When the Boston and Lowell Railroad came through in 1835, Medford was a quiet town with fewer than two thousand residents. By the twentieth century, it had become a thriving city of eighteen thousand.
Emotional Intelligence skills and competencies are the fertile ground for creating a more compassionate world. Emotional Intelligence for a Compassionate World is an engaging, self-paced workbook for
Medford, Massachusetts, has been a part of Massachusetts history since the 1630s when Governor John Winthrop travelled here, and named a rock in the Middlesex fells after the cheese in his lunch. In t
For many years, study of giftedness, creativity and talent was of concern to a small community of scholars. With publication of A Nation Deceived: How America Holds Back its Brightest Students (Templ
This book is the first-ever authoritative work on the use and management of humor in the workplace. It is a practical guide for everyone involved: the humorists (‘jokers’), the targets (sometimes ‘vic
Scholarly work in gifted and talented education has expanded rapidly in the last four decades throughout the world, but the number and diversity of journals in which these works are published make acc
Cristie Kerr began learning how to hold a golf club at age seven. Her formal training began shortly thereafter and in a brief nine years she went from an obscure kid playing in local tournaments to th
Explores the relationship of special intellectual ability to the role of males in American society, and describes the impact of giftedness on boys' academic and social adjustment. The authors (psycho