Plus d’un million de livres à portée de main !
Bookbot

Jan Sutton

    Canadians on the Somme, 1916
    Chess Psychology
    Learning to Counsel
    Learning To Counsel, 3rd Edition
    Learning To Counsel, 4th Edition
    • Learning To Counsel, 4th Edition

      • 320pages
      • 12 heures de lecture
      4,4(24)Évaluer

      First published in 1997, the 4th edition of this classic text on counselling has been thoroughly reworked and updated with new material added to reflect latest practice.

      Learning To Counsel, 4th Edition
    • Learning To Counsel, 3rd Edition

      • 250pages
      • 9 heures de lecture
      4,2(80)Évaluer

      Contains graphics, case studies, examples of skills in practice, practical exercises, forms and checklists designed to stimulate learning. This text is suitable for those contemplating a counselling course, trainee counsellors, counselling tutors to use in training, professionals working in the area of health care, management, and education.

      Learning To Counsel, 3rd Edition
    • Learning to Counsel

      • 208pages
      • 8 heures de lecture
      3,8(15)Évaluer

      Relevant to a range of people, in the workplace and home, counselling skills can improve the quality of relationships in general and provide insight into the counselling process. This guide explains counselling in jargon-free English.

      Learning to Counsel
    • Chess Psychology

      • 208pages
      • 8 heures de lecture

      US National Master William Stewart studies the vital subject of chess psychology in all areas of chess.

      Chess Psychology
    • "Ordered lines of heavily laden soldiers with rifles at 'high port' trudging through mud against uncut barbed wire under heavy machine gun fire is the enduring view of the Somme 1916. What makes Canada's Somme campaign so difficult to characterise was at times this was true, but so were times Canadians advanced at speed over dry ground through smashed German defences. Over the course of 80 days, they encountered all types of weather, ground conditions, defences, and defenders. They achieved stirring victories, and suffered staggering defeats. Thus, Canada's Somme experience was not a simple binary of either victory or defeat, but both and most combinations between. These battles do not lend themselves to grand narratives and sweeping accounts of triumph over great odds. This perspective contributes to the absence of detailed operational studies devoted to Canada's military contribution to the Somme campaign. Resulting in 24,029 casualties, the Somme was the second longest and costliest campaign of the Canadian Expeditionary Force. It represents a critical inflection point in the Dominion's conduct of the war as all spheres of its military effort were impacted by its effects. The corps, however, demonstrated sufficient potential that General Sir Douglas Haig assigned the Canadian Corps the crucial role of seizing Vimy Ridge during the next major British offensive. Nevertheless, Canada's campaign remains a neglected aspect of the Somme campaign with no study devoted to its course. This volume addresses this gap in the available literature by examining the Canadian experience at the operational and tactical level. Its primary focus is on how the Canadians fought and why they battled in the manner they did. Focusing on a single corps brings a perspective on aspects of the campaign that are washed out in the general narratives. This allows for a finer grain examination of diverse topics, such as operations, command and control, and tactics. The period the Canadians served also receives less coverage in general campaign accounts, and it witnessed a set of significant changes in operations as both sides adjusted their tactics."--Jacket

      Canadians on the Somme, 1916