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Elizabeth Murphy

    Elizabeth Murphy, scienziata del suolo, scrittrice e agricoltrice biologica, sostiene la convinzione che il futuro del nostro pianeta dipenda dalla rivitalizzazione del suolo ovunque. Con due decenni di esperienza pratica e ricerche attuali sulla salute del suolo, trasmette un messaggio semplice ma profondo: per coltivare l'abbondanza, dobbiamo praticare la moderazione. Sostiene che un suolo vivo produce naturalmente giardini rigogliosi. La sua passione per il suolo e l'agricoltura ispira avventure globali.

    Weil jedes Kind besonders ist
    The Developing Child
    To Give and to Take
    • To Give and to Take

      • 504pagine
      • 18 ore di lettura

      Sisters Mary and Cathy Ward couldn't be more different: Mary, the eldest, is a wild and sensual red-head, determined one day to leave the mean streets of her Liverpool home to seek wealth and position; whereas Cathy has won the love of all the Wards' friends and neighbours with her dark curls and gentle ways. But one fateful Sunday in 1911, when Liverpool erupts in the Bloody Sunday riot, both meet and fall in love with the same man. Greg Redmond takes one look at Cathy and loses his heart. It looks as though the close-knit family will be split, but then Mary meets the suave and handsome Clive Walden, whose fortune and social standing suggest he will make the perfect husband...

      To Give and to Take2002
      4,0
    • Weil jedes Kind besonders ist

      Verständnisvoll erziehen

      • 187pagine
      • 7 ore di lettura

      SCHLAGWÖRTERS: TypologieS. ExtraversionS. IntroversionS. EmpfindungS. IntuitionS. DenkenS. FühlenS. rationalS. irrationalS

      Weil jedes Kind besonders ist1996
    • Using personality type as theorized by Swiss psychiatrist Carl Jung to help in understanding differences in children, this book gives adults an opportunity to examine some suggested paths for developing positive relationships with the children in their lives. Examples are used to show how psychological type theory applies to daily life. By understanding each of the sixteen psychological types, adults can increase their awareness of more effective ways to help children grow and develop their special gifts and talents. The more that children and adults understand one another, the better their chances of building strong relationships. Each generation passes its knowledge on to another. This generation of adults can be the initial thread in the cloth that is woven to create enhanced relationships with children, and The Developing Child reveals practical strategies for nurturing the bonds between adults and young people.

      The Developing Child1992
      3,8