Audiobooks with category Anthology
This audiobook by The Map Men, narrated by Jay Foreman and Mark Cooper-Jones, delves into a collection of "wrong maps" from various eras and purposes. It explores the adventures, errors, and humor found in these cartographic oddities, answering the question of what went wrong with each one.
This audiobook offers over seventy interactive rhymes and games designed to foster unconditional love and boost children's social, emotional, and academic success. These simple, daily rituals enhance learning, coping skills, and self-esteem while strengthening the parent-child bond for children up to age eight.
This audiobook guides educational leaders through complex ethical dilemmas by applying four key paradigms—justice, critique, care, and profession—with updated case studies and practical application questions. It's a vital resource for administrators, teacher leaders, and policymakers facing contemporary challenges in diverse educational settings.
This audiobook offers an alternative grading system designed to foster genuine student learning by prioritizing feedback and revision over traditional punitive methods. It provides a comprehensive guide with practical examples and a workbook to help educators implement and refine their own assessment strategies.
This audiobook guides school leaders in enacting transformative change for educational equity. It outlines five practices to dismantle marginalization and promote inclusion, offering practical tools and frameworks for systemic reform.
This audiobook reveals how to safeguard and grow your wealth against inflation and financial instability by utilizing a revolutionary, incorruptible digital asset. Learn practical strategies to accumulate and secure generational riches by understanding the history and future of money.
"The Education Debate" by David Kirp and Kevin Macpherson offers a balanced, research-driven overview of key contemporary pre-K-12 education policy issues. The audiobook explores contested topics like equity, charter schools, and teacher evaluation, providing a vital primer for understanding the current landscape of educational reform.
This audiobook argues that the American university, a vital institution for knowledge and creative freedom, is under unprecedented threat. It explores the university's fundamental role in upholding democratic values and the First Amendment, making its defense crucial for the future of the American experiment.
This audiobook offers practical, research-based strategies for educators to address academic inequities faced by diverse student populations, providing guidance on understanding and mitigating psychological hardships, financial insecurity, and disabilities to create more inclusive and equitable learning environments.
This audiobook explores the resurgence of antisemitism in the 21st century, highlighting its universal threat to human rights and societal fabric. It aims to educate readers on this often misunderstood issue, emphasizing its importance for everyone, not just the Jewish community.
James Gleick traces the history of information, from ancient scripts to the digital age, exploring its profound impact on human consciousness and the modern world. This revelatory chronicle details the key figures and technologies that shaped our understanding of information and led us into the current era of overwhelming data.
This audiobook chronicles a century of scientific exploration that confirmed Einstein's theory of general relativity, from early eclipse observations to modern black hole imaging. It details the quest to understand gravity's role in the universe and its connection to quantum mechanics.
Mere Morality - Dan Barker
By Dan Barker
Unknow readerThis audiobook explores the origins of morality, arguing that we don't need supernatural beliefs to understand what is good. Author Dan Barker proposes a straightforward framework for navigating ethical dilemmas based on fundamental principles.
This audiobook explores the history of the Debatable Land, a violent and independent territory between Scotland and England. Author Graham Robb recounts his journey to uncover its forgotten past and its relevance to modern border conflicts.
This unabridged M4B audiobook by Christopher Robbins unveils the largely hidden nation of Kazakhstan, a land the size of Western Europe, revealing its surprising diversity, tolerance, and modernity, and its contributions to the world like apples and trousers.
This audiobook, "The Microbiome: What Everyone Needs to Know®" by Berenice Langdon and read by Lucy Rayner, offers a foundational understanding of our microbial communities, their impact on health, and recent scientific advancements in this rapidly evolving field. It explores various bodily microbiomes, newborn development, and future possibilities, demystifying common misconceptions for a general audience.
Freedom: The Case for Open Borders - Joss Sheldon
By Joss Sheldon
Unknow readerThis audiobook argues for the inherent human need for freedom of movement and its profound benefits for societies, making a case for open borders. It explores the historical, scientific, economic, and cultural advantages of migration and celebrates humanity's innate desire to explore and relocate.
This audiobook offers a powerful guide to healing trauma by emphasizing daily action and self-responsibility. It provides practical tools and principles from leading experts to break subconscious patterns and reclaim control over your well-being.
This audiobook by Dr. Alex George explores the pressures of societal "normalcy" and challenges us to embrace our differences. It offers hope and validation for anyone who has ever felt like they don't fit in.
This unabridged audiobook, narrated by Sonja Schwartzbach, offers a blend of practical advice and personal memoir for nurses. It tackles the challenges of the profession with humor and honesty, saying what others in the field might be thinking.
This audiobook explores 50 dangerous plants and fungi, detailing their history, cultural significance, and effects on the human body across the globe. It uncovers how humans have harnessed these toxic specimens for various purposes, from medicine to ritual.
This audiobook presents a robust critique of religion, arguing it's a man-made construct rooted in wishful thinking and repression, and advocates for a secular life guided by science and reason. It replaces religious narratives with scientific understanding, highlighting the beauty of the universe and the elegance of biological discovery.
This audiobook argues that the neurodiversity movement can combat ableism and other societal injustices by challenging neurotypical dominance. It offers a vision of solidarity across differences, using social theory to promote understanding, acceptance, and humility.
David Crystal's unabridged audiobook, "Making Sense," deconstructs grammar, revealing its essential role in clear communication and tracing its evolution from ancient Greece to the digital age. The book aims to demystify grammar, proving it can be an accessible and entertaining subject for everyone.























