My First Book of Numbers

My First Book of Numbers
Author: Kim Deegan
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 18
Release: 2002-07-01
Genre: Board books
ISBN: 9780747559511

A counting book with extra-strong pages for tough little hands. From ten back down to zero, a little child plays with its toys, counting everything from ten skittles to seven toy cars, three jigsaw puzzles and two wooden animals but it is the number one that holds the biggest surprise.

The Montessori Method: My First Book of Numbers

The Montessori Method: My First Book of Numbers
Author: The Montessori Method
Publisher: Rodale Kids
Total Pages: 22
Release: 2021-02-09
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 0593173147

Learn about numbers the Montessori way with this line of board books following the world-leading educational approach, THE MONTESSORI METHOD! Montessori education values the development of the whole child-physically, socially, emotionally, cognitively. These books tap into the Montessori Method at home, allowing children to discover and engage with concepts in a holistic way that promotes a drive for knowledge and self-motivation. In NUMBERS, children are invited to imagine, touch, mimic, and learn about numbers and how they function in the world around us. Infused with humor and math concepts that both engage and challenge children, this book is sure to inspire a generation of mathematicians! Learn more with THE MONTESSORI METHOD: FEELINGS!

Counting Your Way Through 1-2-3

Counting Your Way Through 1-2-3
Author: Cathie Hilterbran Cooper
Publisher: Scarecrow Press
Total Pages: 204
Release: 1997
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9780810831254

A comprehensive annotated guide to 663 counting books, divided into ten subject areas. Each section includes a description of the subject area, an annotated bibliography of related books, and a number of activities that can be used in connection with counting and math books. Reproducible activity pages are included in each section.

Teaching And Learning Early Number

Teaching And Learning Early Number
Author: Thompson, Ian
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Education (UK)
Total Pages: 252
Release: 2008-10-01
Genre: Education
ISBN: 0335234119

For all trainee and practising early years teachers and classroom assistants, this is an accessible guide to a wide range of research evidence about the teaching and learning of early number.

Random Destiny: How the Vietnam War Draft Lottery Shaped a Generation

Random Destiny: How the Vietnam War Draft Lottery Shaped a Generation
Author: Wesley Abney
Publisher: Vernon Press
Total Pages: 262
Release: 2019-03-30
Genre: History
ISBN: 1622736192

This book provides a concise but thorough summary of how the selective service system worked from 1965 through 1973, and also demonstrates how this selective process, during a highly unpopular war, steered major life choices of millions of young men seeking deferrals based on education, occupation, marital and family status, sexual orientation, and more. This book explains each category of deferral and its resulting “ripple effect” across society. Putting a human face on these sociological trends, the book also includes a number of brief personal anecdotes from men in each category, told from a remove of 40 years or more, when the lifelong effects of youthful decisions prompted by the draft have become evident. There are few books which address the military draft of the Vietnam years, most notably CHANCE AND CIRCUMSTANCE: The Draft, the War and the Vietnam Generation, by Baskir and Strauss (1978). This early study of draft-age men discusses how they were socially channeled by the selective service system. RANDOM DESTINY follows up on this premise and draws from numerous later studies of men in the lottery pool, to create the definitive portrait of the draft and its long-term personal and social effects. RANDOM DESTINY presents an in-depth explanation of the selective service system in its final years. It also provides a comprehensive yet personal portrait of how the draft and the lottery steered a generation of young lives into many different paths, from combat to conscientious objection, from teaching to prison, from the pulpit to the Canadian border, from public health to gay liberation. It is the only recent book which demonstrates how American military conscription, in the time of an unpopular war, profoundly influenced a generation and a society over the decades that followed.

On Perl

On Perl
Author: Jugal Kalita
Publisher: Universal-Publishers
Total Pages: 664
Release: 2003-12
Genre: Computers
ISBN: 9781581125504

The book has an introductory chapter that gets the reader started quickly with programming in Perl. The initial part of the book discusses Perl expressions, statements, control flow, built-in data types such as arrays and hashes, and complex data structures built using references. On Perl has several chapters covering specialized topics. The chapter on socket-based network programming deals with forking and using fork to write complex interactive client-server programs. There is a chapter with in-depth discussion of CGI programming including error-handling and security issues that arise. The chapter on web-client programming deals with writing programs that access Web pages, fill up GET and POST forms, handle cookies and redirected Web pages. The book has several unique chapters not found in any other book on Perl in the market. The chapter on security discusses hashes such as MD5, message authentication codes (MACs), digital signature schemes, and encryption techniques such as DES, Rijndael, and RSA. Other chapters deal with writing recursive programs that work with files and directories; this chapter also discusses predefined modules that deal with portability in file names and paths across operating systems, recursive traversal of file hierarchies and tarring and untarring of filles. The chapter on functional programming illustrates that Perl functions are first-class, can be used to write closures and can be composed to form more complex functions. In particular, this can be useful for programming in artificial intelligence.