Bemo's Ultimate Guide to Casper Test Prep


Book Description

BeMo's Ultimate Guide to CASPer(R) Test Prep is the most comprehensive resource for CASPer preparation. Written by former CASPer test raters, admissions committee members and award-winning scientists, this guide is a must-read for all applicants required to take the CASPer test. The guide includes proven strategies, sample questions and answers, two full length practice tests and access to a sample online test. Here is what is included in this book: how CASPer is really scored by CASPer raters BeMo's proven formula for acing any CASPer question, 17 proven strategies to prepare for and ace any CASPer test, 21 possible types of CASPer questions and how to successful answer each type of question, 12 difficult sample scenarios with expert analysis and answers, 2 additional full-length practice tests, a total of 108 sample CASPer questions, free sample online practice test, free access to BeMo's private online CASPer prep MasterMind group and additional resources, Over 180 pages of tips, strategies and advice from admission experts including former CASPer raters, former admissions committee members, and award-winning scientists BeMo(R), BeMo Academic(TM), BeMo Consulting(TM), BeMo Academic Consulting (TM), MMI SIM(TM), Get In Or Your Money Back(R) are trademarks of BeMo Academic Consulting Inc. CASPer(R) is an official mark of McMaster University ("McMaster") and a registered mark of Altus Assessments Inc. ("Altus"), which delivers CASPer. BeMo Academic Consulting Inc. ("BeMo") and this book, do not endorse nor affiliate with McMaster, Altus, nor CASPer, and vice versa. BeMo is an independent educational firm and provider of CASPer preparation programs and simulations only (CASPer SIM). To find out how to take the actual test, contact Altus directly.




Casper


Book Description

Spread along the North Platte River in central Wyoming, the city of Casper was established in 1888 near the site of old Fort Caspar. As a stop along the Fremont, Elkhorn & Missouri Valley Railroad, Casper quickly became an important hub for the region's wool and beef industries. With the discovery of oil nearby soon after the town was founded, Casper was declared the "Oil Capital of the Rockies" and quickly expanded. Since those early days, Casper has survived many booms and busts to become one of the largest cities in the state of Wyoming. The area is rich in history, from pioneer trails such as the Oregon, California Bozeman, and Mormon Trails to early-day homesteaders, and has remained central to Wyoming's politics and industry. Casper today is a growing city with strong ties to agriculture, oil, gas, and wind energy and has several museums with historical, fossil, and art collections.




Casper


Book Description

Casper was a miserable boy because his mother and brother all passed away. One day on a dusty country road, he met a lady who took him to visit Mrs. Cheerful, a blind lady but a happy Christian. To get acquainted with Mrs. Cheerful changed Casper's life.




Casper


Book Description




Casper


Book Description

Much to the disgust of his fellow ghosts, Casper would rather befriend people, including a living girl, than scare them.







Casper's First Day


Book Description

Casper’s First Day is the second story in the In the Vegetable Garden series. In these stories, as each season changes, different fruits and vegetables are planted and grown in the garden, where they come to life and have fun with each other. In this story, you will meet Casper Carrot, Colin Cucumber, and many others. You will get to know how the different characters work together to overcome uncertainties of new beginnings and surroundings. Who will be your favourite character in the story?







Casper the Commuting Cat


Book Description

Casper became a national celebrity when newspapers ran the story of the amazing cat that regularly took the No. 3 bus on 11-mile journeys around his home town, Plymouth, in Devon. While his devoted owner, Susan Finden, had wondered where her elusive pet was disappearing to each day, Casper was brightening the lives of countless commuters as they went about their business. Bus drivers, too, were getting well-acquainted with Casper, and notices went up in their depot alerting staff that a very special passenger might board their vehicle. In fact, he became a mascot for the bus company, and pictures of him and Susan adorned No. 3 buses. When Casper was sadly killed by a car in early 2010 messages of sympathy flooded in from places as far a field as Australia and Argentina. It quickly became clear that Casper and his remarkable story had touched the lives of so many people around the world. Movingly told by the owner who loved him dearly, Casper the Commuting Catis the touching story of a very special black-and-white cat who rode the bus and stole our hearts.




Constructing American Lives


Book Description

Nineteenth-century American authors, critics, and readers believed that biography had the power to shape individuals' characters and to help define the nation's identity. In an age predating radio and television, biography was not simply a genre of writing, says Scott Casper; it was the medium that allowed people to learn about public figures and peer into the lives of strangers. In this pioneering study, Casper examines how Americans wrote, published, and read biographies and how their conceptions of the genre changed over the course of a century. Campaign biographies, memoirs of pious women, patriotic narratives of eminent statesmen, "mug books" that collected the lives of ordinary midwestern farmers--all were labeled "biography," however disparate their contents and the contexts of their creation, publication, and dissemination. Analyzing debates over how these diverse biographies should be written and read, Casper reveals larger disputes over the meaning of character, the definition of American history, and the place of American literary practices in a transatlantic world of letters. As much a personal experience as a literary genre, biography helped Americans imagine their own lives as well as the ones about which they wrote and read.