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John Dabell

    Epitaph on a Beech Tree
    The Last Journey
    Games, Ideas and Activities for Primary Mathematics
    Classroom Gems: Games, Ideas and Activities for Primary Science
    Bowls
    Maths Problem Solving Ages 7-11
    • Teach children problem-solving strategies with these imaginative and creative maths problems. This book shows how once children have learned the different approaches they can become independent creative thinkers and systematically apply their skills. * Problems are set in creative contexts to engage and motivate children.

      Maths Problem Solving Ages 7-11
    • Bowls

      • 128pages
      • 5 heures de lecture
      3,7(11)Évaluer

      Provides practical advice that can help make you a better sportsperson whether you are learning the basic skills, discovering more advanced techniques or reviewing the fundamentals of your game.

      Bowls
    • Classroom Gems: Games, Ideas and Activities for Primary Science

      Games, Ideas and Activities for Primary Science

      • 384pages
      • 14 heures de lecture

      Designed to alleviate the workload of teachers, this resource offers ready-made science lesson ideas that are easily adaptable for different ability levels. It emphasizes engaging methods to make science more accessible and lively for students, ensuring a dynamic learning experience.

      Classroom Gems: Games, Ideas and Activities for Primary Science
    • This book aims to provide ready-made science lesson ideas that will considerably reduce the workload for many overburdened teachers. They can be easily adapted to suit varying levels of ability, and bring science to life. The structure of the book mirrors the QCA scheme of work.

      Games, Ideas and Activities for Primary Mathematics
    • Recording of songs to offer comfort in bereavement, accompanied by a book on the subject.

      The Last Journey
    • Epitaph on a Beech Tree is a love story set around the time of the Great War. It postulates the life of an invisible hero; just another everyman for whom all individual records have been lost. Ben Robinson, a miner who becomes a despatch rider during the war, can't accept the concept of duty as defined by populist notions of 'King, Country and Religion'. Even so, he serves with distinction at some of the most destructive battles in a three-year campaign, winning the Military Medal (MM). But when his sense of purpose is destroyed, he is left clutching at straws. After the war, his situation leads him into two, unfulfilling relationships, both of which, in different ways, help to re-establish his true, spiritual identity. The story is authorised by Divisional War Diaries and Records, and observations and anecdotes gathered by the author and his family. The fiction relies on perceptions of social and emotional characteristics which continue to inspire and bedevil attempts at personal, domestic, national and international well-being.

      Epitaph on a Beech Tree