence

Kathleen Stassen Berger, Ross A. Thompson

The Developing Person Through Childhood and Adolescence Kathleen Stassen Berger, Ross A. Thompson List Price: $86.95
By: Worth Pub
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 13 Average rating: 3.0 of 5

Not bad for a textbook! 4 out of 5 stars.
0 of 0 people found this review helpful.

I like how the author has broken down the different chapters. As with most textbooks there are a few areas that sort of drag on, especially the intro chapters, but mostly due to them giving you a background and history of Child Development. As you start breaking into the other chapters the information gets much more interested and it starts to read faster. I had to get this book for a class I was taking, but I found the information also useful in my personal life. All in all, not bad for a textbook!

book shipment 1 out of 5 stars.
0 of 0 people found this review helpful.

the book is STILL not here....exactly 1 month and 1 day later..this is ridiculous..im pissed

The Developing Person Through Childhood and Adolescence 1 out of 5 stars.
0 of 0 people found this review helpful.

Purchased book on Aug. 31st and as of Oct 2nd have not received it. Seller hasn't responded to my e-mail questioning the whereabouts of the book. At this point, I would prefer a refund.

Editorial Review:

This text presents theory, research, practical examples, and controversial issues in a way that should inspire students to think about development, addressing the individual's role in both the community and the wider world. Berger's academic background, focus on current research, writing style and commitment to students combine to make this textbook a useful teaching tool.

What My Mother Doesn't Know

Sonya Sones

What My Mother Doesn't Know Sonya Sones List Price: $18.60
By: Orion Children's Books (an Imprint of The Orion Publishing Group Ltd )
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 209 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

"What My Mother Dosent Know" Book Review 4 out of 5 stars.
0 of 0 people found this review helpful.

What My Mother Doesn't Know is a book based on a girl named Sophie and her boy problems. She is a curious 15 year old character, who doesn't know which boy to like. She doesn't feel very comfortable with a boy named Dylan that she has been currently going out with, while also having an IM relationship with someone she doesn't even know. But the real problem here is that a boy named Robin Murphy has caught her attention. Sophie has a desire to just be his friend because he seems so lonely, but he is too much of a loser to even talk to. While this whole charade is going on, Sophie accidentally end up dancing with a masked man at the prom, and is desperate to find who he is. On page 138 Sophie thinks "I don't have a clue who I'm dancing with, but our bodies are acting like old friends, as though they know something we don't know."

Sophie isn't doing all that well with her family relationship either. Her father doesn't seem to be around their home most of the time. It seems as if he doesn't appreciate them. Her mother doesn't trust her anymore because of a terrible act that Sophie committed. She keeps a little too many secrets from them with who she really wants to be with. In the end she does end up with someone surprising. "He's smiling through and through. And I am, too. Because everything's going to be all right". (pg, 259)

Sonya Sones writes this entertaining book in poem style. It does have a lot to do with many real life problems for teens. This book would be mostly directed towards seventh to eighth graders. Around 13 years of age. The genre of this book is fiction. It takes place in her school and around her town. The theme of this book is love. To know someone is to love someone. To love someone is to be with them.

Editorial Review:

Sophie Stein, fifteen, gets dumped, falls for a new boyfriend, outgrows him, searches for her Mr-Right-and-a-half and finds true love where she never thought to look. Sonya Sones' dazzling accomplished poems build up to a narrative that has you on the edge of your seat: so funny, poignant, and easy to read that you just keep turning the pages to find out what happens next. For anyone who has ever experienced the joys and anxieties of teenage love, this book is irresistible. 'Even in the severe limitations that the modern young impose upon their language, Sonya Sones finds poetry - the poetry of First Things...Hers is a voice that the literature of the young has been waiting for' Richard Peck, 2000 Newbery Award winner

The secret of childhood

Maria Montessori

The secret of childhood Maria Montessori By: Fides Publishers
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 6 Average rating: 3.5 of 5

The Secrets of 'The Secret of Childhood' 4 out of 5 stars.
55 of 57 people found this review helpful.

Since 1936, when her seminal work 'The Secret of Childhood' was first published, Maria Montessori has been the leading figure in promoting a holistic education approach to children of all ages. Concepts as radical as the three fundamental freedoms (the freedom to repeat work, the freedom to move around the classroom and the freedom to choose which work they want to do) that each child should have, blast forth form the pages like a breaking news story.

However, the 'secrets' in the book quickly surface as Montessori begins with a look at the traditional perception of the child. She believed that the child was going to be the major concern of the twentieth century and when the education systems that exist today are compared to those of the turn of the 20th century, it can easily be argued that she was right.

She does not end with feeble predictions, however, and goes on to talk of how adults have failed children and will continue to do so unless they change their attitude to children. For some this book will not turn out to be the rainbows and cuddly toys that they traditionally associate with books concerning young children! She pulls no punches in condemning those who have held children in such low regard for so long.

The psychological features present in the new born child, feature strongly in the early part of the book. Montessori cites the work of Hugo de Vries as a precursor to her work on 'Sensitive Periods', which are essentially, periods of time throughout the child's development where he is able to learn certain life skills. Once these periods are missed, it is unlikely that the child will be able to learn the skill, ever. These skills include speech, mobility and several others. From this snippet alone, it would seem that this work is very important to all parents, or people who are thinking about being parents.

Next there is a look at 'Order' and how important a well ordered environment is to the child. It is not as simple as putting everything away so that the child can not hurt him or herself with things or break things. Montessori believes that the child should be encouraged to explore the environment. She believes that the only real way that the child can do this, is if the environment is maintained so that the child can become familiar with its contents. The environment, she is careful to add, is not solely made up of the physical rooms and items, it is also made up of actions, sounds and everything that a child is exposed to.

The second part of the book focuses on how to educate the child. As with much that Montessori writes, there is a certain spirituality contained in the book that seems to help adults in their comprehension of the fact that the child is to be perceived as a whole being. Throughout the section that tells a brief history of the first school, there is clearly a more metaphyical nature to this approach of education.

The first school was opened in 1907, called Casa dei Bambini. The observations that Montessori took here are the basis for the Method she is famous for and also the overall essence of this book. Montessori, unlike most other educators, designed her classrooms to be 'hands-on' learning environments. She fashioned the equipment based on the work of 19th century education innovators, Jean-Marc Gaspard Itard and Edouard Séguin, with an emphasis on 'Sensorial' education and what she called 'Practical Life' exercises. (These exercises consisted of everyday tasks such as washing hands and buttoning coats, which she determined, led the children to higher independence). The materials were very didactic and allowed her to focus on the theory that she had of the child needing work for the hands.

In the next section, she discusses the observations that she was able to make from the children in this setting. As mentioned earlier, she determined that there were three essential freedoms that the child needed to have in order to be successful. These freedoms are interspersed with observations about various other psychological behaviors that the children displayed. Their propensity for 'order' astounded Montessori and soon she allowed them to put the materials away, instead of having the teacher of the classroom do it. This, seemingly, small incident and many more like it, are the makings of Montessori. Her focus on detail is what allowed her to see beyond what other adults had either failed to see or had chosen to ignore.

She continues with interesting information concerning the child's lack of attraction to toys that were placed in the room, due to their focus on the didactic materials that were present instead. She also discusses traditional rewards and punishment systems and how children are typically turned off and unaffected in the way that the system is designed to work. She writes instead, about 'Spontaneous Discipline' which she infers is directly related to the sense of order and the work for the hands.

She continues the controversial (in some circles) theme of the book that introduces the role of the child as that of 'worker'. She exponentially speaks of the instincts that the child shows for work and follows this with the differences between the adult's work and the work of the child. Throughout the whole book, the focus that Montessori puts on elevating the child to a higher plane than that of the adult, is constantly noticeable.

Her theories of inner growth through work are tied together in the last section also and we see the anthropological expertise that Montessori has brought to this study. She shows the steps that each of us go through to become an adult.

In recognizing the wisdom of this great observer of people, this book goes a long way to helping the argument that the child-focused approach is the finest way to create great adults from children.

Editorial Review:

Maria Montessori describes the child with warmth and the exactness of a scientist. She also discusses the array of materials and techniques needed to release his learning potential.

Understanding Children's Drawings

Cathy A. Malchiodi

Understanding Children's Drawings Cathy A. Malchiodi Amazon Price: $26.10
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 5 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Very helpful 5 out of 5 stars.
71 of 73 people found this review helpful.

I have recently completed the book in question and found it extremely helpful. It provided the basics that I can build on to understand children's drawings and perhaps children in general. I,at least have a fundamental idea of what to look for and how to interpret what is presented to me by a child. This book will not make one an over night expert on children's drawing (that takes time) but it does provide simple and understandable direction.

Editorial Review:

This practical resource demonstrates how all clinicians can broaden and enhance their work with children by integrating drawing into therapy. The book enables therapists to address the multidimensional aspects of children's art without resorting to simplistic explanations. Approaching drawing as a springboard for communication and change, Malchiodi offers a wealth of guidelines for understanding the intricate messages embedded in children's drawings and in the art-making process itself. Topics covered include how to assist children in making art, what questions to ask and when, and how to motivate children who are initially resistant to drawing. Assimilating extensive research and clinical experience, the book includes over 100 examples of children's work.

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