Anne Luke - Böcker
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3 produkter
3 produkter
Translating Your Teen
10 Strategies for Understanding and Empowering Your Kid
Inbunden, Engelska, 2026
601 kr
Kommande
A guide to decoding your teenager's communications for better understanding and support.Today's teenagers are navigating unprecedented academic pressure, emotional intensity, and constant digital noise, often leaving parents unsure how to interpret what their teens are really communicating. In Translating Your Teen, educator and counselor Anne Luke offers an insightful framework that reveals what teens are really saying when they communicate and how parents and caregivers can skillfully respond.Through research-supported explanations, vivid real-life stories, and practical strategies, Luke illuminates ten essential messages hidden in adolescent behavior and communication. Parents will learn how purpose fuels motivation, why failure strengthens resilience, and what healthy independence looks like. They'll discover how teens perceive trust, how they wrestle with overwhelm, and why relationships shape identity during these formative years. Luke also addresses the complexities of digital life, habit-building, and the pursuit of authentic strengths that give teenagers a sense of direction and meaning.Luke's guidance offers a rare window into the inner world of teenagers who often struggle to express their needs. Each chapter invites parents to see high school as a developmental landscape where curiosity, self-knowledge, and confidence can flourish. Translating Your Teen empowers parents, guardians, and educators to support teens with greater awareness, empathy, and intention to develop a dynamic where young people feel understood and encouraged to grow into capable, self-directed adults.
252 kr
Kommande
A guide to decoding your teenager's communications for better understanding and support.Today's teenagers are navigating unprecedented academic pressure, emotional intensity, and constant digital noise, often leaving parents unsure how to interpret what their teens are really communicating. In Translating Your Teen, educator and counselor Anne Luke offers an insightful framework that reveals what teens are really saying when they communicate and how parents and caregivers can skillfully respond.Through research-supported explanations, vivid real-life stories, and practical strategies, Luke illuminates ten essential messages hidden in adolescent behavior and communication. Parents will learn how purpose fuels motivation, why failure strengthens resilience, and what healthy independence looks like. They'll discover how teens perceive trust, how they wrestle with overwhelm, and why relationships shape identity during these formative years. Luke also addresses the complexities of digital life, habit-building, and the pursuit of authentic strengths that give teenagers a sense of direction and meaning.Luke's guidance offers a rare window into the inner world of teenagers who often struggle to express their needs. Each chapter invites parents to see high school as a developmental landscape where curiosity, self-knowledge, and confidence can flourish. Translating Your Teen empowers parents, guardians, and educators to support teens with greater awareness, empathy, and intention to develop a dynamic where young people feel understood and encouraged to grow into capable, self-directed adults.
1 177 kr
Skickas inom 10-15 vardagar
Youth and the Cuban Revolution: Youth Culture and Politics in 1960s Cuba is a new history of the first decade of the Cuban Revolution, exploring how youth came to play such an important role in the 1960s on this Caribbean island. Certainly, youth culture and politics worldwide were in the ascendant in that decade, but in this pioneering and thought-provoking work Anne Luke explains how the unique circumstances of the newly developing socialist revolution in Cuba created an ethos of youth which becomes one of the factors that explains how and why the Cuban Revolution survives to this day. By examining how youth was constructed and constituted within revolutionary discourse, policy, and the lived experience of young Cubans in the 1960s, Luke examines the conflicted (but ultimately successful) development of a revolutionary youth culture. She explores the fault lines along which the notion of youth was created—between the internal and the external, between discourse and the everyday, between politics and culture.Luke looks at how in the first decade of the Cuban Revolution a young leadership—Fidel, Raúl and Che—were complemented by a group of new protagonists from Cuba’s young generation. These could be literacy teachers, party members, militia members, teachers, singers, poets… all aiming to define and shape the Cuban Revolution. Together young Cubans took part in defining what it meant to be young, socialist and Cuban in this effervescent decade. The picture that emerges is one in which neither youth politics nor youth culture can alone help to explain the first decade of the Revolution; rather through the sometimes conflicted intersection of both there emerged a generation constantly to be renewed—a youth in Revolution.