Community Kid

Community Kid
Author: Kenny Lenox
Publisher: Benjamin Bott
Total Pages: 111
Release: 2015-02-26
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN:

Kenny grows up in, and eventually leaves, a matriarchal Christian cult, but now he misses all his friends. Should Kenny return? His hilarious and sometimes dark memories are woven together with vignettes from his dysfunctional life in the outer world.

Where Do I Live?

Where Do I Live?
Author: Neil Chesanow
Publisher: Barron's Educational Series
Total Pages: 56
Release: 1995
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN:

Part of being a child is wondering. This charming book uses easy words and color illustrations to explain to children exactly where they live. Crenshaw starts with a child's room, in his or her home, neighborhood, town, state, and county-then moves out to the planet Earth, the solar system, and the Milky Way. From there, children trace their way home again.

Online Community Management For Dummies

Online Community Management For Dummies
Author: Deborah Ng
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Total Pages: 338
Release: 2011-11-29
Genre: Computers
ISBN: 1118099176

Learn to manage, grow, and communicate with your online community Online community management is a growing profession and companies are investing in online communities in order to gain consumer insights into products and to test new products. An effective and dedicated community manager is essential to engage and manage a successful online consumer community. Clear coverage shares tips for dealing with customers and fans through Twitter, Facebook, forums, and blogs. A practical approach shows you how to ensure that visitors to your site are satisfied, kept happy, and return. You'll explore the various types of online communities and benefit from learning an assortment of tips and tools that will help you stand out above the competition, attract more visitors and gain the attention of potential advertisers and investors. Addresses the role of the community manager, the core community management tasks, and how to create an online community. Highlights ways to build relationships within your community, evaluate return on investment, and handle and respond to criticism. Offers advice for establishing policies and transparency and encouraging community interaction.

The Self-Motivated Kid

The Self-Motivated Kid
Author: Shimi Kang
Publisher: Penguin
Total Pages: 352
Release: 2015-08-18
Genre: Family & Relationships
ISBN: 039918497X

Winner of the 2015 USA Book News International Book Award for Parenting and Family In this inspiring book, Dr. Shimi Kang, a Harvard-trained child and adult psychiatrist and an expert in human motivation, provides a guide to the art and science of encouraging children to develop their own internal drive and a lifelong love of learning. Drawing on the latest neuroscience and behavioral research, Dr. Kang shows why pushy, hovering "tiger parents" and permissive "jellyfish parents" actually hinder self-motivation. She proposes a powerful new parenting model: the intelligent, joyful, highly social dolphin. Dolphin parents focus on maintaining balance in their children's lives to compassionately yet authoritatively guide them toward lasting health, happiness, and success. The mother of three children and the daughter of immigrant parents who struggled to give their children the "best" in life—Dr. Kang's mother could not read, her father taught her math while they drove around in his taxicab, and she was never enrolled in a single extracurricular activity—Dr. Kang argues that often the simplest "benefits" parents give their children are the most valuable. Combining irrefutable science with unforgettable real-life stories, The Self-Motivated Kid walks readers through Dr. Kang's four-part method for cultivating self-motivation. She argues that by trusting our deepest intuition about what is best for our kids, we will allow them to develop key traits—adaptability, community-mindedness, creativity, and critical thinking—to empower them to succeed and thrive in our increasingly competitive and complex world.

Program Plan

Program Plan
Author: United States. Bureau of Justice Assistance
Publisher:
Total Pages: 240
Release: 1997
Genre: Crime prevention
ISBN:

Wakefield

Wakefield
Author: Andrei Codrescu
Publisher: Open Road Media
Total Pages: 232
Release: 2015-09-08
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1504019881

A modern-day Faust embarks on a wild romp through the peculiar and preposterous American landscape When the Devil shows up in Wakefield’s living room to announce that his time is up, the bookish “de-motivational” speaker tries to strike a deal. The Devil agrees to prolong Wakefield’s life—for now—on the condition that within the next year he finds a more authentic existence. For Wakefield, who is estranged from his family, nearly friendless, and excellent at his job of lowering expectations in a positivity-crazed world, living “authentically” is a tall order. But he will try: an extra 12 months might be worth it. Wakefield’s bargain sets in motion a cross-country quest to find his life’s purpose. Along the way, he encounters an array of all-American weirdness from plastic surgeons and sadomasochistic strippers to phony New Age yoga gurus and billion-dollar tech start-ups. Codrescu’s astute observations and quick wit illuminate the comedy found in our national culture of narcissism and self-improvement.

Popular Modernity in America

Popular Modernity in America
Author: Michael Thomas Carroll
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Total Pages: 260
Release: 2000-09-28
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 0791491854

Does technology alter our ways of being in and perceiving the world, or does it merely serve as a conduit for predetermined patterns of culture? In addressing this question, Popular Modernity in America examines a broad range of related cultural and technological phenomena—from Bing Crosby to Ice Cube, from the invention of the telegraph to the celebratory heralding of the internet in the 1990s—that have helped shape American popular culture over the past 150 years. Throughout, it avoids the binaries that label popular culture as inherently liberatory or subtly oppressive, arguing instead for the triadic relationship of experience, technology, and myth, each of which has an active role to play in how we interact with popular culture.