Seven Life Lessons From Humanistic Behaviorism: How to Bring the Best Out of Yourself and Others E. SCOTT GELLER Seven ... the top seven lessons you have learned from studying the literature on behavioral and psychological science.
Integrating humanism and behaviorism, this volume presents evidence-based techniques for improving health, safety, and well-being in all walks of life.
Everett L. Worthington believes psychology can contribute to the Christian life, because all of us, psychologists and non-psychologists alike, are human and can benefit from better understanding our fellow humankind.
Everett L. Worthington believes psychology can contribute to the Christian life, because all of us, psychologists and non-psychologists alike, are human and can benefit from better understanding our fellow humankind.
(8a) Some of the factors that influence how people vote include their values (Peeters, Jackson, & Carter, 1992), demographic features (Dubois & Anderson, 2004), and the presence of negative affect like fear or anger (Moore & Hernández, ...
Effective Parenting and Caregiving: Practical Guidelines from Psychological Science equips readers with education and training to help them care most effectively for children--from infants to toddlers and grade schoolers, and on to ...
Life lessons from psychological science: How to bring the best out of yourself and others. Plymouth, MI: Macmillan Learning. → Geller, E. S. (2020). Life lessons from psychological science: Understanding and improving interpersonal ...
Although it's always important to try one's best, the key to success in these simpler areas may not come down to trying harder but to trying differently. 2. It's entirely possible for someone to know what to do yet have difficulty ...
My aim here is to “set the table” for the story by Dr. E. Scott Geller and Bob Veazie that follows. I want to prime you to think about competence, commitment, courage, and compassion—the “four Cwords” at the heart of their story.
I grin, realizing the young man at the microphone is Shane Carroll, the student body President. Carroll keeps his arms up but flares his palms in a patting-down gesture, the crowd realizes he'd prefer quiet, and the noise quickly ...