Sentences with phrase «lacked much practice»

Second, I think your way of thinking is due to a reaction to a doctrinal christianity in which you've been raised that lacked much practice in christian service (i just guess!

Not exact matches

Please don't worry too much about other people's belief, the consti.tution also grants everyone of us the freedom to practice whatever it is and (even) the lack thereof.
Nevertheless, Muirhead has to grant that there is much work that must be done but which, lacking internal goods, can not really be understood as a practice.
Coaches have been lamenting the lack of practice time ever since the 2011 collective bargaining agreement mandated a much less intensive schedule.
With so much heartache in the news caused by lack of attention to prevention measures — this is a good time to read Prevention Diaries: The Practice and Pursuit of Health for All by Larry Cohen, Executive Director of the Prevention Institute in Oakland California.
However, without the much - needed right guidance, tools and techniques, you will lack the real benefits that this practice can offer you.
Without the much - needed right guidance, tools and techniques that are necessary to help release the toxins and negativities, you will lack the real benefits that this healing practice can offer you.
Moretz ends up going on a rampage for the climax like the Dark Phoenix from X-Men: The Last Stand with arms held out and eyes in «looks could kill» mode, but lacks the emotional resonance of Spacek's trance - like turn, in which her powers unleashed came as a shock, but with an overriding sense of tragedy; Moretz is shown practicing her skills extensively during several scenes, which makes her revenge seem much more calculated and evil.
In 2013, when one could just start to glimpse that some reforms might be going south, I mused, «Reformers have greeted with a surprising lack of interest the seemingly self - evident fact that the fruits of policy innovation depend as much on how policies are carried out as on whether they're carried out... Earlier reform efforts failed when their champions got mired in changing «professional practice» while ignoring policy.
A host of factors — lack of accountability for school performance, staffing practices that strip school systems of incentives to take teacher evaluation seriously, teacher union ambivalence, and public education's practice of using teacher credentials as a proxy for teacher quality — have produced superficial and capricious teacher evaluation systems that often don't even directly address the quality of instruction, much less measure students» learning.
Partly because of the lack of time to observe and work with one another, U.S. teachers receive much less feedback from peers, which research shows is the most useful for improving practice.
As great as all the tutorials are, it requires a lot of practice, patience and effort to become great at fighting games and if you lack the drive, there isn't much to do.
Like pink slime, the practice has endured harsh public scrutiny as much because of a lack of transparency as anything else.
Still, with so much time wasted on billable hours and the lack of incentives for efficiency inherent in the billable hour, I'd be curious to see what might happen if an alternative, even one like the McKinsey model, were implemented for large firm practice.
The Court brings much needed clarity to State practice which previously lacked uniformity in the interpretation of Article 6 and left children in a precarious situation depending on where they claimed asylum.
Unfortunately, as Lubet describes, the members who constituted the panel in this case — Frank Easterbrook, Diane Wood and Ilana Rovner — collectively lack extensive practice experience, «much less in a small - town, small - case practice such as Webber's.»
I have tried to bring some visibility to the question of how much is paid in settlements by companies in the United States, but the bits of data are fragmented (See my post of May 30, 2005: lack of benchmark data about settlements; July 16, 2005: settlements as a percentage of total legal spend; Feb. 13, 2008: settlement ratios by practice area; July 16, 2005: settlements and judgments in relation to outside counsel spending; Jan. 20, 2009: settlement costs in relation to costs of outside counsel; and Oct. 27, 2010: data on settlements.).
Also, while in theory, a lack of paternity shouldn't affect parental responsibility decisions in states like Colorado where the statute says as much, in practice, it does impair your likelihood of being awarded parental responsibilities and a finding a non-paternity adds another person with standing to assert parental responsibilities into any parental responsibility proceeding.
Much of it stemming from a lack of real understanding of how employment screening is performed, but there are also fair questions and challenges pointed at employers and suppliers who neglect to follow best practices and established legal guidelines.
He highlights the lack of a meaningful partnership between these groups and argues the word partnership is much over-used and rarely realised in practice.
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