Sentences with phrase «learn anything of value»

What was your experience with reviews, and did you learn anything of value from them?
The story was weak: Ned, the main character does not change, evolve or learn anything of value.
«I know that I can learn more in a phone or Skype interview, but that takes time — 45 minutes or more in order to learn anything of value,» she said.
You won't learn anything of value there but maybe you'll feel more comfortable.
It's almost impossible for a business acting alone to directly break through the noise and clutter to get its message to the right audiences and to learn anything of value from them in a timely manner.
Just because your grandparents had some fraudulent, baseless book of lies used in school does not mean they learned anything of value from it.

Not exact matches

If we can learn anything from these companies, it's that cultural relevance and solving region - specific problems often trumps the value of an internationally recognized brand name.
If anything, the Puritan case was more like a clinical setting in which clients talk about feelings in highly codified terms that have been provided by psychoanalytic theory, learned by interacting with the therapist, and sanctioned by ideas about the value of self - examination.
Cable news has devolved into shouting matches punctuated by commercial breaks, and whether or not viewers learn anything is secondary to the entertainment value of CNN or Fox or MSNBC.
In fact, although Goldstein mentions in the her introduction that she wanted to give Plato a chance to learn from and recognize the value of modern thought, most of Plato's interlocutors exist more to draw Plato out than to offer anything of value in return.
Teachers are not on «the side» of anything; they are smack in the middle of effective learning, which is why a MOOC may radically increase the volume of knowledge transfer but will never replace face - to - face interaction with equal value for the individual student.
If you're still not sold on the potential value of teaching journalism to history students, Meacham says, «I see a direct connection between what I learned in journalism and what I'm doing now,» explaining that insofar as he has anything to say in his books, it's because journalism exposed him to politics and public life at an early age.
As to the theory of the quantitative strength of hurricanes I have learnt much from the early posts on this thread and haven't anything of value to add.
You'll learn more, and more of value, spending time with a trial court judge than doing pretty much anything else.
Are you trying to be in the top 10 % your class so you can get a high salary job in a prestigious firm trading moments of your life for the grunt - work handed down by someone who doesn't appreciate anything other than your billing totals, or are you using the time to learn how to provide enough value in your own area of interest that you won't ever have to depend on a boss's whims?
But while it's illegal for anybody working for the U.S. government to accept anything of value from a «foreign state,» that doesn't make it illegal, unethical, or even particularly noteworthy for a «learned intermediary» to accept things of value from prescription medical product manufacturers — provided, of course, that doing so doesn't adversely affect patient care.
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