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Neil Bright

    Neil Bright is an educator and administrator with a background in psychology and government. His work delves into the principles of master teaching and personal growth, often drawing from his extensive experience in education. He explores the 'how' and 'why' behind effective teaching and the psychological underpinnings of individual development. Bright's writings offer insightful perspectives for both educators and those interested in self-improvement.

    Southwark in the Blitz
    Those Who Can
    The Greater Game
    A Wander Through Wartime London
    Rethinking Everything
    • 2016

      Southwark in the Blitz

      • 128 pages
      • 5 hours of reading

      The moving and dramatic account, in words and pictures, of how the London borough of Southwark survived the Blitz

      Southwark in the Blitz
    • 2015

      Rethinking Everything

      • 234 pages
      • 9 hours of reading

      Combining widely-accepted concepts of human behavior with elements from Rational Emotive Therapy, Positive Psychology, Emotional Intelligence, and most prominently Transactional Analysis, Rethinking Everything explores in immediately understandable terms why we act as we do, how we frequently undermine our relationships, why we often cripple our potential, and how we can take greater control of our lives.

      Rethinking Everything
    • 2012

      Those Who Can

      Why Master Teachers Do What They Do

      • 198 pages
      • 7 hours of reading

      Focusing on the practices of elite instructors, the book illustrates the characteristics of instructional excellence by connecting theory with real-world application. It explores the specific actions and decisions of master teachers, explaining how their pedagogical choices contribute to exceptional student outcomes. By analyzing these effective strategies, readers gain insights into achieving excellence in education.

      Those Who Can
    • 2010

      A Wander Through Wartime London

      • 142 pages
      • 5 hours of reading

      Through a series of five walks this book discovers the sights, sounds and experience of the capital at war; it details the remaining tangible evidence of the dark days via air raid shelter signs, bomb damage on buildings and memorials detailing heroic and often tragic events. The new routes cover a wide area of London and reveal further evidence of the experiences of four years air war in the skies above our capital city. The East End & Docks, Greenwich, Holborn, Bermondsey, Southwark and the West End are all featured, along with detailed maps and numerous contemporary photographs that accompany the text for each walk. The book also contains a number of appendices relating to the wider picture of the war. A well deserved story of London's Home Guard is told. A list of Civil Defense casualties that occurred within the boroughs covered by the walks is included as well as a detailed list of the locations of wartime fire and ambulance stations across the capital. This book will appeal to both the enthusiast and anyone with an interest in London's past. It is a further record of the memories and tangible evidence of this dramatic period of our capital's past and a tribute to those who lived through the Blitz and sadly so often, those who did not.

      A Wander Through Wartime London
    • 2008

      The Greater Game

      • 199 pages
      • 7 hours of reading

      This fascinating book examines the deadly impact of The Great War on a number of leading professional sportsmen of the age. Their untimely deaths pressed home how even the fittest and most gifted were vulnerable and their loss was felt by far more than their families and friends.Among those featured in this well illustrated book Donald Bell - the only professional football player to win the Victoria Anthony Wilder - the glamorous Wimbledon champion who fell in May 1915; Francois Faber - the Tour de France Percy Poulton Palmer - England Rugby Captain; and numerous others. Also covered are those sports-orientated units such as 16 Battalion Royal Scots (formed around Heart of Midlothian FC) and 11 King’s Royal Rifle Corps (professional golfers). We learn of their formation, training and war service. Finally the authors study the effect of the conflict on the world of sport - canceling of fixture, use of facilities etc.

      The Greater Game