Tag: Relationship

Overcoming Relationship Anxiety


Free Download Overcoming Relationship Anxiety: A Personal Approach to Understanding Your Emotions, Building Your Self-Confidence, and Creating a Healthy, Secure Partnership by Courtney Paré
English | December 10th, 2024 | ISBN: 1507222688 | 240 pages | True EPUB | 2.84 MB
Understand your anxiety and its causes, develop new coping skills, and build the healthy, strong, and supportive relationship you’ve always dreamed of with the help of this guide to overcoming relationship anxiety.

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Relationship Communication!


Free Download Relationship Communication! by Laurel D. Malvern
English | May 1, 2024 | ISBN: N/A | ASIN: B0D3612RW8 | 143 pages | EPUB | 0.21 Mb
In "Relationship Communication," Laurel D. Malvern delves deep into the heart of what makes or breaks relationships: communication. Drawing from years of experience as a relationship coach, Malvern presents a comprehensive guide that covers every aspect of communication in relationships, from foundational principles to navigating the toughest conversations.

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The Employment Relationship Causes and Consequences of Modern Personnel Administration


Free Download The Employment Relationship: Causes and Consequences of Modern Personnel Administration By William P. Bridges, Wayne J. Villemez (auth.)
1995 | 243 Pages | ISBN: 0306447444 | PDF | 3 MB
In 1979, serious research was just beginning on the connections between stratification outcomes and organizations. Data suitable for investigating these connections were scarce, and the general wisdom was that they would remain scarce–since organizational case studies were seen as the only means of gathering linked individual and organizational data. The case study approach does allow one to link the two types of data, but gathering such data on more than a few organizations is prohibitively expensive and difficult, and having only a few organizations limits g- eralizability. To help solve this problem, we developed the idea of a survey of a random sample of several thousand employed individuals, followed by a second survey of their several thousand employing or- nizations. This method, we reasoned, would provide us with a gen- alizable, simple random sample of individuals, coupled with a weighted random sample of organizations (weighted, of course, by size of orga- zation). An added benefit would be that these valuable data could be gathered by a survey organization for the price of two simple surveys. It was not an easy idea to sell. We developed it into a proposal to the National Science Foundation (NSF), and though the reviewers were o- erwise sympathetic, they were almost unanimous in their contention that such a survey would not work because "obviously" the great maj- ity of respondents would refuse to reveal exactly who their employers were.

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