Wednesday, March 31, 2010

New Mars Hill Audio Journal

That is right!

It is time for Issue 101
of Mars Hill's Audio Journal!



This Issue includes new lectures...

Thomas Long discusses funeral rites and their place in today's society.

William Cavanaugh discusses how the concept of "Religious Wars" misinterpret religion.

James Hunter discusses how Christians need to start looking at culture differently when trying to engage with the world around them.

Please stop by and take a look!

Saturday, March 27, 2010

New in Education

"To teach is to learn twice."
~ Joseph Joubert, Pensees

Teaching, as many more eloquent people have said before me, is a calling. Northwest University makes a serious effort to keep their education program up-to-date and comprehensive so that, upon graduating, students enter the teaching force with all of the skills they need to reach their students effectively.

In that spirit, Hurst Library continuously updates their holdings...

These books, for example, are new in this week!

General Teaching Books:

Mindful Teaching and Teaching Mindfulness is a general companion guide for teachers of all grades and all subjects. The author works with the concept of mindfulness - how to be conscious of your teaching at all times - and integrates that with education, teaching the students the best way of taking their knowledge and using it in all aspects of his/her life. Basically, this is a guide to develop mental and emotional presence in your work.

Multicultural Teaching is a handbook with real world activities and examples for teachers trying to reach a multicultural classroom. This book covers more than just racial diversity, but also addresses monetary and gender diversity. It is a good source for information, but a better source for practical how-to - walking you through lesson planning and self-evaluation.

Rethinking Classroom Participation: Listening to the Silent Voices. Anyone who has taught before knows the terror of a noisy classroom almost as well as the terror of the silent one. In this book Katherine Schultz teaches you to gauge this silence, listen to the quiet students, and insure that your instruction is getting to all of the students in the classroom.

Subject Specific Teaching Books:

The Mathematics Teacher's Handbook does exactly as its title suggests - provides a companion for Mathematics teachers. It comprehensively covers everything from developing a Math-loving classroom culture to making the most of math homework assignments.

Making Connections in Elementary and Middle School Social Studies attempts to make early Social Studies more personal and, hence, more accessible to the students. This book addresses most of the major methods for instruction and gives real classroom examples. This is the second and newest edition of this already much used guide.

Reforming Secondary Science Instruction operates with the (valid) assumption that secondary science education is broken and that, if we want our children to graduate with the necessary scientific knowledge, teachers need to work to reform it from the inside out. Each chapter addresses a different issue, walks you through a self-assessment, and guides you to beneficial reform.

Ha! That reminds me of this one time, in 10th grade biology, when my lab partner and I succeeded in setting the entire lab table on fire... but I digress.

Come check out all of these books I mentioned
and many more on special display on our New Book Shelf!

Sunday, March 21, 2010

Magazines for Fun, not Learning

If you are anything like me, you casually flip through magazines while waiting at the checkout or while killing some time in a bookstore. Usually this affords me enough time to get caught up on the latest gossip about Angie and Brad and on the latest thoughts of experts on trans fats; however, sometimes I want a little more time!


This is when I march over to my favorite corner of Hurst Library, sit in the comfortable chairs and browse one of the many popular magazines available.



What?!?!



You didn't know we carried popular magazines like...

and... People

We have these and many more to occupy your leisure time or to help you in the art of procrastination.


Come take a look!

Saturday, March 6, 2010

Spring Break - Time for FUN!


A whole week where you have nothing to do but sit in your PJs, eat ice cream, and watch movies... can life get any better?

You have learned to use our expertise while writing your papers and studying for your tests. To many students, however, we become obsolete during this annual break from classes. But...

Hurst Library can even help during Spring Break!

Not everything on our shelves is educational. We like having fun too! And, best of all, renting movies from us is FREE.

To search our collections visit our homepage, select the browse by format tab followed by the link called "Videos and DVDs."


... or just click HERE