This book focuses on essential skills and methodologies relevant to modern training assessments. It emphasizes practical techniques and effective strategies that enhance learning outcomes. By integrating contemporary approaches, it aims to equip readers with the tools needed to excel in various training environments, fostering both personal and professional development.
This textbook will help you unlock and access the great potential of corpus
linguistics for language learning.It provides step-by-step illustrated
examples to help learners, graduate students, and language instructors
visualize and understand the potential of corpus linguistics for language
learning.
Focusing on the essential interpersonal skills needed for effective interviewing and assessment, this guide offers practical insights for working with psychiatric patients. It emphasizes accessibility and engagement, making it suitable for both novices and experienced practitioners. The book aims to enhance understanding and application of clinical skills in real-world scenarios, fostering better patient interactions and outcomes.
Jimmy Wilson lives in London's East End, his father tending a barrow in Brick Lane, his mother taking in washing. We meet Jimmy playing in the streets as an eleven year old and again, after the war, twelve years later. Throughout the period he is infatuated with Pinkie, a mixed-race girl whose mother lives with the Indians, then starting to move into the Brick Lane area as Jews move out. For Jimmy, Pinkie offers a new world, where he can improve himself, wear better clothes, get a decent job. This is London's East End in the 1940s - polyglot, violent, poor. We visit 'the local', the blitz and an all-day wedding feast. A vibrant area, but for Jimmy despair awaits when even his father steals from him. And how will Pinkie get on in these changing times? Robert Poole was born in Stepney in 1923. He died in 1963 of an accidental overdose. London E1 was his only published novel and a rare, early fictional description of the new Asian settlement of the East End.
The only modernised version of Thomas Potts' seventeenth-century account of
the famous witch trials. Published to coincide with the 400th anniversary of
the Pendle Witch Trials of 1612.
Exploring the rich history of railways in Gravesend, the Hoo Peninsula, and the Isle of Grain, this illustrated work delves into the fascinating evolution of transportation in these regions. The narrative highlights the significance of the ancient riverside town and its surrounding areas, revealing how the landscapes between the Thames and Medway Rivers have influenced military and industrial railways. The book captures the unique character of these low-lying areas with their expansive skies, showcasing their integral role in railway history.