The following is an extract from
my article about the conclusions of the Education Endowment Foundation (EEF) research on the effectiveness of various approaches to school learning.
Not exact matches
The broad points are sound, but I didn't get a
conclusion to warn you of an impending recession any more than I did from the Times
article, but thought it coincidental that many are talking
about a recession but NOT associating such talk to the stock market's action in the last month.
Her description of the science alone would have been fine, but the
article is meant to be taken as a whole, and drawing a theological
conclusion and describing the proper practice of science as an act of worship takes an
article about science and turns it into one
about fantasy as those
conclusions are baseless and unprovable.
I think the
conclusion of this
article should be more
about whether or not people are turning to the only true hope for the world rather than turning to their own (or someone else's) twisted perspectives.
My
conclusion from the
article and its stated survey results is, in part, in agreement with what was written: Atheists have spent a lot more time thinking
about and studying religion.
Finally, Mr. DeVet thinks our
article had too optimistic a
conclusion, arguing that stem cells «will cause people to be more prudent in the future
about mixing science with politics in general.»
But each time I read books, blogs or
articles about the topic (granted that I am more inclined to read stuff written by people who are really serious
about their relationship with God rather than people complaining merely because they can — and thereâ $ ™ s plenty of them), I come to one
conclusion: The complaints are mostly
about what the church has become (or how people perceive the church to be) than against the church itself.
That's the
conclusion of University of Illinois researcher Brian Wansink, who wrote a definitive
article about the subject: «The Mystery of the Cabinet Castaway: Why We Buy Products We Never Use» in the Journal of Family and Consumer Sciences.
talk
about skewing the stats to fit your own
conclusions... this is like a slap in the face to every real Arsenal fan... have you no shame, have you no dignity, have you no sense of right from wrong... if you think everything was so well orchestrated why is everyone and their brother laughing at the way in which we conduct business both on and off the field... either you're a paid hack or a delusional buffoon... regardless you can't be a genuine Arsenal fan because the difficulties facing this club having been going on for years and this latest episode in our pathetic recent history is but a glaring reminder of how far we have fallen... I'm not going to waste my time discrediting every single ridiculous statement you made in your love letter to Wenger, but if you write another
article I will gladly expose you for the fraud you truly are... this club is in desperate need of a serious cleansing and for you to try and package this dog and pony show as a well - oiled machine is a direct insult to anyone who has supported this team during the supposed «lean» years... the deceptive and disrespectful manner in which this organization has treated it's fans is an abomination to supporters everywhere and for you to even try to justify their actions is akin to saying just shut - up and keep filling our pockets... so please crawl back under whatever stone you crawled out from under and think carefully before you spew this type of propaganda ever again
Good
article states many reasonable
conclusions and facts
about the season and how amongst all the turmoil we have a manger who does well but one thing in purchases over the last five years we are 6th in the epl were at 366m tottenham in 5th with 397m and he made a mistake there we are 6thin money spent on players but we have had the sanchez saga and new players adjusting to epl and the team and injuries and it definitely hasnt been our year in ref decisions which have played a factor in games though we still should have won aside from ref but watford and westbrom many other games are included at city free offside goal weak penalty and at spurs we were robbed of going one nil up auba onside bu honestly the officiating across the whole league this year has been an embarrassment to professional officials of all sports its been bad game after game they need to get some rigorous training this offseason for improvement
Don Reese's
article and the increasing stories
about conniving in college athletic recruitment and the ensuing exploitation of the athlete lead me to only one
conclusion: As a society, we have equaled the decadence of the Roman Empire.
If you're in the mood for 5,000 words
about why baseball's future is in trouble, please read my
article from last week, which comes to this
conclusion:
Hardly the cut and dry
conclusion that Hanna Rosin was talking
about in her
article.
He says: «Our
article is very specific
about clarifying the role of Tu Youyou, and we came to the
conclusion that Tu is a representative of the project.
Case in point is an
article in Science last week (January 23, 2009) detailing how bacteriological and linguistic research, independent of each other, reached the same
conclusion: the peopling of the Pacific islands originated from the island of Taiwan
about 5,200 years ago (rather than Southeast Asia as previously thought), jumped to the Philippine Islands, thence Micronesia and finally to eastern Polynesia.
I've seen
articles written
about this paper which reach more alarming
conclusions.
I believe that a well balanced diet is what we should be talking
about rather than low this and low that, again, as Phil puts it perfectly well (in my opinion) in the
conclusion of this
article, thus, ``... we can only hope it is replaced by sound and balanced style of eating that includes nourishing and metabolism - boosting dietary fats, unrefined natural carbohydrates, and healthy protein choices.
(And the author of this recent NY Times
article comes to the same
conclusion about buying what you love.)
That's the
conclusion I want to say
about this
article.
If you just think
about the steps necessary to read an
article on an iPad, you would come to this same
conclusion.
Diane Ravitch makes many points in her
article «The Myth of Charter Schools» [NYR, November 11, 2010]-- some we agree with, some we disagree with, namely ill - informed
conclusions about what we can learn from Locke High School, a high school of more than three thousand students in Los Angeles that Green Dot took over from the school district in 2008.
While in the
conclusions section of this
article authors stretch this finding out a bit, writing that «Overall, this study finds that there is promise in teacher evaluation reform in Chicago,» (p. 114) as primarily based on their findings about «the new observation process» (p. 114) being used in CPS, recall from the Review of Article # 4 prior (i.e., # 4 of 9 on observational systems» potentials here), these observational systems are not «new and improved.
article authors stretch this finding out a bit, writing that «Overall, this study finds that there is promise in teacher evaluation reform in Chicago,» (p. 114) as primarily based on their findings
about «the new observation process» (p. 114) being used in CPS, recall from the Review of
Article # 4 prior (i.e., # 4 of 9 on observational systems» potentials here), these observational systems are not «new and improved.
Article # 4 prior (i.e., # 4 of 9 on observational systems» potentials here), these observational systems are not «new and improved.»
An
article in today's Wall Street Journal has been making the rounds on Twitter and in blogs — the piece is
about the habits of e-reader owners, and as Penguin imprint Dutton tweeted this morning, the
conclusions are «maybe not what you'd think.»
I speculated the same thing
about Del Rey «helping» Kodansha in my
article on this a while back, but my personal
conclusion is that Kodansha has actually been publishing books in North America for quite some time, including some manga... I doubt they really need help, at least on the level of submitting things to Amazon.
Add to that the fact that the same person who penned the post I fisked followed up with another
article about why the «vast majority of self - published authors will never be taken seriously», and I've come to the
conclusion that the premise he'd been as insulting — and I'm being nice here — as he was was simply to drive traffic to the site.
Article Critical Review While writing article review, you should remember about the essential components of the essay writing: introduction, body, and conc
Article Critical Review While writing
article review, you should remember about the essential components of the essay writing: introduction, body, and conc
article review, you should remember
about the essential components of the essay writing: introduction, body, and
conclusion.
As a
conclusion to this
article, I believe that the best - kept secret to becoming an Amazon bestselling author is building enthusiasm and excitement
about your book.
As is typical for such cursory analyses, the
article lumps together ETFs with the word «dividend» in their name, and focuses on short - term (up to three years) returns to draw
conclusions about the funds» performance.
Our
conclusions about «what to invest in» based on a mindful assessment of historical and expected future returns and risks in
Articles 6.1 and 6.2 include:
The
article compares his track record against other investors and discusses his contrarian investment approach and his
conclusion that the «right method in investment is to put fairly large sums into enterprises one thinks one knows something
about».
In this
article, we're going to lay out the facts
about raw food diets for dogs so you draw your own
conclusion about whether this diet is good or bad for dogs...
In this
article, we're going to lay out the facts
about raw food diets for dogs so you can draw your own
conclusion about whether this diet is good or bad for dogs.
That is why Dr. Weedon and three fellow shelter medicine researchers from the University of Minnesota, the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals and Mississippi State University recently published a review
article * evaluating the relevant literature and drawing
conclusions about gonadectomies, especially regarding the optimal age to perform this procedure.
Writing an
article presumes a comprehensive disclosure of one's thoughts
about a specific topic with abstract
conclusions that are expressed figuratively.
Without it one is easily stopped by opportunists who will find petty errors, like M&M did using
about 17 1/2 pages of the 20 pages of their first
article to describe them, then using the claim that only perfection is acceptable as a basis for denouncing a major collaborative work that has been peer reviewed and even had its
conclusions reproduced several times since.
Here's an Associated Press summary in The Times and a BBC
article on the Dutch findings, which are in a report initiated after an errant
conclusion about the risks from rising sea levels in the Netherlands made it into the 2007 climate assessments by the panel.
Your tentative
conclusion about the MWP being prevelant in the Northen Hemisphere is not supported by the research documented in the following
articles:
I've seen
articles written
about this paper which reach more alarming
conclusions.
What I find most surprising
about the paper on my re-read and those who seem to have little problem accepting or at least finding no weaknesses of the indirect methodology used to make some rather far reaching
conclusions is not that papers such as this one can get published, but the authoritative nature these
articles seem to take on and particularly so when they are referenced in the IPCC reports.
Even so, we can still assess whether the issues discussed in the
article lead to the
conclusion that there is no need to worry
about climate change.
Peiser has long opposed mainstream science's
conclusions about anthropogenic global warming; in 2005 Peiser said he had data which refuted an
article published in Science Magazine, claiming 100 % of peer - reviewed research papers on climate change agreed with the scientific consensus of global warming.
The
article's key
conclusion about Kangerlussuaq (KL)-- based on a study of ice dynamics from 2000 to 2006 — hardly justifies labeling it an «inconveniently growing» glacier:
Certainly we can all think for ourselves and interpret data using logical principles but we must be careful
about drawing
conclusions based on partial evidence (such as the world temperature plot Mr. MacRae uses in his
article «Glimmer of hope for consensus climate honesty is short - lived» which only includes 10 years of readings).
Anyway - I'm surprised that in that
article, you seem to be focusing the
conclusion from the study towards whether to research geoengineering or not - rather than the underlying lessons to be gained
about how to make science communication less polarizing.
Just like Ira's physical model or the explanation of the atmopsheric window in this
article, a lab experiment simplified down to a cylinder with air in it is fine for evaluating certain aspects of CO2 and IR, but for drawing any
conclusions about the climate?
That the Court declined to comment on the second question reminds us to be circumspect
about the impact of the Court's holding — it is a narrow holding in so far as it is limited to the set of circumstances enumerated in
Article 15 (2) and, as the AG notes in her
conclusions, the language suggests that there was little margin for discretion — the State must «normally» keep the family together.
Excuse me, but I suggest that we first ask ourselves whether cartel facilitators should be included in the scope of application of
Article 101, and only if the answer is yes, care
about whether the Court has given the proper reasons for this
conclusion.
The Volokh Conspiracy's Todd Zywicki, still mulling last week's testimony on bankruptcy before the U.S. Senate, posts his concerns
about the
conclusions of a Health Affairs
article that links serious medical problems to 50 percent of bankruptcy filings.
The Commission, however, argues that EU competition law seeks to bring
about equal conditions of competition, leading to the
conclusion that just maintaining inequality in the conditions of competition suffices for a violation of
Article 106 (1) in connection with 102 TFEU.
A recent
article in the Vancouver Sun,
about an Angus Reid survey regarding «Canadians» openness to the religions of others» based on «the results of a major survey of more than 2,000 residents by Vancouver - based pollsters Angus Reid» highlights the importance of context and clarity in stating
conclusions based on statistics.