Is the Answer Reasonable?, Grade 6


Book Description

Each book contains a variety of activities from all five NCTM content standards to help students develop analyitcal skills. Students will learn strategies and techniques for determining whether answers make sense. The activities will improve students test taking strategies




Is the Answer Reasonable?, Grade 7


Book Description

Each book contains a variety of activities from all five NCTM content standards to help students develop analyitcal skills. Students will learn strategies and techniques for determining whether answers make sense. The activities will improve students test taking strategies




Is the Answer Reasonable?, Grade 8


Book Description

Each book contains a variety of activities from all five NCTM content standards to help students develop analytical skills. Students will learn strategies and techniques for determining whether answers make sense. The activities will improve students test taking strategies




Is the Answer Reasonable?, Grade 3


Book Description

Each book contains a variety of activities from all five NCTM content standards to help students develop analytical skills. Student will learn strategies and techniques for determining whether answers make sense. The activities will improve students test taking strategies




Is the Answer Reasonable?, Grade 4


Book Description

Each book contains a variety of activities from all five NCTN content standards to helpl students develop analytical skills. Students will learn strategies and techniques for determining whether answers make sense. The activities will improve students' testing taking strategies




A Reasonable Response


Book Description

Followers of Jesus need not fear hard questions or objections against Christian belief. In A Reasonable Response, renowned Christian philosopher and apologist William Lane Craig offers dozens of examples of how some of the most common challenges to Christian thought can be addressed, including: Why does God allow evil? How can I be sure God exists? Why should I believe that the Bible is trustworthy? How does modern science relate to the Christian worldview? What evidence do we have that Jesus rose from the dead? Utilizing real questions submitted to his popular website ReasonableFaith.org, Dr. Craig models well-reasoned, skillful, and biblically informed interaction with his inquirers. A Reasonable Response goes beyond merely talking about apologetics; it shows it in action. With cowriter Joseph E. Gorra, this book also offers advice about envisioning and practicing the ministry of answering people’s questions through the local church, workplace, and in online environments. Whether you're struggling to respond to tough objections or looking for answers to your own intellectual questions, A Reasonable Response will equip you with sound reasoning and biblical truth.




Reasonable Children


Book Description

The public outcry for a return to moral education in our schools has raised more dust than it's dispelled. Building upon his provocative ideas in On Becoming Responsible, Michael Pritchard clears the air with a sensible plan for promoting our children's moral education through the teaching of reasonableness. Pritchard contends that children have a definite but frequently untapped capacity for reasonableness and that schools in a democratic society must make the nurturing of that capacity one of their primary aims, as fundamental to learning as the development of reading, writing, and math skills. Reasonableness itself, he shows, can be best cultivated through the practice of philosophical inquiry within a classroom community. In such an environment, children learn to work together, to listen to one another, to build on one another's ideas, to probe assumptions and different perspectives, and ultimately to think for themselves. Advocating approaches to moral education that avoid mindless indoctrination and timid relativism, Pritchard neither preaches nor hides behind abstractions. He makes liberal use of actual classroom dialogues to illustrate children's remarkable capacity to engage in reasonable conversation about moral concepts involving fairness, cheating, loyalty, truthtelling, lying, making and keeping promises, obedience, character, and responsibility. He also links such discussions to fundamental concerns over law and moral authority, the roles of teachers and parents, and the relationship between church and state. Pritchard draws broadly and deeply from the fields of philosophy and psychology, as well as from his own extensive personal experience working with children and teachers. The result is a rich and insightful work that provides real hope for the future of our children and their moral education.










The Irish Reports


Book Description