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Single Item
Product: 10028.A
$79.95 
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Everyone wins when personality type enters the picture in the education process. Teachers, counselors, administrators, parents, and students learn there are many paths to success, and embracing differences yields a love of learning that carries on for life.
These three books from CAPT provide a wealth of information for educators who want to help students discover their unique potential, including the foundation of type theory and practical exercises for workshops and the classroom.
The Type in Education Package includes one copy each of the following products:
- Great Minds Don't Think Alike by Diane Payne and Sondra VanSant enables teachers to identify and address the differing learning styles of their students in the classroom. Includes a Resource CD-ROM of reproducible handouts, exercises, and support materials.
- Discovering Type with Teens by Mollie Allen, Claire Hayman, and Kay Abella is a comprehensive program for introducing psychological type to teenagers in the classroom or any group setting. Includes a Resource CD-ROM of reproducible handouts, exercises, and support materials.
- People Types and Tiger Stripes by Gordon Lawrence provides detailed descriptions of each of the 16 types and how type theory can be used in the classroom to enhance learning for all students.
Choose this package and save 20%!
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Great Minds Don't Think Alike!
Every day teachers are faced with a sea of expectant faces—each with a different way of seeing and learning. How can we motivate and empower every one of these young people to reach their highest potential?
In Great Minds Don’t Think Alike! education experts Diane Payne and Sondra VanSant provide the ultimate lesson plan for transforming classrooms into places where every child becomes engaged in the learning process.
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People Types & Tiger Stripes
People’s behavior often seems randomly varied—but according to Carl G. Jung, behavior actually follows patterns.
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Discovering Type with Teens
It’s not easy being a teen. Looking back on those days we often say, "If only I knew then what I know now." That statement resonates even more when we think about all the insights gained from our knowledge of personality type.
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