Starpower: It’S Your Life. Star in It!

Starpower: It’S Your Life. Star in It!
ISBN-10
1480840734
ISBN-13
9781480840737
Category
Young Adult Nonfiction
Pages
86
Language
English
Published
2017-01-05
Publisher
Archway Publishing
Author
Pat Blair Huntington Ed.D.

Description

Offering a combination of illustrative stories, theoretical discussion, and exercises, Star Power, by author Dr. Pat Blair Huntington, encourages youth to discover possibilities for satisfaction and success in life, career, and work. It offers tools to help teens work toward making positive changes and developing the skills that will help them achieve their goals. Star Power, a program developed by Huntington, supports young adults facing self, social, and status relationship decisions. It includes self-assessments to evaluate the status of ones physical, intellectual, emotional, and spiritual being, and it looks at a host of social influences faced by teens. Using attitude testing instead of aptitude testing, this program offers ways to manage concerns and find solutions. Using the SHINE model as a pattern, Huntington describes how decisions become more realistic and set the stage for success. Star Power discusses how to control achievement, attitude, and aptitude to help teens reach their goals and dreams.

Other editions

Similar books

  • Steve Jobs: The Man Who Thought Different: A Biography
    By Karen Blumenthal

    Framed by Jobs' inspirational Stanford commencement speech and illustrated throughout with black and white photos, this is the story of the man who changed our world.

  • Because I Was a Girl: True Stories for Girls of All Ages
    By Melissa de la Cruz

    Edited by #1 New York Times-bestselling author Melissa de la Cruz, the book is the perfect gift for girls of all ages.

  • Because I Was a Girl: True Stories for Girls of All Ages
    By Melissa de la Cruz

    True Stories for Girls of All Ages Melissa de la Cruz. Henry Holt and Company, Publishers since 1866 Henry Holt® is a registered trademark of Macmillan Publishing Group, LLC 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010 fiercereads.com ...

  • Split in Two: Keeping it Together When Your Parents Live Apart
    By Karen Buscemi

    Complete with: - Personal advice from teens who have lived or are living in two households - Tips on goal-setting and planning skills - Comic-book-style illustrations that give the book an edgy, modern, graphic novel feel

  • Bonnie and Clyde: The Making of a Legend
    By Karen Blumenthal

    On November 21, Clyde and Bonnie celebrated Cumie's fiftyninth birthday with other family members on a deserted road west of Dallas near an unincorporated community called Sowers. Clyde and Bonnie were planning to leave town for a while ...

  • Abraham Lincoln's Presidency
    By Karen Latchana Kenney, Catherine M. Andronik

    Violence even broke out in Congress when Representative Preston Brooks of South Carolina beat Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts almost to death on the Senate floor. Brooks was angry because Sumner had delivered an antislavery ...

  • Tommy: The Gun That Changed America
    By Karen Blumenthal

    At the Auto-Ordnance annual meeting, surrounded by antiques in Thomas Fortune Ryan's opulent New York office, Thompson suggested the gun be named after its chief financial backer. But Ryan wanted nothing of it.

  • The Wide World of Coding: The People and Careers behind the Programs
    By Jennifer Connor-Smith

    Kimberly Bryant founded Black Girls Code because her daughter was the only black girlinasea of white, malefaces at a computer science camp. “I wanted to create something where she could find another community of girls like her who were ...

  • Unsung Heroes: Women of the Civil Rights Movement
    By Jennifer Lombardo

    WOMEN OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT Shown here are members of Kimberly Bryant's organization Black Girls Code, which she created to help black girls advance in technology classes. LEARNING ABOUT CITIZENSHIP WOMEN OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS ...

  • Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr
    By Richard Worth

    Washington's logical successor was his vice president, John Adams. Burr, however, hoped that Thomas Jefferson would run for president. And Burr also believed that he would be an excellent choice for the Republican vice president.