Sentences with phrase «example by experimentation»

They found that most of the learning farmers do is informal, for example by experimentation or from their networks, which are made up from a wide range of people not necessarily just farmers.

Not exact matches

Lead by example in discussing issues, ideas, and experimentation in open forums and giving credit for trying — promote those who do.
This pack includes: Scheme of work to show you what to do stage by stage Clay extension tasks with image examples from seed pods / natural forms Artist presentation Image examples of outcomes Examples of experimentation pieces leading up to the final outcome (Drawings, collages etc) Homework sheets (artist research) Sculpture design sheet Images of artists work for inspiration This project can be used for GCSE to A Level pexamples from seed pods / natural forms Artist presentation Image examples of outcomes Examples of experimentation pieces leading up to the final outcome (Drawings, collages etc) Homework sheets (artist research) Sculpture design sheet Images of artists work for inspiration This project can be used for GCSE to A Level pexamples of outcomes Examples of experimentation pieces leading up to the final outcome (Drawings, collages etc) Homework sheets (artist research) Sculpture design sheet Images of artists work for inspiration This project can be used for GCSE to A Level pExamples of experimentation pieces leading up to the final outcome (Drawings, collages etc) Homework sheets (artist research) Sculpture design sheet Images of artists work for inspiration This project can be used for GCSE to A Level projects.
Lead by example The most effective schools create a culture where learning is openly modelled by all senior staff, where experimentation and research are actively encouraged and supported, and where even the most experienced teachers are open to constructive feedback.
Rural schools, as noted in the example of Betsy Layne High School, can effect significant changes in classroom practice by creating a culture that supports experimentation.
Led by Beate Kuckertz (formerly head fiction editor at Droemer Knaur), dotbooks is a fascinating example of old - school publishing knowledge meeting digital experimentation, and an important, if admittedly (for now) small - scale account for GRIN to have.
It shows the cruelty of the false hopes raised by those masters pretending to «humane» treatment, through promises of manumission extended as a calculated tool to secure loyalty when an owner took the risk of educating a slave for office work, for example; or the deceitful «kindness» used to secure compliance of seemingly freed slaves, in perpetuating programs of sterilization, medical experimentation, and of course cheap labor.
Inside, by Playdead, is a brilliant example of such experimentation.
What has not been mentioned is that the «Saul - into - Paul conversion theory», published by Elaine de Kooning in Art News in 1958, was not set in Willem de Kooning's studio and did not mention a «Bell - Opticon», unlike her account of 1962.13 Additionally, while the 1958 account's introduction dramatised Kline's breakthrough to abstraction as a «transformation of consciousness», or a «revelation» of Biblical proportions, invoking the example of «Saul of Tarsus outside the walls of Damascus when he saw a «great light»», the description of Kline's technical and conceptual breakthrough in this account nevertheless resembled previous accounts of Kline's development in its gradualness, uneventfulness and thoughtfulness.14 The breakthrough that Elaine de Kooning first recounted was a product of sustained technical experimentation and logical thought on Kline's part, rather than accident or epiphany: «Still involved, in 1950, with elements of representation, he began to whip out small brushes of figures, trains, horses, landscapes, buildings, using only black paint.
This hypothesis has yet to be validated by empirical data based on actual physical observations or reproducible experimentation and has not yet successfully withstood any attempts at falsification, so (unlike your example of «evolution») remains an uncorroborated hypothesis, rather than «reliable scientific knowledge» (or, even less, «settled science», despite what Gavin has stated in the past).
[5] Other examples are not so commonly predicted (if, indeed, they are predicted at all), yet are no less significant: business models that facilitate free legal services, the use of non-legal (notably industry and business) knowledge and experience to increase client trust in and comfort with the firm and with legal services more generally, the collection of knowledge about the legal issues of individual clients in the same industry for use by a trade association to assist and defend the rights of all in that industry on a collective basis, a severely injured client's reassurance and comfort in knowing that in selecting a certain legal services provider the client is not just receiving highly specialized advice but also benefitting an association that helps others with the same type of severe injury, the development of a legal research establishment for experimentation with different ways of providing legal services.
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