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The 7 Habits Of Highly Effective Teens

The 7 Habits Of Highly Effective Teens

List Price: $14.00
Your Price: $10.50
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The best thing for any teenager
Review: I bought this book four days ago, and it has already changed my life. Everything used to stress me out, but this not only helps you relaxe, but teaches you to understand other people. I deffenitly reccomend it!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A must read for all teenagers AND their parents!
Review: I bought the book for my 14 year old son. I started reading it to my freshman leadership class and then shared the book with my daughters, age 16 and 18. Everyone agreed that the book is positively fun and inspirational!! I liked reading the younger Covey's book more than his dad's! Nothing but good can come from buying this book and sharing it with a friend. Or two. Or three. Or more!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great book to steer teens in the right direction
Review: Sean Covey is a great role model for teens! He uses the principles from his father's best-selling book, The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People, to show teens how they too, can use them. The Covey model encourages solid character formation, and provides essential strategies for success in all areas of life. You start by mastering yourself and then you learn how to interact correctly with other people. The book is logical and the cartoons add fun.

I must also recommend "Optimal Thinking: How to Be Your Best Self" endorsed by Dr. Steven Covey. The author of Optimal Thinking, a former teacher, interacted with teens in the classroom for a decade and truly understands them. Optimal Thinking shows all of us how to bring our best self to every situation, deal most effectively with our feelings, bring out the best from others, and make the most of every situation. Optimal Thinking should be taught in every school, and these books should be in every home.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: expensive toilet paper
Review: I hate this book! I truly can't see why this book is so popular.
Heres why i hate it: First off I can't stand covey's writing style. Its just so unsophisticated, so annoying, and very dry.
Second the messages that covey presents are blatant. He says that we should perform random acts of kindness (Really? i don't think my grandmother ever told me to do that) he also says that we should not let our fears make our decisions (wow!!!! what a great motivator). so if you already wiped your ass today you haven't any use for this book!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: An effective book for effective people
Review: I bought this book last year.What attracted me was not just the content,but the fun and interesting English language teenagers will find reading enjoyable (Note: it's not the type of super English with bombastic words and terms that'll probably send you poring through the dictionary).There are also interesting and cute little quotations that get you start laughing and giggling.

But what is really great about this book is that it is hardly a book.It's so well-written,it's like a essential manual for all teenagers to possess! There are true-account experiences as well as well as well as accounts of scenarios which you may find familiar...like struggling to do well in an exam,coping with relationships problems and stuff.

Frankly speaking,Sean Covey did make a point.I was quick to point out that i'm a procastinator (something i learnt over here),and is now able to control my emotions and get the better of myself.Though this book is like the one of the many thousands "self-improvement" source i've read,i think it is one over at my top ten list.Pointers,comics strips,useful hotlines,true accounts...and a really cool author,what more can you expect?

Need help? This is the book for you!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great Book For Adults Too--Forget His Father's Book
Review: What Sean has done here hopefully has taught his father a lesson or two about simplicity. I don't think "how to" books have to be so complicated and Sean Covey proves it with this wonderful book. It has the exact same message as Stephen Covey's book but is a lot more fun and relaxing to read. I recommend that all adults buy it instead of Stephen Covey's book, "7 Habits of Highly Effective People". Stephen Covey's wordy,proud and know it all writing style really got on my nerves. Sean's book on the other hand is humble, straight forward, simple, easy and fast to read. You get the point without having to read through a bunch of mental masturbation. I bought it for my teenage daughter and then ended up reading the whole book and buying another copy for another teenager. They both really liked it. My husband is a crisis counselor who works with teens. He has been using the ideas in Sean Covey's book for his "Rites of Passage" work with teens and has really gotten some great insights and practical tools for his workshops. I wish there were more books like this on the market. If your teen is resistent to reading the book then read it yourself. You'll find that it will still be helpful when guiding them or talking to them about the immense stress and issues facing them in today's highly chaotic society.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Very upbeat, funny, non-invasive
Review: I'm not a teenager anymore, but I still enjoyed reading Sean Covey's book. A person might criticize Sean for riding on his father's coattails (Stephen R. Covey of the Seven Habits collection of books and other materials). However, Stephen himself has said that he is not responsible for creating the ideas involved with the seven habits, and I doubt that anyone would criticize Sean for much of anything after reading 'The 7 Habits of Highly Effective Teens.'

I really liked this book, to state the obvious. It can serve to excite interest in social science in younger readers, or at least make them consider things about themselves they have not thought much about. What are your dominant intelligences? Are you a grape, an orange, a banana, or a melon (different categories of personalities)? The book is definitely a tool that promotes self-discovery.

Sean explains the seven habits with anecdotes from his personal life and situations that would be familiar to anyone. Overall it's a very uplifting, insightful book that presents a wonderful learning opportunity to readers of any age. The book doesn't have to be read cover to cover, even people who don't like to read can browse through it or read just one section and walk away with food for thought. And definitely ideas that can be applied to their everyday lives. econ

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Read it if You Need it
Review:
I read this book in tenth grade as a mandatory part of a success-related class in high school. What I found was a book that was easy to read, slightly beneficial, but containing a hypocritical chapter that ruined the whole meaning for me.

Yes, Sean DOES state many skills that people should develop in order to be happy and successful in their lives. Yes, he did put some of them into practise, and uses fairly interesting, real-life stories to stress the importance or relevance of the skills. However, I found a particular personal anecdote he mentioned in here to be contradictory with the very purpose of the book. Sean himself was a low-grade-achieving, drop-out student. He was given a decent job because he happened to know someone in a high position at a famous, profitable company (I'm not giving details, in case someone doesn't want to be given too much info). Basically, he lucked out. If his achieval of the job had been through determination and effort instead of dumb-luck and good connections, maybe I would've taken the story more seriously.

If you feel this book will give you the motivation you need, by all means pick it up. It's a quick, easy read with good morals. If you're already happy with who you are, and stress yourself out enough about "being successful," you probably don't need it.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Slowly, but surely.
Review: I got this book when I was like in 7th grade and read it, but didn't understand it. In eigth grade I read it again, and again once more. I started understanding what the book was saying, and I really LOVED how Sean wrote the book. He used real life experperiences from when he was a teen, as well as other people. This was towards the end of my eigth grade year. By the time I started High school, I stopped procrastinating and had much better grades. Nor would I "forget" my homework. Then I made a friend who was in the IB program as well as I, but procrastinated really bad. I knew exactly what to prescribe. When I referred to the book, I was amazed at how I practiced everything without even thinking of it. I found that I could manage my time wisely: hold a B+ average, wrestle, and still have time for myself. I hope that the book will have the same effect on him, as well as everyone else.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: How the book effected me
Review: When I was growing up I had older sisters, and one of my sisters hung out with the wrong croud ,and started to do drugs. One day she brought me to one of her friends houses and she convinced me to try smoking pot I knew it was wrong but i did casue I didnt want ot feel out of place being the yungest one and all. I was 13 at the time and her and her friends were 15-19. So when i tried it I thought it was really cool I started smoking it before school and one day I got cought. It wasnt good thats when I knew I needed to stop so i went to a counciler and I got help. It took me about 2 1/2 months to completly STOP, but I did it. and now today i am drug free and will never tough drugs agian in my life.


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