Sentences with phrase «defined by the discipline»

Only problems defined by the discipline or highly abstract expressions of real problems can be dealt with in that way.
Featuring new works by Jane Harris, Alex Paik and Gelah Penn, we are led to enter an imagined space where the work no longer needs to be defined by disciplines, media or intention; the work is meant to resonate inside and out in a poetic and visceral transformation.
This is a narrative that has developed on a much more personal level, whose fragmented contours are not defined by discipline, city, or nationality.
Chung's methodical and introspective approach to painting aligns his work with Tansaekhwa values, as he explores the power of his medium to invoke contemplation while probing the identity of an art object defined by a disciplined devotion to craft.

Not exact matches

In the coming months and years, as a recovery takes hold, financial institutions defined by long - term business strategies, strong balance sheets and especially by disciplined risk management principles will be rewarded.
Tamara Schenk, research director at CSO Insights, defines sales enablement as «a strategic, cross-functional discipline designed to increase sales results and productivity by providing integrated content, training and coaching services for salespeople and front - line sales managers along the entire customer's buying journey, powered by technology.»
Challies defines mysticism as «those forms of Christian spirituality which attempt direct or unmediated access to God» and mentions, generally, the popularity of books on spiritual disciplines and spiritual formation and, specifically, books by Christian authors like Sarah Young and John Eldredge.
I am also troubled by the extent to which theology has allowed itself to be defined as one academic discipline among others with its distinctive subject matter and method, related only externally to other disciplines.
One is the view that what defines an inquiry as «theology» is that it employs the distinctive methods or disciplines required by its peculiar object or subject matter.
Alvarado cites the example of German Calvinist political theorist Johannes Althusius, who defined the discipline of morals as «the inquisition into and chastisement of those morals and luxuries that are not prevented or punished by laws, but which corrupt the souls of subjects or squander their goods unproductively.»
Because both systematic and moral theology are defined by interests in the integral unity of the «Christian thing» and the unity of theological inquiry, neither of them should be thought of as the «middle discipline» (cf. 50 - 51) between historical theology's formulations of what is normatively or faithfully «Christian» and practical theology's application of those formulations to practice.
Parents and teachers can teach the democratic principle of the limitation of powers by carefully defining the areas of adult responsibility for the young and by making plain the widening dimensions of liberty for those who learn to accept the disciplines of responsible freedom.
In this way religious studies can more closely approximate the university norm, where academic disciplines are distinguished by particular subject matters, not by perspectives, and the subject matters are not themselves defined as perspectives.
Every field of disciplined study is defined by certain characteristic methods and concepts.
They try to order chaos not in the way an artist or scientist does, through a defining vision that creates structure and discipline, but by closing off and isolating themselves from that which does not fit.
The theologian is given freedom by the university to develop theology, but this is defined as one discipline alongside others, with a distinct subject matter separated from that of others in clearly definable ways.
It met in the Vatican in 1869 - 1870, and its most notable decrees, later promulgated by the Pope, declared «that the Roman Pontiff, when he speaks ex cathedra, that is, when in discharge of the office of pastor and doctor of all Christians, by virtue of his supreme apostolic authority, he defines a doctrine of faith and morals to be held by the universal Church, by the divine assistance promised to him in blessed Peter, is possessed of that infallibility with which the Divine Redeemer willed that His Church should be possessed for defining doctrine regarding faith or morals; and that therefore such definitions of the Roman Pontiff are irreformable of themselves, and not from the consent of the Church»; and that the Roman Pontiff has «full and supreme power of jurisdiction over the universal Church, not only in things which belong to faith and morals, but also in those which relate to the discipline and government of the Church spread throughout the world.»
Here, however, Job faces a contradiction between the friends» argument that a covenantal relationship is «defined by humility and passive acceptance of the misfortunes God may use to discipline him,» and God's approbation of Job for his other covenantal virtues, «including strong words and fierce resistance.»
Academic specializations tend to be partly defined by the use of a distinctive discipline.
This rhythm is substantially slower than the Tidal Rhythms as defined by the Osteopathic and Craniosacral healing disciplines.
She immediately sets us straight by defining discipline as a teaching process and explaining that most of our frustrations with our children come from having unrealistic expectations of their emotional maturity.
A person is a being, such as a human, that has certain capacities or attributes constituting personhood, which in turn is defined differently by different authors in different disciplines, and by different cultures in di..
According to the magazine, computer education no longer is defined by programming; it has emerged into a discipline that focuses on computer applications, such as word processing, spreadsheets, and database management.
Instructional rounds, as defined by City, Elmore, Fiarman, and Teitel (2011), is a disciplined way for educators to work together to improve instruction and is a practice that combines three common elements of improvement: classroom observation, an improvement strategy, and a network of educators.
Thus, high - performing district or charter schools use chants, ceremonies, signs, and strong discipline to forge a culture defined by college - going and career success; at the same time, unlike schools of a half - century ago, they rarely seek to use those same exercises to help invest students in the American nation as a civic enterprise.
Some of these are the same people who have made once - esoteric educational questions — like school discipline, collegiate Title IX policies governing due process, school choice, teacher evaluation, and determination of testing subgroups — into hero's journeys defined by bitter battles between those fighting «for the kids» (their side) and the forces of malice (the other side).
States with particular high stakes policies tend to have higher discipline rates, defined as the unduplicated count of students removed from school by school personnel or hearing officers and students serving long - term suspensions.
When the matter of inappropriate discipline was raised — this was what all speaking against the plans for a new charter school found most alarming — there were attempts by Achievement First reps to brush the issue aside by repeating that almost half of the suspension / expulsion data was due to In School Suspensions, which they defined as when a student was removed from the classroom for more than two hours at a time.
NICs are characterized by their focus on a well - defined common aim, their deep understanding of a problem and the system that produces it, their disciplined application of improvement science to the problem, and its network of participants.
As defined by Marilyn Armour, director of the Institute for Restorative Justice and Restorative Dialogue, restorative discipline is «a relational approach to building school climate and addressing student behavior.
It encourages saving and discipline by defining your goals and time horizon for achieving them.
You must teach full - time in a public or non-profit private elementary or secondary school in a geographic region, grade level, academic, instructional, subject matter, or discipline classified shortage area, as defined by the U.S. Department of Education.
There are some that define themselves by proving their mastery in multiple race disciplines.
The point being that these works by Salomon (paintings, comics, drawings, graphic stories, whatever you choose to call them — I say they are all of these) are neither fixed to a singular reading, nor are they defined by a narrow discipline.
Jäger's concepts have developed in dialogue with other art disciplines, such as the Generative Music of the 1960s, and Concrete Art as defined by Theo van Doesburg as early as 1930.
The exhibition has been assembled by Ms. Eisenman and A. L. Steiner, working under the moniker Ridykeulous, an umbrella identity covering artists in many disciplines who work — and here I quote press material — to «subvert the languages, theoretical and visual, which are commonly used to define feminist and lesbian art.»
Her interests are framed by the relationship that art is able to establish with other disciplines, such as science and mysticism, as well as with the different dimensions of human consciousness and the role of this interplay in the construction of history and in defining the present.
That is also the topic behind the so - called ut pictura poesis, the Latin expression by the Roman poet Quinto Orazio Flacco which literally translates to: «as in painting so in poetry» — an across all disciplines - approach defined and advocated for centuries by artists and eloquence virtuosos.
We're specifically interested in the number of degrees that have been awarded in the various scientific disciplines as defined by the OISM in the list above.
«Systems thinking is a management discipline that concerns an understanding of a system by examining the linkages and interactions between the components that comprise the entirety of that defined system.»
Can schools legally allowed to punish or discipline to an extent different from what is defined by their policies, just because it is a protest / walkout or that it agrees with their political opinions?
Behavioral control is defined as the ability of the parent to regulate the behavior of the child by using discipline (providing rewards and punishments) and monitoring.
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