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Books with author Joan Esherick

  • Brain Injury

    Joan Esherick

    Hardcover (Mason Crest Publishers, Aug. 15, 2014)
    The human brain is a fragile organ, and as a result, brain damage is all too common. Tumors, strokes, accidents, gunshots, and impacts to the skull can all cause brain injury. These injuries can be minoror they might cause memory loss or the inability to move normally. Many people who suffer brain injuries must relearn how to walk, talk, and do basic things like tie their shoes. In this book, youll read the story of Jerome, a boy who suffered a dangerous head injury while riding his bicycle. Youll learn how schools, doctors, and others are helping people like Jerome regain control of their lives.
  • Criminal Psychology & Personality Profiling

    Joan Esherick

    eBook (Mason Crest, Sept. 2, 2014)
    Television programs and feature films present criminal psychology and profiling as a blend of psychic visions, supernatural intuition, and evidence analysis. The reality, however, is quite different. Using true-crime case studies from history and the present, examples from current and former FBI profilers, and informative sidebars, Criminal Psychology & Personality Profiling explores the many roles and responsibilities criminal psychologists and profilers fill as they support other professionals in addressing crime and its consequences. From crime-scene analysis to offering expert testimony in court, these behavioral scientists offer an understanding of crime, the criminal mind, and those affected by crime.
  • Criminal Psychology & Personality Profiling

    Joan Esherick

    Library Binding (Mason Crest, Sept. 1, 2013)
    Defines criminal psychology, discusses criminal profiling and its associated dangers, and outlines the skills and education required to become a profiler.
  • Sleep Deprivation & Its Consequences

    Joan Esherick

    eBook (Mason Crest, Sept. 2, 2014)
    Do you ever feel exhausted and drowsy, like you need more sleep? If you do, you're not alone. A recent study by the National Sleep Foundation (NSF) found that 60 percent of people under the age of eighteen complained of daytime tiredness. Fifteen percent (one out of every seven) said they were so tired they fell asleep in school. You may think that not getting sufficient sleep is no big deal, but think again. According to the National Sleep Foundation, sleep deprivation can put you at high risk for unintentional injury and death, low grades and poor school performance, negative moods, and increased likelihood of stimulant use. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration views driving drowsy as actually more dangerous, and more deadly, than driving drunk! What is sleep? Why do we need it? What causes sleep deprivation and how can it be avoided? What are its tragic results? This book answers these and other questions by using a readable blend of real-life accounts, easy-to-understand statistics, scientific data, and practical suggestions.
  • Criminal Psychology And Personality Profiling

    Joan Esherick

    Library Binding (Mason Crest, Nov. 30, 2005)
    Defines criminal psychology and discusses criminal profiling and the dangers faced by professional criminal psychologists and profilers.
    V
  • Brain Injury

    Joan Esherick

    eBook (Mason Crest, Feb. 3, 2015)
    The human brain is a fragile organ, and as a result, brain damage is all too common. Tumors, strokes, accidents, gunshots, and impacts to the skull can all cause brain injury. These injuries can be minor—or they might cause memory loss or the inability to move normally. Many people who suffer brain injuries must relearn how to walk, talk, and do basic things like tie their shoes. In this book, you'll read the story of Jerome, a boy who suffered a dangerous head injury while riding his bicycle. You'll learn how schools, doctors, and others are helping people like Jerome regain control of their lives.
  • The Laws That Protect Youth with Special Needs

    Joan Esherick

    eBook (Mason Crest, Feb. 3, 2015)
    Millions of people with special needs experience problems like prejudice, limited opportunities, and difficulties accessing the facilities that should be freely available. Luckily, there are laws in place today to protect their rights. Maria, a beautiful young girl with dreams of becoming a model, isn't allowed to participate in a local modeling workshop. Why? Because she uses a wheelchair. Another student with a disability is threatened by the loss of medical funding from the government, just because he's turning twenty-one; if he loses the government's help, he'll have to stop going to school and start living in a nursing home. What can he do to fight the situation? Meanwhile, nineteen-year-old Manuel is rejected from a job because of his history of seizures, even though he takes medication and hasn't had a seizure in more than five years. Is there something Manuel can do to get the job? As you read these young adults' stories, you'll learn about the laws that protect their rights. You'll discover the history behind these laws, and you'll find out exactly which rights are protected.
  • Sleep Deprivation & Its Consequences

    Joan Esherick

    Library Binding (Mason Crest, Sept. 1, 2013)
    Provides teenagers with information on the importance of sleep, discussing how much is needed, how to get a good night's sleep, and the problems surrounding sleep deprivation.
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  • Prisoner Rehabilitation: Success Stories And Failures

    Joan Esherick

    eBook (Mason Crest, Feb. 3, 2015)
    Russ committed thousands of dollars of damage during a two-hour drunken vandalism spree. He never saw the inside of a jail, yet in the thirty years since his first arrest he remains re-arrest free. He's a rehabilitation success story. Manny stole a car at thirteen years of age, a crime for which he was sentenced to a detention center. That was only the first of what would become dozens of arrests, re-arrests, and convictions in Manny's lifetime. Criminal behavior became his way of life. Russ and Manny represent the best and worst of today's American rehabilitation policies. While a few programs and institutions succeed in helping people with criminal tendencies to turn their lives around, many fail. How are people who commit crimes being successfully rehabilitated? What works? What doesn't? Is there hope for change for someone who finds himself behind bars? The real-life case studies provided in this book offer intriguing answers and observations. They may even raise additional questions. In any case, Prisoner Rehabilitation: Success Stories and Failures provides a balanced perspective of what rehabilitation is and how it can better be accomplished.
  • Dead on Their Feet: Teen Sleep Deprivation and Its Consequences

    Joan Esherick

    Library Binding (Mason Crest, Dec. 1, 2004)
    Provides teenagers with information on the importance of sleep, discussing how much is needed, how to get a good nights sleep, and the problems surrounding sleep deprivation.
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  • Prisoner Rehabilitation: Success Stories And Failures

    Joan Esherick

    Library Binding (Mason Crest, Sept. 30, 2006)
    Provides case studies that illustrate the best and worst of America's rehabilitation policies, showing what works and what does not.
    Z+
  • Suicide & Self-Destructive Behaviors

    Joan Esherick

    eBook (Mason Crest, Sept. 2, 2014)
    Sixteen-year-old Draven dresses like the un-dead. Thirteen-year-old Kristen slices her thighs. Fifteen-year-old Jamal rides BMX bikes in competition. What do these teens have in common? They are all taking risks. Though many teens seek independence and thrills through activities that can harm them, risk-taking in adolescence does not have to be self-destructive. This book takes an honest look at the five most self-destructive behaviors: substance abuse, risky sex, self-injury, eating disorders, and suicide. Causes, consequences, and treatment options are examined, and the final chapter provides healthy less-risky alternatives teens can take to accomplish their independence-seeking goals. Sidebars, easy-to-understand statistics, and real-life case studies make this an informative, interesting read for teens who seek to understand high-risk behaviors, their consequences, and how to avoid them.