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ActionsIntegrated Science for Jamaica provides full coverage of the lower secondary school science curriculum. This comprehensive course:
- provides up-to-date scientific information with links to technology and the environment
- is relevant to your pupils, drawing on examples taken both from Jamaica and across the Caribbean region
- encourages critical thinking and problem-solving through lively activities
- engages students' interest in science with 'Finding out' and 'Did you know' boxes and a glossary of key terms
- presents clear objectives at the start of each topic, with a summary section and questions at the end to help consolidate learning
- offers assessment tests at the end of each book to check students' progress and understanding
Provide a strong foundation in Spanish at Caribbean lower secondary level in preparation for the CSEC (R) examination.
- Progress forward to provide an accessible, thematic approach to learning Spanish to match the demands of the CSEC (R) syllabus, with Book 4.
Sylvia Moodie is Senior Lecturer & Director of the Centre for Language Learning, U.W.I Trinidad.
This edition retains the mixture of prose and poetry that was a feature of the original book, but includes a number of new selections alongside some of the more popular stories and poems in the original anthology.
This new edition also brings one of the most widely-used and long-lasting anthologies to a new generation of young readers.The Sun's Eye retains all its proven favorites, but almost half the stories and poems are new, selected from the past 20 years' wealth of Caribbean writing.
The Sun's Eye again includes its unique feature 'Notes about the Writers', prepared by each author specially for this book. In addition, at the request of many teachers, there are now questions at the end of each piece of writing, to further the students' understanding and appreciation and to encourage their creativity.
The centre illustration on the cover and many inside, are by Caribbean artists.
Anne Walmsley taught for three years at Westwood High School in Jamaica, and for nine years travelled throughout the Caribbean as Longman's Caribbean editor. She has also taught English at a Grammar School in London, and worked for the BBC Schools Television Service. She has been active with the Association for the Teaching of Caribbean and Africa Literature. Now a freelance editor and writer, she is engaged in research on the Caribbean Artists Movement, 1966-72, of which she was a member. She lives in South London with her husband, a cat, and many books.