Busy Family Organizer (Planner, Address Book and More!)


Book Description

Busy Family Organizer is designed to help keep life stress free. Organize schedules, meals, contacts, chore charts, lists,and other important information all in one place! Tabbed divider pages make it easy to find what you're looking for fast! Weekly calendars to keep activities, appointments, and schedules straight Menu planning pages to help you save time and money Handy charts and checklists to keep track of household chores A birthday, anniversary, and special occasion monthly log with a gift and thank you note checklist Party planning pages to help take the stress out of your next celebration Travel planning pages and packing lists to keep you organized and ready for adventure A guided contact and address section to log important names and numbers Journaling and grid pages for notes and doodles Practical perforated tear-out lists for shopping, babysitter, and general "to do" - Hardcover - Spiral binding (lays flat for ease of use) - 9-1/8" x 8-3/4" - 164 pages




The Homeschool Planner


Book Description




The Organized Homeschool Life


Book Description

The Organized Homeschool is a practical guide for achieving homeschool success, even if you're not naturally organized. As you complete the weekly challenges, you will save time and money so you can enjoy teaching your children. Inside you'll find: Short, daily missions that don't feel like a burden Help with creating systems that will get and keep you organized Practical suggestions for building stronger relationships with the Lord, family, and friends Reminders to prepare for holidays, celebrations, and homeschool tasks at just the right time Organizing ideas for all the areas of your life: church, hobbies, business, & more "Melanie has adapted the FLYLady system for her homeschool and family. She's created habits and routines that allow her to be the less-stressed, confident mother and teacher she dreamed of being. Now she is blessing other homeschoolers with the peace she found through FLYing. -- The FLYLady, Marla Cilley of FLYLady.net




Mom's Planner


Book Description

Moms can be busy and will always be busy to get stuff for the family. This is her perfect daily tasks organizer, manager, planner for 2019-2020. Week-per-schedule of list of mom's daily task that will helps every mother to do everything for the love of the family. Beautiful Mom's Planner just as our mother. This is a monthly, weekly, daily organizer of the many things that mother must do everyday.




Plan a Happy Life: Define Your Passion, Nurture Your Creativity, and Take Hold of Your Dreams


Book Description

From the creator of the immensely popular Happy Planner and Me and My BIG Ideas, Stephanie Fleming, comes Plan a Happy Life(TM)--a delightfully practical book that shows you how to simplify, organize, and live with intention, all while having fun.




Plan Your Year


Book Description




Mom's Manager


Book Description

Planner 2020 2020 Monthly Planner is all you need to keep things organized! The Monthly planner features 24 Month Calendar.Book Details: January 2020 to December 2021 (24 Months Calendar) 6 inches By 9 inches Matte Finish Cover Design Printed on Quality Paper Calendar on each Monthly View Entire week at a glance; two pages per week format Special note page Best for Christmas gift and New Year gift Made in the USA.




Community Organizing and Community Building for Health and Social Equity, 4th edition


Book Description

The fourth edition of Community Organizing and Community Building for Health and Social Equity provides both classic and recent contributions to the field, with a special accent on how these approaches can contribute to health and social equity. The 23 chapters offer conceptual frameworks, skill- building and case studies in areas like coalition building, organizing by and with women of color, community assessment, and the power of the arts, the Internet, social media, and policy and media advocacy in such work. The use of participatory evaluation and strategies and tips on fundraising for community organizing also are presented, as are the ethical challenges that can arise in this work, and helpful tools for anticipating and addressing them. Also included are study questions for use in the classroom. Many of the book’s contributors are leaders in their academic fields, from public health and social work, to community psychology and urban and regional planning, and to social and political science. One author was the 44th president of the United States, himself a former community organizer in Chicago, who reflects on his earlier vocation and its importance. Other contributors are inspiring community leaders whose work on-the-ground and in partnership with us “outsiders” highlights both the power of collaboration, and the cultural humility and other skills required to do it well. Throughout this book, and particularly in the case studies and examples shared, the role of context is critical, and never far from view. Included here most recently are the horrific and continuing toll of the COVID-19 pandemic, and a long overdue, yet still greatly circumscribed, “national reckoning with systemic racism,” in the aftermath of the brutal police killing of yet another unarmed Black person, and then another and another, seemingly without end. In many chapters, the authors highlight different facets of the Black Lives Matter movement that took on new life across the country and the world in response to these atrocities. In other chapters, the existential threat of climate change and grave threats to democracy also are underscored. View the Table of Contents and introductory text for the supplementary instructor resources. (https://d3tto5i5w9ogdd.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/04143046/9781978832176_optimized_sampler.pdf) Supplementary instructor resources are available on request: https://www.rutgersuniversitypress.org/communityorganizing




The Future of Emergency Management after 2020


Book Description

2020 was a year unlike any other in U.S. history. Emergency managers were confronted with a rapidly evolving deadly virus coupled with widespread economic devastation. On top of increasingly destructive hurricanes and other extreme weather as well as ongoing drought and wildfires, there was societal upheaval. All of these crises created a witch's brew of challenges for public safety and emergency management in the middle of 2020 that continues today. For emergency managers in 2020, better strategies were needed to overcome these major crises and disasters that triggered instability and upended normal life. Mega-disasters and cascading catastrophes now must be imagined and managed for effectively. The Future of Emergency Management After 2020: The New, Novel, and Nasty looks at this new normal and at the issues that alter the scope, complexity, and priorities of emergency management. It references the last ten years, where the tragedy of 9/11 redefined priorities in the field. Drawing on the authors' extensive experience while canvassing the opinions of other emergency management professionals, this thought-provoking book offers new strategies for the crises we're now seeing—and the novel crises we might see in the future. Faculty, students, and practitioners of emergency management will find this book extremely pertinent and valuable.




The Maternal, Digital Subjectivity, and the Aesthetics of Interruption


Book Description

Bringing together philosophies of the maternal with digital technology may appear to be an arbitrary pairing. However, reading them intertextually through select creative practices reveals how both encompass an aesthetics of interruption that becomes a novel means of understanding subjectivity. EL Putnam investigates how the digital performances of certain artists, creators, and technologists rupture existing representations of the maternal, taking advantage of the formal properties of digital media. What results are interruptions of visual and aural constructions through an immanent merging of the performing body with digital technologies. Putnam bases her analysis on close examinations of the way certain makers use the formal properties of digital imagery, such as the gap, the glitch, and the lag, as means of rendering images of the maternal uncanny in order to challenge mediation, constituting an aesthetics of interruption. The result is a radical critical strategy for engaging with digital technology and subsequent understandings of the subject that defy current modes of assimilation.