Apprentissage auto-géré et instruction à la maison : une perspective européenne
Sous la direction de Leslie Safran Barson
L’apprentissage auto-géré est une philosophie qui a beaucoup de partisans mais peu de reconnaissance officielle dans une Europe de plus en plus centralisée et bureaucratisée. Le mouvement de l’instruction à la maison a joué un rôle déterminant pour faire connaître cette approche éducative ; Learning Unlimited a été fondée en partie afin de promouvoir celle-ci en Europe et c’est pour cette raison que ce livre a vu le jour.
Ce livre est basé sur des conférences organisées (...)
Breastmilk makes my tummy yummy
de Cecilia Moen
Un livre d’image célébrant la joie de l’allaitement au sein.
Editions Midsummer Press, 1999.
Runa’s birth - The day my sister was born
de Uwe Spillmann et Inga Kamieth
Mummy is having a baby. This is a very special day for four-year-old Lisa. Her mother doesn’t go to the hospital to have her baby, but rather stays at home. Lisa enjoys a beautiful spring day together with Mummy, Daddy, Karen the midwife, her godmother Laurie, and her friend Fabio and is even ther when the baby finally comes out of Mummy’s tummy.
The birth is portrayed with warm pictures and brief text.
This book conveys the midwife’s work as well as the excitement, joy, and happiness of (...)
The continuum concept
de Jean Liedloff
"Basic things about human nature that we forget or ignore at our peril" Professor Robert Aldrich, M.D., Formerly of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Washington DC.
"Deserves to be read by western parents, child psychologists, and other social engineers concerned with restoring self-reliance and well-being. There are remarkable insights here." The New-York Times Book Review.
"A book we all should read... to help us become nurturing parents and advocates for our (...)
The vital touch - How intimate contact with your baby leads to happier, healthier development.
de Sharon Heller
A provocate exploration of touch’s role in our babies’ development.
Why do american babies rank among the least held on earth ? Throughout human evolution, babies have enjoyed intimate physical contact with their mothers. In cultures around the world, parent’s arms are used to comfort their babies, for holding and carrying them to rocking them to sleep.
In this probing and insightful book, psychologist Sharon Heller uses evolutionary psychology to examine why social pressures and a desire (...)