Sentences with phrase «meaningful projects where»

Not exact matches

An excellent, free education where learning is meaningful — with arts, play, engaging projects, and the chance to learn citizenship skills so that children can one day participate — actively and consciously — in this increasingly fragile democracy.
Jonathan runs mission - driven media and education venture, Good Life Project, where he and his team lead a global community in the quest to live more meaningful, connected, and vital lives.
Welcome to Decor Adventures, a place where you can find easy, affordable projects and ideas to make your new or old home a beautiful, meaningful place.
I decided that we should to a project on world hunger and food distribution, a topic of inquiry which is very meaningful in the Francophone world, since three of every five native speakers of French live in Sub-Saharan Africa, where hunger is a real life or death issue.
Quality unit instruction combined with differentiated instruction transforms «the game called school» into a meaningful journey where learners understand and connect with the curriculum on a daily basis, whether the approach is project - based learning (PBL), Understanding by Design (UBD), or any other unit design that connects a deep understanding of content and a mastery of skills and concepts to real - world contexts.
Students are engaged in academic and discovery lessons with many community partnerships where they make personal connections; take part of meaningful projects that bring excitement to their learning.
Projects designed in response to these questions enable students to grapple with challenging texts in an environment where the texts are connected to meaningful enterprise.
The Family Day of Service is an event where families join together to participate in meaningful volunteer projects.
However no more, Fronteering has specialized in providing meaningful wildlife rescue and rehabilitation projects where you can be in direct contact with the local North American wildlife!
In fact, about a year and a half ago we worked with the artist James Nares, who came in and did a project with my colleagues in the photograph department where he selected works from the collection that were very meaningful to him and which he had gotten to know over years and years.
Warning signs of the confused intern include: not hearing back about an assignment while the intern is working on it (usually there's some kind of feedback or status update volunteered); no progress made from an intern who is usually responsive; when prompted for questions, the questions are disjointed from the project at hand (intern might not understand project enough to ask meaningful questions and doesn't want to admit they don't know where to start).
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