Sentences with phrase «encouraging picture of himself working»

Not exact matches

People should be encouraged to show each other around their corner of the company to learn what they are working on and with that be able to form a bigger picture of your marketplace's mission.
By encouraging people to double - check with you, via reporting suspected violations, you are educating your personnel on what is and is not a violation and gaining a clearer picture of how trade compliance actually works within your company.
One of the encouraging aspects of the present picture is the amount of preventive educational work that is being done by individual ministers in their communities.
Such a picture will not work in a multi-cultural society or in a Church whose most recent Council encouraged us to look for the positive signs of the Spirit's presence in the world as well as his all - too - obvious absences.
Researchers across the UT System are working hard to gain a clearer picture of what works best to encourage and support children and adults in overcoming obesity.
In order to reach every person who lives, works, plays and prays in our borough, the «#Not62» initiative encourages Bronxites to use their social media platforms to post pictures of healthy habits on a daily basis.
Hayashi says he kept copies of his work records and took pictures and videos inside the plant, encouraged by a TV journalist he had met before beginning his assignment.
The PGA is working with the Directors Guild of America, the Writers Guild of America, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences and the Television Academy to develop a framework to encourage people who experience harassment and discrimination to lodge complaints without fear of reprisal.
Among the findings: (1) art activities can be integrated into classroom content and used to encourage rehearsal - type activities (such as songs) that incorporate relevant subject matter, (2) incorporating information into story, poem, song, or art form may place the knowledge in context, which can help students remember it, especially if the students are creating art that relates subject matter to themselves, (3) through artistic activities like writing a story or creating a drawing, students generate information they might otherwise have simply read, which will very likely lead to better long - term retention of that information, (4) physically acting out material, such as in a play, helps learners recall information, (5) speaking words aloud results in better retention than reading words in silence, (6) increasing the amount of effort involved in learning new information (such as being asked to discern meaning from an ambiguous sentence or to interpret a work of art) is positively associated with its retention, (7) emotionally charged content is easier to remember than content linked to events that are emotionally neutral, and (8) information presented as pictures is retained better than the same information presented as words.
One study, for example, used a number of useful strategies to help children share semantic similarities between words.32 Strategies such as encouraging children to look at two picture cards with words on them and make inferences about how these words work together helped them make comparisons of concepts.
Everything the game offers captivated me at first sight: beautiful hand drawn graphics (all of them are work from the lady in the picture above), great original music from the game composer Antonio Teoli (if you never heard of him, I encourage you to look for his previous jobs — or just for the trailer for White Lie) and a beautiful story.
These works, ultimately capturing everyday moments, encourage the viewers to intimately engage with the pictured subjects, and to seek out clues of their personal lives and character, reflecting our own searches for the extra in the ordinary and the thrill in the mundane.
Editor Gabrielle Jennings — a video artist herself — reveals as never before how works of abstract video are not merely, as the renowned curator Kirk Varnedoe once put it, «pictures of nothing,» but rather amorphous, ungovernable spaces that encourage contemplation and innovation.
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