Redo For Today
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GRE All the Quant
Written by our 99th percentile GRE instructors, Manhattan Prep’s GRE All the Quant features in-depth lessons covering the facts, rules, and strategies for every math question type and content area on the GRE. Note: We’ve got you covered for the updated GRE! When you create an account on our platform, you will gain access to digital supplements for the parts of the exam that have recently changed—and we’ll continuously update your digital materials for any future changes. (We’ll also tell you which parts of the books you can ignore!) This edition of GRE All the Quant has been reorganized to start you at the fundamentals and take you all the way through the hardest topics—start where you need and go as far as you need for your target score. We teach you not just the facts, formulas, and rules but also the strategies that will save you time and mental energy on the test—from estimation to testing cases to working backwards from the answers. Each chapter provides comprehensive subject matter coverage with numerous examples and thorough explanations to help you build confidence and content mastery. Mixed drill sets help you develop accuracy and speed. Every lesson, problem, and explanation was written by a 99th-percentile GRE instructor—we know how to earn a great score and we know how to teach you to do the same.
Parenting in the Third Stage
One minute you’re holding their hand … the next, they’re headed in the opposite direction, and you’re standing at the intersection, staring at a road sign announcing you have a teenager. Parenting in the Third Stage is your guide to pivoting when the old parenting map no longer works, and your teen is forging a path of their own. This guide is a hands-on, heart-centered journal packed with insights to help you reconnect when your teen pulls away, communicate when words don’t come easily, and show up bravely, calmly, and consistently. Inside, you’ll find: • dozens of weekly tools grounded in adolescent brain science, emotional regulation, and values-based parenting; • simple daily prompts to help you pause, reflect, and put ideas into action; • blueprints to communicate with clarity, empathy, and confidence. If you’ve ever thought, “Wait, where did my kid go?” or “I just want us to feel close again,” this journal is for you. Let this guide be your GPS for the wild turns and unexpected detours of raising a teen, so you can reconnect, regroup, and walk beside them with courage, no matter where the road leads.
How to Give Effective Feedback to Your Students
A teacher's feedback on student schoolwork can be a powerful force for learning--if it contains a helpful message and is delivered with certain considerations in mind. But what kind of content makes a feedback message helpful to a student? And what kinds of strategies work best for delivering feedback? In How to Give Effective Feedback to Your Students, Susan M. Brookhart answers these questions by describing important elements of feedback content (focus, comparison, function, valence, clarity, specificity, and tone) and strategy (timing, amount, mode, and audience). Grounded in what researchers have learned about effective feedback, the book provides practical suggestions and classroom examples that demonstrate what to do--and not do--to have a positive impact on students. In addition to general guidelines for good feedback, readers will learn what kinds of feedback work best in the various content areas, and how to adjust feedback for different kinds of learners, including successful students, struggling students, and English language learners. Done well, feedback has a two-pronged effect: it influences cognitive factors by helping students understand where they are in their learning and where they need to go next, and it influences motivational factors by helping students develop a feeling of control over their own learning. Taken together, these factors explain why learning how to give good feedback should be at the top of every teacher's to-do list.