Sentences with phrase «learn from our readers»

I hope not only will you learn from me and our writers, but that we also learn from our readers.
Learn from readers feedback and improve.
The Century (Post) Mark, and What I've Learned From Readers Posted by Greg on The New Dork Review of Books
Having already posted the preliminery version of my book Arabic Made Easy on an online forum, I learned from reader feedback that they found the book very useful, giving me the go - ahead to publish it.
Myth 3: Dumping your old funds is easy One of the most surprising things we've learned from our readers is just how much resistance they've faced when trying to switch to a Couch Potato portfolio.

Not exact matches

Graham — today the lead director of Facebook's board — benefited from the relationship too, learning from Zuckerberg about online initiatives that would engage Washington Post readers.
Graham benefited from the relationship, too, learning from Zuckerberg about online initiatives that would engage Washington Post readers.
Focus instead on how readers can benefit from the story (and no, learning about your new product isn't a benefit to readers).
Solomon: Now comes true confessions time: Anything you can share that you would have done differently in your career - something that readers can learn from rather than repeating a mistake themselves?
Readers, have you learned anything from the teachings of Benjamin Graham in your evolution as an investor?
Readers are invited to research the following words: protectionism, tariffs, quotas, trade barriers, Smoot, Hawley, history, learning from history, lessons of the past.
-- Doug Kass, March 2, 2018 Readers are invited to research the following words: protectionism, tariffs, quotas, trade barriers, Smoot, Hawley, history, learning from history, lessons of the -LSB-...]
Inc.com The Best Small Business Blogs Brief Case Study: Liz Strauss appreciating readers on Successful Blog through comments and through encouragement awards The Blogosphere's Original S.O.B. Rossonerian — AC Milan News Blog You Can't Have a Community Without People: A Chat With Liz Strauss Liz Strauss the Voice Behind the Blog A Personal Interview with Liz Strauss Interview with Liz from the Successful - Blog Learn from Liz: An interview with successful blogger Liz Strauss Someone I'd Like You to Meet Write Up Your Alley with Liz Strauss
While I will be waiting to see what the readers post and see what I can learn from their analysis.
Frequent readers know that I strive to follow the advice of Bismarck and study history to learn from the mistakes of the past.
They can learn a lot from Vishal's wisdom and the views from other readers of Safal Niveshak.
As a reader of Financial Samurai, I think you would agree that having a blog is a great way to build a community, grow a brand, learn from each other, and broaden our perspectives.
You need to convert that blog traffic into leads, and if you've written some amazing content, your readers will probably want to learn more from you.
According to Enns, we would do well to learn a few things from the Jewish readers of Scripture whose emphasis in engaging the holy text is «not on solving the problems once and for all but on a community upholding a conversation with Scripture with creative energy.»
In A Hobbit Journey, the reader has to plough through 17 pages of a rather diffuse introduction before Dickerson explicitly states the purpose of his book, and even then it is somewhat vague: it will explore the question «What can we learn from hobbits and from their vision of the Good Life, and how does that apply to our own present situation?»
The American reader, for instance, will learn a great deal from the European writers (e.g., Max Huber) on whom Küng draws.
The result is that even the most secular of readers will not feel hectored by these pages, and even the most scholarly will learn from them.
Seaver denies that Wallington can be regarded as a typical Puritan artisan (the fact that he wrote so much was itself unusual), but he presents enough material in addition to that of Wallington — from Puritan sermons and other autobiographies — that the reader is likely to come away feeling that he or she has learned something about Puritans in general.
Perhaps the first readers of the gospel were expected to learn from the immediacy of the response here: no time for excuses.
I was impressed with how the initial commenter responded — with an apology and an eagerness to learn more — and for the most part, her follow - up questions were met with equally gracious responses from gay readers.
But for the likes of me and most ministerial readers of The Christian Century, our need is to be humble enough to learn from a genius like Schuller about getting people within earshot in the first place.
Because of its long history, ISI has many contacts» both faculty and student» on campuses around the country, and a reader of this Guide will see that a great deal of information has come from actual interviews conducted with those who teach and learn on the respective campuses.
All readers will benefit from Lombardo's broad learning, multidisciplinary approach, and clear reasoning, but not all will agree with him on every count.
3) Biblical scholarship relating the creation account of Genesis and ancient Near Eastern cosmology continues to become more accessible to the average reader, so Christian university students are in a great position to learn from Bible professors why a literal, scientific reading of Genesis 1 and 2 need not be a fundamental element of the Christian faith.
As the delusional fellow tries to learn why he's surrounded by phony doubles of everyone once familiar to him, and while his sister and a therapist try to help him see reality, readers find themselves sliding into the baffling blindness that affects everyone in the story and keeps them from ever seeing or knowing the truth of their own lives, much less anyone else's.
«My goal with this book,» he writes, «is to assure people of faith that they do not need to feel anxious, disloyal, unfaithful, dirty, scared, or outcast for engaging these questions of the Bible, interrogating it, not liking some of it, exploring what it really says, and discerning like adult readers what we can learn from it in our own journey of faith... We respect the Bible most when we let it be what it is and learn from it rather than combing out the tangles to make it presentable.»
Moreover, since his concern as a teacher was to root doctrine in the inmost affection of the heart, he learned from the rhetorical tradition recovered by Erasmus and Budé how to use language to move the hearts and affections of his readers so that their piety might be built up within them.
The author provides activities to help the reader you affirm and learn from the experiences of prayer.
This will not be the first time that First Thoughts readers have heard from me on the virtues of Mr. Lionel Trilling, but readers interested in learning more about one of America's greatest critics and intellectuals can check out my piece in today's Wall Street Journal....
(First Things readers will have already learned this from Samuel Gregg: «France's Catholic Moment,» February.)
Applies the learnings from existential therapy to help readers understand the human predicament and rediscover their selfhood.
One of the best things about having this blog is the vast amount of information we learn from all of our great readers.
As a holistic nutritionist, she saves her prose for educating readers about the benefits of the foods she uses and I have learned so much from her.
While working in a restaurant I learnt that it is «your public, the people, your clients» who have the say they decide which is your signature dish: sometimes I have cooked great things (in my opinion) and received not so much enthusiasm from my readers.
This Lessons Learned essay submission from reader Caitlin Fitzpatrick Curley opened my eyes and shifted my perspective about the complexities of giftedness, and I'm grateful to now better understand.
Some of these readers expressed fear that this program will cause other women in their situation to be pressured or shamed, and I'm very glad to learn from your comment that this shouldn't be the case.
Through exercises, observations and dialogue from actual groups, Dr. Kurcinka helps readers learn to identify the triggers that lead to tantrums and challenging behaviors.
Sadly I was unable to continue, but the desire to blog about my experience and learn from keen readers, family and friends have only grown stronger.
In Secrets of the Garden: Food Chains and the Food Web in Our Backyard by Kathleen Weidner Zoehfeld (Alfred A. Knopf, $ 16.99), readers learn that there are plenty of critters who also benefit from the garden Alice and her family plant each spring.
The Resource provides examples of how health professionals can support schools in promoting optimal health and learning outcomes, walks readers through their role in the Healthy Schools Process, and provides real stories of CSH in action from the perspective of health professionals across the province.
I'm hoping the readers here will have some ideas about improving adoption home study practice, based on what we have learned from the deaths of Hana Williams and Lydia Schatz and injuries to their siblings.
I love your blog and have learned so much from your readers questions and your answers.
The community is vibrant and active and I have learned many insights from readers.
Today I'm starting a Lunch Tray tradition of periodically posting on a Friday some of the latest stuff I've learned about from readers and from my own research.
People generally expressed concern about the food dye issue as well as other aspects of our food supply which may be unsafe, and I shared with the group some resources I've recently learned about — first, a link to Natural Candy Store.com (which, coincidentally, I found out about from Jenna herself via Twitter) as well as a mobile phone app created by CSPI to help consumers sort through additives on food labels (shared with me by a TLT reader and fellow Houston School Health Advisory Council Member — thanks, Mike!)
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