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1000 tulosta hakusanalla Benjamin Gray

Joyful Together

Joyful Together

Georgie Gray; Michelle Wallace; Benjamin Kearney

Institute of Family and Community Impact
2024
pokkari
OhioGuidestone's mission is to provide pathways for growth, achievement, and lifelong success. Our behavioral health services use innovative intervention methods to treat children, youth, adults, and families experiencing mental health concerns. We also provide services related to addiction recovery, foster care, job training, and more. We know in our hearts that when we care for others, we are stronger. The Institute of Family and Community Impact combines care and compassion with advanced clinical science to help chart a better path for children, adults, and families in need. We invite those who make policy and program decisions and those who fund programs and services to join us in this mission. It's time to focus collective resources on innovative approaches that make a meaningful difference.
Plough Quarterly No. 42 – Educating Humans

Plough Quarterly No. 42 – Educating Humans

Meir Soloveichik; Grace Hamman; Peter Gray; Claude Wilkinson; Alex Sosler; Brit Frazier; Phil Christman; Stephanie Ebert; Patrick Tomassi; Benjamin Crosby; Marianne Wright; Frederick K. S. Leung; Paul Coleman

PLOUGH PUBLISHING HOUSE
2024
nidottu
Education has become too narrowly focused on academic success and future earning potential. But creative schools and individual teachers are finding ways, new and old, to reverse this trend. From kindergarten to university, writers in this issue of Plough step back to look at education as the holistic task of forming healthy, responsible, passionate humans, and share success stories from the front lines. On this theme: Alex Sosler on innovative schools where students learn a trade and study the humanities. Brit Frazier on becoming a local volunteer firefighter. Peter Gray on why free play is essential. Anthony Garces-Foley on why he chose to teach in a public school. Stephanie Ebert on reading children scary fairy tales. Patrick Tomassi on Lernvergnugenstag, when teachers get to teach what inspires them. Tim Maendel on a public high school that raises deer and fish. Phil Christmas on why everyone still needs literature. Benjamin Crosby on how Christian teaching gets passed on. Frederick K. S. Leung on why math is not merely instrumental. Also in this issue: Rabbi Meir Soloveichik on hearing God in the subway. Grace Hamman on Sister Penelope, mentor to C. S. Lewis. Paul Coleman on religious persecution in Nicaragua and Finland. Reviews of Edwidge Danticat’s We’re Alone, John Inazu’s Learning to Disagree, and H. G. Parry’s The Magician’s Daughter. New poems by Claude Wilkinson. Plough Quarterly features stories, ideas, and culture for people eager to apply their faith to the challenges we face. Each issue includes in-depth articles, interviews, poetry, book reviews, and art.
Compensation Innovation

Compensation Innovation

Timothy B Corcoran; August Aquila; John Chisholm; Paul Lippe; Dan O’Day; Rebecca Holdredge; Arthur G Greene; Simon Nash; Benjamin Viney; Polina Pavlova; Nina Gray

Ark Group
2018
nidottu
Commentators have argued for many years that law firms need to move forward from their traditional, seniority-based compensation systems. But it's not enough to simply add performance-related elements at the edges of these. Shifting generational-based attitudes; changing career aspirations; increasingly demanding clients; and pricing innovation and development in the range of benefits that can be offered (both financial and non-financial) all conspire to urge firms to rethink how their compensation system operates at all levels, across the whole firm. By reviewing these emerging factors, Compensation Innovation: An in-depth exploration into the future of law firm compensation aims to inspire law firms towards future proofing their compensation systems so that they continue to deliver results as their partnerships age. Exploring also the interplay between compensation and succession planning, and compensation and lateral hiring, the authors keep one eye to the future.
Benjamin

Benjamin

University of Chicago Press
1989
nidottu
Walter Benjamin (1896-1940) has been called by Hannah Arendt the "greatest critic of the century." While an increasing number of Anglo-American literary critics draw upon Benjamin's writings in their own works, their colleagues in the philosophical community remain relatively unacquainted with his legacy. In the European intellectual world, by contrast, Benjamin's critical epistemological program, his philosophies of history and language, and his aesthetics have long since become part of philosophical discourse. The present collection of articles, many of which were contained in earlier versions in the Winter 1983 special issue of the journal The Philosophical Forum, initiates the project of establishing Benjamin's importance to philosophy. A balance of original work by Benjamin and important commentary on his works, this volume includes the crucial chapter from Benjamin's magnum opus The Arcades Project, his "Program of the Coming Philosophy," and "Central Park," as well as essays by leading scholars (including Theodor W. Adorno, Leo Lowenthal, and Rolf Tiedemann) that treat single philosophical themes and relate his ideas to those of other thinkers such as Gadamer, Goodmann, and Rosenzweig. Gary Smith's introduction to the volume provides an extremely useful and sophisticated entrée for readers unaccustomed to the breadth of Benjamin's philosophical allusions, as well as an informative summation of the contents of the volume. This book will be of interest to philosophers, literary theorists, art historians, anthropologists, and other social scientists.
Benjamin

Benjamin

Chico Buarque

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
1998
nidottu
Photographic model turned minor actor Benjamin Zambraia feels mocked by his spurious sort of fame. He is also haunted by Castana Beatriz, a love he lost 30 years before, but whose double has begun to crop up around town. Could Arieta Muse be Castana's daughter?
Benjamin

Benjamin

Aaron Powell

Lulu.com
2013
sidottu
The harsh winter and great outdoors of upstate New York provide Benjamin with the only solace from an otherwise agonizing existence. His mother's abusive alcoholic boyfriend, the bully on the bus, and a Math teacher who pays a little too much attention to schoolboys are slowly chipping away at his dignity and feelings of self-worth. Benjamin clings to any sense of normalcy, until a series of escalating events drives him to the very edge of suicide. He begs God for help-a divine intervention-but his prayers go unanswered until he has an epiphany: God helps those who help themselves.
Benjamin

Benjamin

Barbie Bellinger

AuthorHouse
2004
pokkari
Benjamin is a talented seven year old artist who was given the gift of clairvoyance from God to help his family and friends cope with tragedies from the past and tragedies yet to come. Benji's older brother Billy and Billy's best friend Trevor are jealous of Benji's artistic ability until he shows them how he envisions a picture on the canvas. Together, the three of them create a painting and use it to locate a missing toddler. Through Benji's gift of foresight, God informs him about a death in the family in the not-so-distant future. Benji has accepted this to be true, but will his family?