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Healthy, Wealthy, and Wise October 2020
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Overcoming Dyslexia
by Sally Shaywitz
One in five American children has trouble reading. But they are not stupid or lazy. In Overcoming Dyslexia, Dr. Sally Shaywitz, codirector of the Yale Center for the Study of Learning and Attention and a leader in the new research into how the brain works, offers the latest information about reading problems and proven, practical techniques that, along with hard work and the right help, can enable anyone to overcome them. Here are the tools that parents and teachers need to help the dyslexic child, age by age, grade by grade, step by step.
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Anxiety and Stress Relief
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The Mayo Clinic Guide to Stress-Free Living
by Amit Sood
In this thoughtful and accessible book, Mayo Clinic doctor Amit Sood explains how to handle the pressures caused by heavy workloads and lack of control in your life. Rather than allowing these negative factors to dictate your moods and possibly damage your health, you can follow Sood's program of attention training and spiritual practices, along with his plan for healthy eating and exercise. Booklist observes that "just reading Sood's lucid, commonsensical recommendations" can put you on the path to a stress-free life.
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Beat Stress
by Alice Jane Muir
Beat Stress is a wholly practical guide to coping with stress, which draws on a mixture of CBT and NLP therapies, offering both long-term solutions and strategies to help you feel better now. It gives you a wide range of techniques that will successfully relax both body and mind, drawing extensively on Mindfulness practices, as well as showing you where you can find support, solutions and strategies online...Designed to make the information work for you, this is the most effective and practical guide available to beating stress - forever.
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Under Pressure: confronting the epidemic of stress and anxiety in girls
by Lisa Damour
Though anxiety has risen among young people overall, studies confirm that it has skyrocketed in girls. Research finds that the number of girls who said that they often felt nervous, worried, or fearful jumped 55 percent from 2009 to 2014, while the comparable number for adolescent boys has remained unchanged. As a clinical psychologist who specializes in working with girls, Lisa Damour, Ph.D., has witnessed this rising tide of stress and anxiety in her own research, in private practice, and in the all-girls’ school where she consults. She knew this had to be the topic of her new book.
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Contact your librarian for more great books!
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