Norton Books in Education 2018 Catalog
Norton Books in Education 2018 Catalog
Norton Books in Education 2018 Catalog
Dear Educator,
The newest tites from Norton Books in Education include timely, evidence-based resources for
teachers, administrators, and school support staff on the topics of school discipline, social-
emotional learning, brain research, and early childhood.
From Patricia Jennings, best-selling author of Mindfulness for Teachers, comes The Trauma-
Sensitive Classroom (page 3), a ground-breaking exploration of the effects of trauma on
children and adolescents, and how teachers can support the learning of these vulnerable
students. Early childhood educator Cindy Terebush’s Teach the Whole Preschooler (page 7)
shows how to nurture and prepare our youngest students for a lifetime of learning and growth. In Designing a
Prosocial Classroom (page 5), child development expert Christi Bergin describes effective strategies to foster
collaboration amongst students of any age and create a peaceful, productive classroom. In The School Discipline
Fix (page 4), psychologists Stuart Ablon and Alisha Pollastri provide a fully realized, paradigm-shifting model
that focuses on building student skills rather than on punishment or rewards. And Tracey Tokuhama-Espinosa
builds on her existing work at the cusp of education and neuroscience with two new books: Neuromyths, a
myth-busting look at common misconceptions about the brain and learning, and Five Pillars of The Mind (page
6), a revolutionary rethinking of curriculum based on the way our brains actually receive information.
Also featured of course are many other recent titles that you have shown us are valuable to your work in
schools. See below for details about ordering and discounts: note that schools ordering 10 or more copies get
45% off. Please let us know about the issues that are important to you, whether in the form of a book proposal
or a suggestion for a topic we need to address. Your thoughts are welcome!
TABLE OF CONTENTS
NEW AND FORTHCOMING . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 DIVERSITY AND EQUITY. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Professors who wish to consider these books for college course adoption can request complimentary examination
copies at wwnorton.com/education. You may also email education@wwnorton.com or call Nicholas Fuenzalida at
212-790-9430 with your request. Please include your 1) department name, 2) institution, 3) UPS shipping address,
4) course name, 5) course enrollment, and 6) text you’re currently using.
Coming in
November 2018
NEW
THE TRAUMA-SENSITIVE
CLASSROOM
Building Resilience with Compassionate Teaching
PATRICIA A. JENNINGS
AND
From the author of the best-selling Mindfulness for
Teachers, a guide to supporting trauma-exposed students
FORTHCOMING
Children and teens exposed to trauma come to school
with disrupted working models of relationships . . . The
good news is that with knowledge and skill, educators
are well positioned to help these students build
resilience in the face of adversity.
Fully half the students in U.S. schools are experiencing or have experienced trauma,
violence, or chronic stress. In the face of this epidemic of trauma among schoolchildren, it
falls increasingly to teachers to provide the adult support these students need to function
in school. But most educators have received little training to prepare them for this role. In
Part I, Jennings describes the effects of trauma on body and mind, and how to recognize
them in students’ behavior. In Part II, she introduces the trauma-sensitive practices she has
developed and implemented in her work with schools. And in Part III, she connects the dots
between mindfulness, compassion, and resilience. Throughout, the text is interwoven with
student profiles and the author’s own story of childhood trauma and recovery.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Preface: My Story PART III Building Resilience with Mindful
Introduction: Why We Need Compassionate Compassion
Classrooms 6: Building Resilience in Ourselves and Our
Students
PART I Understanding Trauma in Schools
1: Understanding Trauma and Chronic Stress 7: How Mindfulness Builds Resilience
Dr. Ablon, director of Think:Kids and his co-author Dr. Pollastri have been working with
NEW
schools across the country to refine the Collaborative Problem-Solving (CPS) approach,
creating a step-by-step program for educators based on the recognition—from research in
neuroscience and related fields—that challenging classroom behaviors are due to a deficit
of skill, not will. This book provides everything needed to implement the program, including
reproducible assessment tools to pinpoint the lagging skills, such as frustration tolerance
and flexibility, that are at the root of students’ challenging behaviors.
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4
Coming in
May 2018
NEW
DESIGNING A PROSOCIAL
CLASSROOM
Fostering Collaboration in Students from PreK-12
with the Curriculum You Already Use
CHRISTI BERGIN
AND
Prosocial behavior: a set of social-emotional skills that can
also boost academic achievement
FORTHCOMING
“ An enormously useful guide to the establishment of
a positive learning environment in classrooms—highly
”
readable and engaging. —Nel Noddings, Lee Jacks
Professor of Education Emerita, Stanford University
In this book, Christi Bergin has distilled the complex literature about social-emotional
learning into a set of tools that all teachers can use to promote prosocial behavior. As with
any skill, fostering kindness and collaboration requires deliberate practice; but it does
not require a separate curriculum. These research-based tools—using effective discipline,
building prosocial habits, developing positive relationships, modeling good coping
strategies—are teaching practices that can be employed within any
content area during regular instruction.
SUBJECTS:
Each chapter includes authentic classroom vignettes, highlights from
social-emotional learning
the research on prosocial behavior, and questions for reflection and
discussion. Designing a Prosocial Classroom is an engaging read and classroom management
an ideal resource for a school-wide book study group; included in an teaching methods
appendix is a case study for review and discussion of the teaching school discipline
tools presented in the chapters.
and reform literature. In each case, from myths about “right-brained” and “left-
brained” people to myths about IQ or about the Internet, she traces
21st C learning
the origins of the belief—often a distortion of research findings—and
NEW
Coming in
FIVE PILLARS OF THE MIND November 2018
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6
NEW
TEACH THE WHOLE
PRESCHOOLER
STRATEGIES FOR NURTURING DEVELOPING MINDS
CINDY TEREBUSH
AND
“with
[L]ike attending a professional development session
Terebush or being in the classroom with her where
you can hear her discussing the issues that are important
FORTHCOMING
to our field in a personal and conversational manner.
—Amanda Discala, EdM, Child Development Center
”
Director, President, NJAEYC
Chapters in the book cover everything from socialization and behavioral expectations to
emotional capacity and assessing reading and writing readiness. Teachers will learn how to
have realistic expectations of themselves as well as their young students while preparing
them for the years ahead.
Cindy Terebush has spent almost 20 years working in the field of education.
She has experience teaching and directing in daycare, preschool and school
age programs. Cindy is a sought after speaker and professional development
provider. She is a Child Development Associate (CDA) Professional
Development Specialist & Lead Instructor and a New Jersey Workforce
Registry Approved Trainer & Technical Assistance Specialist.
“way
More joy in classrooms and less work for teachers as the
to improving student learning? Sounds incredible, but
the Finns have figured it out, and Tim Walker explains how
American educators can do the same in this engaging and
important book. Teach Like Finland deserves to be widely
”
read and discussed. —Tony Wagner, author of The Global
Achievement Gap and Creating Innovators
When Timothy D. Walker started teaching fifth graders at a Helsinki public Join the
school, he began a search for the secrets behind the success of Finland’s
conversation with
educational system. Walker has already written about several of those
#teachlikefinland
discoveries, and his The Atlantic article on this topic received more than
500,000 shares. In this book, he gathers all he has learned and reveals how
teachers everywhere can implement these simple practices, which integrate
seamlessly with educational standards in the United States and elsewhere.
Watch a video trailer for the book, a BBC World News interview with Tim, and read interviews
and an excerpt at: wwnorton.com/rd/walker
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8
NPR BOOKS
INSTRUCTIONAL STRATEGIES
BEST OF 2016
THE ABCS OF HOW Selection
WE LEARN
26 Scientifically Proven Approaches, How They Work,
and When to Use Them
DANIEL L. SCHWARTZ, KRISTEN P. BLAIR, and
JESSICA M. TSANG
”
[E]very teacher and student can benefit. —Learning and
the Brain
•E
asy-to-remember alphabetic organization of techniques for
teaching and learning
•D
escriptions of risks & challenges for each technique because
implementation matters
•P
ractical, approachable examples immediately applicable for
everyday classroom use
Together the theories, evidence, and strategies from each chapter can be combined endlessly
to create original and effective learning plans and the means to know if they succeed.
Daniel L. Schwartz, PhD, is the Dean of the Stanford University Graduate School of
Education and holds the Nomellini-Olivier Chair in Educational Technology. He is
an award-winning learning scientist, who also spent eight years teaching
secondary school in Los Angeles and Kaltag, Alaska. His special niche is the ability
to produce novel and effective learning activities that also test basic hypotheses
about how people learn. Jessica M. Tsang, PhD, and Kristen P. Blair, PhD, are
researchers and instructors at Stanford University’s Graduate School of Education.
SUBJECTS: brain & learning, best practices, theories of learning, learning differences, teaching methods
“away
You’ll enjoy the push to your thinking, and walk
with ideas to implement in your very next
”
class. —The North Carolina Science Teachers
Association Newsletter
“Educators
Visual literacy is an absolute game changer for learning.
and students who edu-sketch will find that their
thinking becomes broader and deeper. A whole new mind
emerges. Pillars’ book belongs on every teacher’s desk, right
next to that proverbial apple.
”
—Sunni Brown, best-selling author and
leader of The Doodle Revolution
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10
SCHOOL DISCIPLINE
DIFFICULT STUDENTS AND
DISRUPTIVE BEHAVIOR IN THE
CLASSROOM
Teacher Responses That Work
VANCE AUSTIN and DANIEL SCIARRA
”
book—an outstanding read. —George Giuliani, JD, PsyD,
Associate Professor, Hofstra University
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction: A Manifesto for Becoming a Good 7: Teaching Children Who Bully and Are Bullied
Teacher 8: Teaching Children Who Are Victims of Bias in
1: Attachment Theory and Its Application to the Classroom
Good Teaching 9: Teaching Children Who Are Survivors of
2: Principles of Pedagogy for Teachers of Suicide
Students with Challenging Behaviors 10: Teaching Children with High Functioning
3: Teaching Children with Disruptive Disorders Autism (HFA) and Social Skill Deficits
4: Teaching Children with Anxiety Disorders 11: Teaching Children with Impulsivity
5: Teaching Children with Depression as 12: Wrapping Up
Presented in the Classroom
6: Teaching Children with Eating Disordered
Behavior as Presented in the Classroom
Vance Austin, PhD, is Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of Special
Education at Manhattanville College and also teachers part-time in a special high
school for students with emotional and behavioral disorders. He has formerly
worked full time as a special education teacher in both public and private schools
where he accumulated over 25 years of teaching experience.
This comprehensive set offers dozens of simple worksheets, games, and targeted resources to
cultivate (1) assertiveness, emotion management, and friendship skills in kids vulnerable to bullying,
(2) problem-solving skills for kids who witness bullying, and (3) empathy and kindness skills in kids
who are likely to bully their peers. The Companion Guide for Parents & Educators, a leader’s manual for
the Activity Book for Kids & Tweens, provides practical guidelines and vital background information for
collaborating with kids through each of the activities and lessons.
“ The activities are fun to do and I couldn’t wait to see what was
coming next. After I completed the 8 Keys I really wanted to get rid
of bullying at my school. I learned what bullying is and things I can do
”
to stop it. —Ashlyn, age 11
This book is designed to be both useful and fun. There are quizzes,
experiments, questions and answers mixed in with games, puzzles, journaling challenges, and
real-life stories that teach kids how to:
• t ell the difference between rudeness, mean •h
ave fun online and while texting without
behavior, and bullying, hurting others or putting themselves at
• r espond well when someone is bullying risk,
them, •k
eep a cool head and make good
• s tand up for someone else before, during, choices, even when they are upset,
and after bullying, • and more! Books are available
Every part of this book is designed to teach kids how to bring an end to bullying. individually or as a
ISBN: 978-0-393-71180-6 • 2016 • 272 pages • Paperback • $19.95 discounted set!
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12
THE 8 KEYS TO END BULLYING ACTIVITY
BOOK COMPANION GUIDE FOR PARENTS
SCHOOL DISCIPLINE
& EDUCATORS
SIGNE WHITSON
Signe Whitson, a licensed social worker, school counselor, and author, is COO of
the Life Space Crisis Intervention Institute and presents workshops nationwide for
parents and professionals on bullying prevention and helping kids manage anger.
Signe provides training nationwide for professionals, parents, and kids on topics
related to bullying prevention, assertive anger expression, crisis intervention, and
child and adolescent mental and behavioral health.
“ [P]rovides the reader with ample resources and lessons that can
be used immediately in the classroom. . . . worthy of consideration
by any school leader who values the emotional needs of students
”
and staff members. —Principal, a magazine of the National
Association of Elementary School Principals (NAESP)
Contents include: How Does Mindfulness Work? • Mindfulness Lessons for Teachers • Setting
Up a Personal Practice • The Art of Introspection • Ways to Engage our Audience • Nurturing a
Mindful Environment • A Developmental Mindfulness Model • Diversity and Inclusion • Trauma-
Sensitive Mindfulness • Mindfulness Lessons for the Classroom: Learning Objectives • Mindful
Lesson Layout • The Five Realms of Mindful Literacy • Integration Practices • A Day in the Life of
a Mindful Class • Creating Your Own Mindfulness Lessons Worksheet • Recommendations from
Mindful Education Leaders
SOCIAL-EMOTIONAL LEARNING
Simple Skills for Peace and Productivity in the Classroom
PATRICIA A. JENNINGS, Foreword by DANIEL J. SIEGEL
”
practice mindfulness. —Teachers College Record
This best-selling book offers simple, ready-to-use, and evidence-proven mindfulness techniques
to help educators manage the stresses of the classroom, cultivate an exceptional learning
environment, and revitalize both their teaching and their students’ knowledge acquisition. Drawing
on basic and applied research in the fields of neuroscience, psychology, and education, as well as
the author’s extensive experience as a mindfulness practitioner, teacher, and scientist, it includes
exercises in mindfulness, emotional awareness, movement, listening, and more, all with real-time
classroom applications.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Preface: My Journey from Preschool Teacher to 4: The Power of Positivity
Scientist and Why I Wrote This Book 5: The Heart of Teaching
Introduction 6: Orchestrating Classroom Dynamics
1: What Is Mindfulness? 7: Mindfulness and School Transformation
2: The Emotional Art of Teaching Resources
3: Understanding Your Negative Emotions
To watch the book trailer, a TEDx Talk, an interview with Jennings on NPR, and
much, much more, visit the Norton web page at: wwnorton.com/rd/jennings
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15
SOCIAL-EMOTIONAL LEARNING
TEACHING TRANSFORMATIVE
LIFE SKILLS
A Comprehensive Dynamic Mindfulness Curriculum
BIDYUT BOSE, DANIELLE ANCIN, JENNIFER FRANK,
ANNIKA MALIK
This book systematically develops stress resilience in all parts of a school’s ecosystem—
students, staff, and families. With four units incorporating mindful movement, yoga postures,
breathing techniques, and more, the evidence-based and trauma-informed Transformative
Life Skills (TLS) curriculum outlined in this book offers educators a comprehensive platform
to cultivate their students’ personal and academic development. It features 48 scripted,
15-minute lessons designed to require minimal preparation and fit neatly within the busy
school days of a single academic semester. Recommended by CASEL, it benefits all five core
competencies of Social and Emotional Learning:
Bidyut Bose, PhD, is founder and director of the Niroga Institute, which fosters student and
community health with mindfulness-based programs.
SUBJECTS: Danielle Ancin, RYT, is a Program Manager at the Niroga Institute and
teaches regular yoga classes to at-risk children and adolescents.
whole child
Yoga can help address bullying behaviors, students with autism and special needs, and
promote overall resilience and executive function. With this book in hand, readers can
integrate these fun, relaxing, and healthy breaks into the daily lives of their students and
themselves.
Louise Goldberg has been a yoga teacher and educator for SUBJECTS:
over 35 years. She is the author of Yoga Therapy for
whole child
Children with Autism and Special Needs (2013), Creative
classroom management
Relaxation® Yoga for Children DVD (2004), and co-author of
S.T.O.P. and Relax, Your Special Needs Yoga Toolbox executive function
(2006). She is the director of the Yoga Center of Deerfield mindfulness
Beach, Florida, and is a licensed massage therapist. She leads trainings in
inclusion & special needs
Creative Relaxation yoga for children to educators, therapists, and
parents nationally. classroom practices
special education
ISBN: 978-0-393-71095-3 • 2016 • 352 pages • Hardcover • $24.95
• What are the best practices to create and maintain supportive, inclusive school
environments for transgender and gender-diverse youth?
• Do I have a duty to disclose to parents what I might know about their child’s gender
identity?
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18
STUDENT MENTAL HEALTH
THE TEACHER’S GUIDE TO STUDENT
MENTAL HEALTH
WILLIAM DIKEL
“education
[A] unique and necessary tool for general and special
teachers, student support service providers, and
school administrators. . . . This is a must-read for educators
and anyone else invested in promoting student mental health
and academic success!
” —Nancy Lever, PhD, & Sharon
Stephan, PhD, Co-Directors, Center for School Mental Health,
University of Maryland School of Medicine
• and how they affect students’ emotions, behaviors, and ability to learn.
Readers will learn the differences between normal child and adolescent behaviors and
behaviors that reflect underlying mental health disorders, and will recognize where these
behaviors fall on a spectrum, ranging from behavioral (planned, volitional acts that clearly
have a function) to the clinical (where a mental health disorder is causing the behavior).
Teachers will learn how to communicate effectively with their school SUBJECTS:
teams and student families to ensure that school mental health staff
classroom management
(psychologists, social workers, counselors, and nurses) will be able to
provide appropriate interventions for students in need. Administrators school psychology
will learn the importance of creating a district mental health plan that school social work
clearly defines the roles of teachers, mental health staff, principals, and
child & adolescent
others, with the goal of establishing a seamless system of coordinated
development
professionals all working to meet the student’s needs.
William Dikel, MD, a child and adolescent psychiatrist who assists school
districts nationwide, lives in Minneapolis, Minnesota. His school consultation
includes creating mental health plans for school districts, consultation about
individual students, maximizing available funding streams, providing cost-
effective services, co-locating mental health diagnostic and treatment
services into school districts, providing in-service presentations and assisting
in data gathering and outcome analysis.
“to[P]rovides suggestions to build resilience and teach self-regulation in order to help kids
succeed in school and beyond. . . . [T]his is a thoughtful, invaluable book—and should be
required reading for anyone working with school-aged children.
” —PsychCentral
Anxiety and depression are two of the most common mental health problems for young
students, and can be particularly hard to detect and support. In this book, the first of its
kind for teachers, Nadja Reilly lays out with richly detailed examples the signs to look for so
educators can direct their students to help and ensure emotional wellness in the classroom.
Grounded in recent psychological research and practical self-regulation tools, Reilly
opens her study out onto nourishing emotional wellness in all students,
SUBJECTS: communicating with parents, and schoolwide mental health advocacy.
Readers will learn how to detect if a student’s stress has shifted from a manageable level
to an unhealthy “distress” level. They will then learn how to decide if the Emotional Health
Checkup is a good fit for their school and how to get the school on board to implement the
program.
The book is an A-to-Z guide on how to implement the Emotional Health Checkup once the
need and commitment have been confirmed. Information includes:
school psychology
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21
EMOTIONS, LEARNING, AND THE BRAIN
EDUCATION
Exploring the Educational Implications of Affective Neuroscience
MARY HELEN IMMORDINO-YANG, Foreword by HOWARD
GARDNER, Afterword by ANTONIO DAMASIO
”
should read. —Marcelo M. Suárez-Orozco, Wasserman Dean &
Distinguished Professor of Education, UCLA Graduate School of
Education & Information Studies
What are feelings, and how does the brain support them? What role
do feelings play in the brain’s learning process? This book unpacks
these crucial questions and many more, including:
AND
Emotions, Learning, and the Brain is the educator’s foray into the neurobiology of emotion. It is
a game-changing book that will transform the way teachers think about learning.
”
that can be utilized in the classroom the next day. —Brian Balke,
Superintendent of Schools, Goffstown, New Boston, and Dunbarton,
New Hampshire
Topics include: Uncovering the Invisible Roots of Learning • The Neurobiology of Classroom
Safety • Classroom Relationships • The Attentional Circuits of the Brain • Explicit and Implicit
Memory • Nurturing Student Strengths • Mindfulness • Classroom Culture
MIND, BRAIN,
Creating a Tribal Classroom
LOUIS COZOLINO
“ Dr. Cozolino provides a clear road map with the tools necessary to
successfully implement an effective teaching and learning struc-
”
ture —Erik Perkowski, Executive Director, California Scholarship
Federation
AND
and even teacher-parent workshops, this book applies laboratory findings from cognitive neuro-
science to the practicalities of the classroom.
Topics include: The Social Brain • The Power of Attachment • Stress and Learning • Reaching
EDUCATION
“Unteachable” Students • Bullying • Social Stress • Play, Explore, and Learn • Storytelling •
Tribal Work-Arounds in Practice • Deepening Experience
Topics include: How Brains Learn • How Relationships Build and Rebuild Brains • Connections
Between Learning and Stress • How Insecure Attachment Creates “Unteachable” Students • How
Bullying Impedes Learning • Why Teachers Burn Out • How Emotional Attunement Stimulates
Learning • Why Exploration Is So Important • Why Stories Are Essential for Learning • Teaching
Students About the Brain • Building Tribal Classrooms
“and
This is a must-read for every educator who is willing to question
enhance their practice to deliver a better, research-based
curriculum with improved methods for the benefit of their
”
students. —Elizabeth Helfant, Upper School Coordinator of
Pedagogical Innovation at the Mary Institute and St. Louis Country
Day School (MICDS), Missouri
The first half of the book provides a practical overview of teaching from a mind, brain, and
education perspective. The second half shares 50 ready-to-use, evidence-based classroom
best practices that have a proven positive impact on student success. Well-researched and
accessible, this essential resource offers highly effective methods that teachers, administrators,
parents, and curriculum planners can easily implement.
“research
[A]n excellent tool for anyone needing to better understand the
that should be a foundation for our teaching methods.
—2e: Twice-Exceptional Newsletter
”
For anyone seeking to solidify the parameters, goals, and standards
of brain-based teaching, this book elegantly separates well-
established information from “neuromyths” to help teachers split
the wheat from the chaff in classroom planning, instruction, and
teaching methodology. Based on an exhaustive review of the
literature, as well as interviews with more than twenty leaders in the
field from six different countries, this book sets out to define the field and offer teachers models
for interpreting new data and implementing effective classroom settings.
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24
MIND, BRAIN,
TRANSFORMING YOUR TEACHING
Practical Classroom Strategies Informed by Cognitive
Neuroscience
KIMBERLY CARRAWAY
”
Kimberly to visit their school. —Matthew Treat, Director of the
Academic Support Program, Hopkins School
AND
for instructional design, knowledge assessment, and the enhancement of learning skills, like:
EDUCATION
These strategies are written specifically for the regular classroom teacher who is struggling to
help his or her students be academically successful in the classroom. You will find the book an
incredible tool to use as you design your lesson plans, create activities for your students, and
make up tests and long-range assessments. Recommendations for parents are also provided so
the strategies presented can be reinforced in the home.
”
academic success of his or her students. —Sal Lentini, Stony
Brook University, School of Professional Development
“guidance
This book is a must-read for parents and teachers who seek
in finding a student’s strengths rather than focusing on
”
learning deficiencies. —Patrick F. Bassett, President, National
Association of Independent Schools (NAIS)
• fostering self-motivation,
• and emphasizing social and emotional learning.
Through the use of positive psychology in the classroom, children can learn to be more
emotionally aware of their own and others’ feelings, use their strengths to engage academically
and socially, pursue meaningful lives, and accomplish their personal goals.
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26
CHILDREN WHO FAIL AT SCHOOL BUT
SPECIAL EDUCATION
SUCCEED AT LIFE
Lessons from Lives Well-Lived
MARK KATZ
Mark Katz, PhD, is a clinical and consulting psychologist. For over 30 years he has
served as the Director of Learning Development Services, an educational,
psychological and neuropsychological center in San Diego, California. He is a past
recipient of the Rosenberry Award, a national award given yearly by Children’s
Hospital in Denver, Colorado, and a past recipient of the CHADD (Children and
Adults With Attention Deficit Disorder) Hall of Fame Award.
Poor EF can result in behavioral and attentional problems in school. Marcie and Daniel Yeager’s
dynamic interventions provide external support in a planned and systematic manner, allowing
children to compensate for difficulties and grow in their ability to intentionally regulate their
thoughts, emotions, and behavior. This book explains to professionals and parents how EF
develops in kids, what EF difficulties look like, and what creative and effective interventions can
meet their needs.
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