Artistic contribution to the development of art movements in America was an important selection criteria, as gallerist Michael
Kohn explains:
«Parting with power is not easy, if only because the results are less predictable than in a situation where we have control,»
Kohn explains.
Not exact matches
«People have a false assumption that they're more productive working as a group than individually, even though all evidence shows it's the opposite,»
explains Nicholas
Kohn, co-author of the University of Texas study, published in the journal Applied Cognitive Psychology.
In the discussion moderated by Cushman & Wakefield vice chairman and president Steven
Kohn, panelists had a more nuanced way of
explaining it.
For
Kohn emotional correctness — the ability to empathize and
explain — opens the door to real conversation:
As the folks at the Michael
Kohn Gallery in L.A.
explain it, the art exhibit that opened last Saturday «takes the idea of the object — in this case the seductive shape of the surfboard — and attempts to trap the image beneath the fiberglass and resin surface.
I recently read Alfie
Kohn's The Myth of the Spoiled Child and he very nicely
explains it by stating that rewards only work to get temporary compliance and that giving kids rewards to do something (try a new food) sends the message that the thing in and of itself is not worth doing.
«Rewards, like punishments, produce only one thing: temporary obedience,»
explains Alfie
Kohn, author of Punished by Rewards: The Trouble with Gold Stars, Incentive Plans, A's, Praise, and Other Bribes.
In this video, whiteboard graphics are used to help
explain Alfie
Kohn's thoughts on «feel - bad» education, which he believes is a problem for many schools.
To
explain what this is all about is author Alfie
Kohn in an article adapted from the author's new book The Myth of the Spoiled Child: Challenging the Conventional Wisdom about Children and Parenting, just published by Da Capo Press.
Clark County Public Defender Phillip
Kohn called the issue of case counting a «red herring,» and
explained why cases might be counted differently by different participants in the criminal justice system: