Not framing a conversation can have negative effects.
Not exact matches
In her book, Melanie Ross has provided us with an affectionate
framing of evangelical liturgical practices that will surely bring a greater and much - needed clarity to the
conversation between evangelicals and high - church Christians, if
not a greater sympathy.
Having spent the last ten years wrestling through some tough questions related to faith, heaven, hell, and salvation, I really appreciate the personal way in which Bell
frames the
conversation, asking the very questions I was so afraid to ask all those years and proclaiming the same hope I only dared believe — that God doesn't give up on people, that he is ever - loving, ever - redeeming, ever pursuing.
In most cases, you won't end up actually sending the letter to the person, but the process of writing it will help you gain perspective on your feelings, and might even help you
frame a
conversation you need to have.
Don't enter into these
conversations with a negative
frame of mind about the school; that won't help your child.
Using empathy to
frame your concerns in a way that enables a productive
conversation is positive; being so empathetic that issues never get worked through is
not.
And if you're
not, read the next two steps to see if you can get in the right
frame of mind to proceed with a productive
conversation.
He doesn't take quite the gonzo cinematic approach McKay did, but he keeps things visually interesting via unflattering freeze
frames and drug - fueled
conversations glimpsed through night vision goggles as he zooms from Miami and Vegas to Jordan and Albania.
Every
frame of it, every
conversation, the way it starts and ends, they could
not have done it any better.
Not for nothing, it makes textbook - worthy use of negative space — heightening the effectiveness of its intimate
conversations, characters are often tucked away into the corner of the
frame in fully realized visuals.
These sentence
frames also direct students back to the classmate to whom they're responding, reminding members of the discussion that all are part of a community of thinkers and that their
conversation is with one another,
not just with their teacher.
Even though much of this presentation overlaps with Kristen Swanson's TEDx talk above, and the same Flocabulary song is featured, I couldn't resist including this wonderfully - named talk by Dan Callahan, who
frames the whole
conversation so nicely.
March 25: 6 and 8:30 pm Screenings March 26: 3 pm Screening followed by a
conversation with Mary Helena Clark; Sky Hopinka; Cauleen Smith; Mia Locks, co-curator of the 2017 Whitney Biennial; and Aily Nash, co-curator of the 2017 Whitney Biennial film program Mary Helena Clark (b. 1983), The Dragon is the
Frame, 2014 Delphi Falls, 2016 Sky Hopinka (b. 1984), I'll Remember You As You Were,
Not As What You'll Become, 2016 Jáaji Approx., 2015 Anti-Objects, or Space Without Path or Boundary, 2017 Cauleen Smith (b. 1967), H - E-L-L-O, 2015 Sine At The Canyon Sine At The Sea By Kelly Gabron, 2016 Tickets are required ($ 12 adults, students, and seniors; free for members).
That means we're in a cooperative,
not competitive
frame of
conversation, seeking to discover truth and derive strategies based on truth,
not to accuse or oppose.
While I can't help but be pleased to see this apparent consensus on the importance of ethics and professionalism to legal practice, I think the
conversation as
framed has the potential to lead us astray.
And here's something interesting: While your photo or video only remains visible for 24 hours, your
conversation about it doesn't necessarily expire in that time
frame, as long as the thread remains active.