Sentences with phrase «how kids like»

I'm going to give these a try and see how the kids like them.
I'm going to make this the next time corn is requested and see how the kids like it (I know I'm gonna love it)!
I'm going to give these a try and see how the kids like them.
Thanks Laura, I can't wait to see how my kids like it.
Will see how my kids like it tonight and I used mozzarella daiya cheese
I'd love to try some of these grains and see how the kids like them.
Just like how kids like to imitate American culture.

Not exact matches

Science fairs, all year long How to get teachers to think beyond the textbook and kids to think like scientists.
Another grateful occupant Mia, 20, expressed how lucky she is to be part of the program: «I feel like I just rolled some dice and hit something lucky because I don't think I would have found a place that genuinely takes care of kids like they do here.»
But sexist comments — like «How can she run a startup as a mother of three small kids
Dave and Helen Edwards, co-founders of artificial intelligence research firm Intelligenstia.ai, don't go so far as to suggest a specific course of study, but like Kalt they have publicly insisted that if you want your kids to thrive in an AI - filled future, you better teach them how to handle human beings, unpredictability, and complexity, all of which a liberal arts degree forces you to confront and grow comfortable with.
He realized that the closed - off nature of computing systems and gaming consoles had led to a generation of kids who like computers but had no idea how to program them.
Jon Bon Jovi on how he feels Steve Jobs and iTunes have altered the music - buying experience... for the worse The Sunday Times, March 2011 Kids today have missed the whole experience of putting the headphones on, turning it up to 10, holding the jacket, closing their eyes and getting lost in an album, and the beauty of taking your allowance money and making a decision based on the jacket, not knowing what the record sounded like, and looking at a couple of still pictures and imagining it.
But for most middle - and even upper - middle - income earners, the prospect of making one's savings stretch into what seems like an endless retirement is a daunting one, increasing the uncertainty around how to invest, how to pay for medical care, and whether you can leave a legacy behind for the kids or your community.
As she and her husband struggle to find the best school for their daughter, «I worry about the experiences she'll have early in her life on the other side of town where the parks are picturesque and pristine and none of the other kids have beads and braids like her, and how that might impact her culturally.»
But in a society like ours that bombards kids with advertising and continuously pushes materialism and a narrow view of success, how can you encourage your children to stop wanting more things and start being thankful for the things they already have?
Yet no matter how many fans the kids» clothing company acquires or how big its factory gets, «it feels like we're still sitting my garage,» says Temple, referring to her original production facility.
Ask your kids what type of restaurant they would like to have, and how they'd do it differently.
Here's how growing a business is like raising kids and how your parental instincts can help you choose the right partners.
Since I'm still feeling parenthood out like the rest of us, I asked Nasiba Adilova, founder of The Tot, for some advice on how we can get kids to that point.
Ask any parent how their kids respond when someone tries to take away their phone or tablet, and they'll tell you: children and teens really, really don't like anyone coming between them and their screens.
They might want to... If they feel like they've locked in their future earnings to take care of their kids, or families, sisters, brothers, whatever, then I think people should really look into their story and see how football is affecting their life.»
I don't know how I could live with myself not being able to participate in my kids» lives like that.
The figure below was in the WSJ this AM, in an interesting piece about how, given the rising costs of college relative to incomes, some kids and their parents are taking a closer look at alternatives like technical / vocational programs.
Kids gave their input as to how they liked to play and parents related based on their memories of play.
They complain about everything they don't like, including how others take care of their yards (though theirs is hardly well - maintained), and they have repeatedly tried to convery the neighborhood kids without the knowledge or consent of their parents.
no i just show them how silly it is... laughable really... the same way we knocked back the Bush conservatives... people like John Stewart showed them for the baffoons they were,,, how silly and ridiculous they were... heck I may be teaching your kids tomorrow in the AM
I don't care what side of the issue you're on, how it is OK to drag your kid out to protests like this?
You guys are like little kids: waah, I do nt want to... waah., the towers were attacked, people died and you guys are upset because of how we grieve and pay tribute to lost ones with a symbol of our beliefs and strengths.
I started learning how to trust God for finances many, many years ago, when it was about just trusting him for things like utensils for my kitchen and shoes for my kids.
And I think that's what I was thinking — about kids and the fleeting brevity of time and all my growing crow's feet and these wrinkling hands and watching the way the light fell across the fields and how I could feel my aching soul burning right there like an ember in my throat.
I think awfully difficult conversations like this in a forum that requires no transparency (how do we know any of us is who we are unless we practice some disclosure) and involves kids that will have access to this whole conversation, especially amongst Christians, ought to be marked by caution, prayer, discretion and deliberation.
As for your practical question - how to navigate the mess - I think of Solomon's divide - the - baby option, except that in this case, it's more like a divorce with lots of kids involved, and sometimes the warring parties are happy to take a few of the kids they like and let their «ex» take the others.
I don't always tell you about how sometimes I'm not sure I want to bring kids into a world like this one, a world so full of suffering.
angelis If the kids won't encounter these words in school (where they are supposed to get basic learning / guidance on society & culture), I wonder how it'll be like for them someday if they hear / read these «banned» words elsewhere?
A standard ploy in our efforts to loosen up and stimulate the kids» imaginations is to get them wondering — like Ken — how it would feel to be some creature or thing they're not: steam shovel, garden hose, vacuum cleaner, wild horse, 100 - year - old turtle, old man on a park bench.
The caseworker will be helping them map out their next steps, like enrolling the kids in school and teaching them how to use local mass transit.
Yeah, kind of like how being black was in style in the early 1960s... just look at how all the kids were doing it.
I keep hearing or reading things like, «It's so tempting to just give up,» or «I don't know how to explain this to my kids
How can you be breast fed when the catholic church does not like birth control — if mom is popping them out every year for the first 6 kids say it is tough to get a breast?
Then ask them how many think THEIR kids are using drugs and watch those hands fall like bricks.
Just like with homework, if we say the answers are in the back, kids never learn how to do the math.
I hadn't spent much time thinking about what it's like for gay kids to overhear their parents talking about gay neighbors with derision and fear, for example, or how narratives about judgment and hell can be processed by kids in some pretty destructive ways.
Reverend Molester needs to be water - boarded so we know how many little kids has seduced him.There are more ideological similarity with the Taliban and Catholicism than we would like to admit.
Poor kid has to grow up with Gopher telling it what to believer and how to live it's life to be just like Gopher.
Read good books like Faber and Mazlish's How To Talk So Kids Will Listen and Listen so Kids Will Talk, or Shame Free Parenting by Sandra D. Wilson.
I'd also like to see a serious, mature analysis of: 1) How much actual total tax (income, payroll, sales — this is important, etc.) various representative families actually pay right now (step through the range of incomes, kids, etc.) if you add it all up.
So we only kid ourselves, like the tyro who reports that he learned to play golf yesterday, if we think we have finished learning how to listen to God as God deserves to be heard.
I was tempted at first to give maybe a 10 point list of advice for parents going through deconstruction in front of their kids... things like let them see the books you read and answer their curiosities about them; teach your kids how to think, not how to believe; tell them everything you're going through and let them deal with what it means for them; ask them what they believe and listen objectively and engage in conversation about it; openly share your struggles with what you're going through with the church and let them process it themselves, and so on.
Once you begin to read [the Bible], if you're reading the prophets where they're talking about exchanging the poor for a pair of sandals, and what happens when you have a widening gap between the ruling wealthy elites and the poor masses who can't feed their kids, and how this is an affront to what it means to be human, if at that point you're like, «Well, is this inerrant?»
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