Books

4465 products

  • When Dinosaurs Die: A Guide to Understanding Death

    When Dinosaurs Die: A Guide to Understanding Death

    A balanced, comprehensive and age-appropriate explanation of death and its emotional aftermath, featuring the amiable cast from her earlier Dinosaurs book. Ages 4-8.

  • When Fuzzy Was Afraid Of Losing His Mother

    When Fuzzy Was Afraid Of Losing His Mother

    Fuzzy is a little sheep. For young children with irrational fears about being away from parents, this book is designed to help young children develop constructive alternatives to unnecessary worry thoughts. For ages 4 to 8. More books in this series are available through ODIN BOOKS (priced separately): When Fuzzy Was Afraid of Big and Loud Things & When Lizzy Was Afraid of Trying New Things

  • How to Do Homework Without Throwing Up

    Trevor Romain How to Do Homework Without Throwing Up

    Revised classic provides a humor-filled take on a sickening subject—homework—updated to address modern issues such as technology.Homework can be horrible! But homework isn’t going anywhere, and kids need to learn to do it—without throwing up. This updated classic provides specific tips for starting, doing, and finishing homework—and maybe even laughing while they learn. Kids will also learn how to make a homework schedule, when to do the hardest homework (first!), the benefits of doing homework, and more—serious suggestions delivered with wit and humor because laughter makes learning fun. Refreshed to address modern distractions like the Internet and electronic devices, this updated classic (with hilarious full-color illustrations) helps kids see that they can handle their homework and emphasizes how terrific it feels when they finish.

  • When I Feel Afraid

    Cheri J. Meiners When I Feel Afraid

    Children today have many fears, both real and imagined. Encouraging words and supportive illustrations guide children to face their fears and know where to turn for help. Little ones also learn simple ways to help themselves. Includes a special section for adults, with ideas for supporting children when they feel afraid and a list of additional resources.

  • When I Feel Angry

    When I Feel Angry

    It's hard to be a bunny. Sometimes a bunny feels angry--especially if someone is teasing or if Mom is paying more attention to the new baby in the family. But there are things a bunny can do to keep anger from taking over--exercise, rest, cry, or even ask for help. This gentle book puts an adorable bunny in a variety of situations that preschool or grade-school children can relate to. Instead of acting out, the bunny and her friends find constructive ways to deal with their anger. The illustrations are comical and gentle. In a note to parents, the author, a social worker, explains that it's important to let children know that they can't avoid their feelings but that they can avoid acting in bad ways. The note also includes advice to parents on setting good examples when dealing with negative emotions.

  • When I Feel Good About Myself

    When I Feel Good About Myself

    This book offers children positive and upbeat examples about being themselves. The author portrays a very young guinea pig and friends feeling good about themselves through common situations readers will relate to.

  • When I Feel Jealous

    When I Feel Jealous

    A bear cub describes situations that make her jealous: when someone has something she wants, when someone is good at something she wants to be good at, and when someone else gets all the attention. The book illustrates how children can feel better. It includes a note to parents and teachers. Preschool - Gr 2.

  • When I Feel Sad

    When I Feel Sad

    Readers will recognize similar experiences in their own lives as this little guinea pig describes feeling sad when someone is cross or when something bad happens. Eventually our heroine realizes that feeling sad doesn't last forever. Part of The Way I Feel series of books.

  • When I Miss You

    When I Miss You

    In this picture book from the Way I Feel series, Spelman offers support for children with separation anxiety and, in a note to parents and teachers, practical advice for helping kids cope. A little guinea pig narrates, telling her parents how she feels and how she comforts herself when they leave her at day care or with a babysitter. She even mentions how unsettling a parent's business trip can be. While acknowledging anger and sadness, the text and illustrations show the little guinea pig moving beyond her initial despondency into play, laughter, and good times, including the happiness of being reunited.

  • Classwide Positive Behavior Interventions and Supports:

    Classwide Positive Behavior Interventions and Supports:

    2nd Edition A Guide to Proactive Classroom Management. A vital classroom management resource, this book shows how to implement positive behavior interventions and supports (PBIS) in K-12 classrooms, regardless of whether PBIS is adopted schoolwide. The primary focus is universal (Tier 1) support for all students. Practical, step-by-step guidelines are provided for structuring the classroom environment, actively engaging students in instruction, teaching positive expectations, and establishing a continuum of strategies to reinforce positive behavior and respond to inappropriate behavior. Numerous real-world examples and learning exercises are included. In a large-size format with lay-flat binding for easy photocopying, the book includes reproducible tools for class-wide PBIS planning and implementation. Purchasers get access to a Web page where they can download and print the reproducible materials.

  • When Anxiety Makes You Angry

    When Anxiety Makes You Angry

    CBT Anger Management Skills for Teens with Anxiety-Driven Anger  Using a proven-effective approach rooted in evidence-based cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), When Anxiety Makes You Angry will help you identify the anxiety beneath your anger, accept difficult emotions ”rather than fighting or trying to ignore them”and learn healthy coping and self-regulation skills to help you find emotional balance. You'll also discover how to “train your brain to stop and think before reacting; and how to choose calm over chaos when faced with the things that trigger your anxiety or anger.

  • Radical Compassion

    Radical Compassion

    : Learning to Love Yourself and Your World with the Practice of RAIN This heartfelt and deeply practical book offers an antidote: an easy-to-learn four-step meditation that quickly loosens the grip of difficult emotions and limiting beliefs. Each step in the meditation practice (Recognize, Allow, Investigate, Nurture) is brought to life by memorable stories shared by Tara and her students as they deal with feelings of overwhelm, loss, and self-aversion, with painful relationships, and past trauma--and as they discover step-by-step the sources of love, forgiveness, compassion, and deep wisdom alive within all of us.

  • When Someone Very Special Dies

    When Someone Very Special Dies

    Children Can Learn to Cope with Grief This beautiful workbook helps children learn how to cope with the grief and loss of someone dying. It is designed to use with children, to work through the complicated emotions surrounding death.

  • When Someone You Love Is Depressed

    When Someone You Love Is Depressed

    How to Help Your Loved One Without Losing Yourself. This empowering title will help readers and their loved one to speed their recovery and to safeguard the relationship against the weight of depression. Every chapter provides guidelines for countering the negative effects of depression; special circumstances such as substance abuse or suicidal inclinations are also addressed.

  • When Sophie Gets Angry

    When Sophie Gets Angry

    - Really, Really Angry Sophie becomes angry after her sister takes a toy away from her. When her mother says that she must take turns, Sophie becomes very angry. What will happen to Sophie after she becomes angry?

  • Love 2.0

    Love 2.0

    Creating Happiness and Health in Moments of Connection Even more than happiness and optimism, love holds the key to improving our mental and physical health as well as lengthening our lives. Using research from her own lab, Barbara L. Fredrickson redefines love not as a stable behemoth, but as micro-moments of connection between people-even strangers. She demonstrates that our capacity for experiencing love can be measured and strengthened in ways that improve our health and longevity. Finally, she introduces us to informal and formal practices to unlock love in our lives, generate compassion, and even self-soothe.

  • When the Brain Can't Hear: Unraveling the Mystery of Auditory Processing Disorder

    Teri James Bellis, PH.D. When the Brain Can't Hear: Unraveling the Mystery of Auditory Processing Disorder

    In this landmark book, Dr. Teri James Bellis, one of the world's leading authorities on auditory processing disorder (APD), explains the nature of this devastating condition and provides insightful case studies that illustrate its effect on the lives of its sufferers. Millions of Americans struggle silently with APD. As sound travels through an imperfect auditory pathway, words become jumbled, distorted, and unintelligible. Often, they are misdiagnosed. Discussing the latest and most promising clinical advances and treatment options, and providing a host of proven strategies for coping, Dr. Bellis takes much of the mystery out of APD. If you or anyone you know has difficulty comprehending spoken language, or if your child is struggling in school, this important book may have the answers you need.

  • Faciliating Developmental Attachment

    Faciliating Developmental Attachment

    The Road to Emotional Recovery and Behavioral Change in Foster and Adopted Children This book addresses the emotional difficulties of many of the foster and adopted children living in our country who are unable to form secure attachments. Traditional interventions, which do not teach parents how to successfully engage the child, frequently do not provide the means by which the seriously damaged child can form the secure attachment that underlies behavioral change. Dr. Daniel Hughes maps out a treatment plan designed to help the child begin to experience and accept, from both the therapist and the parents, affective attunement that he or she should have received in the first few years of life. Hughes' approach includes: -Using foster and adopted parents as co-therapists -Teaching differentiation between old and new parents -Overcoming the perception of discipline as abusive -Framing misbehavior, discipline, conflicts, and parental authority as important aspects of a child's learning to trust.

  • When Things Fall Apart: Heart Advice For Difficult Times

    When Things Fall Apart: Heart Advice For Difficult Times

    Pema Chodron's book is filled with useful advice about how Buddhism helps readers to cope with the grim realities of modern life, including fear, despair, rage and the feeling that we are not in control of our lives. Through reflections on the central Buddhist teaching of right mindfulness, Chodron orients readers and gives them language with which to shape their thinking about the ordinary and extraordinary traumas of modern life. But, most importantly, Chodron demonstrates how effective the Buddhist point of view can be in bringing order into disordered lives.

  • Where To Draw The Line

    Where To Draw The Line

    How To Set Healthy Boundaries Every Day This book provides the tools and insights needed to create boundaries so that we can allow time and energy for the things that matter -- and helps break down limiting defenses that stunt personal growth. Focusing on every facet of daily life -- from friendships and sexual relationships to dress and appearance to money, food, and psychotherapy -- Katherine presents case studies highlighting the ways in which individuals violate their own boundaries or let other people breach them. Using real-life examples, from self-sacrificing mothers to obsessive neat freaks, she offers specific advice on making choices that balance one's own needs with the needs of others. Boundaries are the unseen structures that support healthy, productive lives. Where to Draw the Line shows readers how to strengthen them and hold them in place every day.

  • Wherever You Go, There You Are: Mindfulness Meditation In Everyday Life

    Wherever You Go, There You Are: Mindfulness Meditation In Everyday Life

    An updated tenth anniversary edition of the best-selling guide explains how anyone can use mindfulness--the Buddhist art of living each moment fully as it happens--to reduce anxiety, achieve inner peace, find fulfillment, and enrich one's life, accompanied by a series of anecdotes, instructions, and meditations.

  • Grief Recovery for Teens

    Grief Recovery for Teens

    Letting Go of Painful Emotions with Body-Based Practices In this helpful and healing guide, the director of the Children's Grief Connection offers practices to help you deal with the physical aspects of grief and loss. Did you know that grief can also affect your body? That's because the brain and the body are much more connected than you might think. In this compassionate guide, you'll discover how your mind can affect the way you feel physically, and discover body-oriented skills to help your body heal after experiencing loss. You'll also find ways to relieve feelings of anxiety and confusion that can make your physical symptoms worse, and finally begin the healing process.

  • Energy Medicine : Balancing Your Body's Energies for Optimal Health, Joy, and Vitality

    Energy Medicine : Balancing Your Body's Energies for Optimal Health, Joy, and Vitality

    In this updated and expanded edition of her alternative-health classic, Eden shows readers how they can understand their body's energy systems to promote healing.

  • Whoever You Are

    Whoever You Are

    Every day all over the world, children are laughing and crying, playing and learning, eating and sleeping. They may not look the same or speak the same language. But inside, they are alike. Stirring words and bold paintings weave their way around our earth, across cultures and generations. At a time when tolerance still needs to be learned, Whoever You Are urges us to accept our differences, to recognize our similarities, and--most important--to rejoice in both.


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