Sentences with phrase «need bright young people»

We need bright young people on board.

Not exact matches

Matthew Warren seemed to have been a bright, warm young man who was loved and needed and appreciated by people.
Some people had the bright idea of placing young people into institutionalised education, to teach them everything they need to know before letting them loose in the world.
Earlier this year David Van Essen, president of the Society for Neuroscience (SfN), strongly urged the US House and Senate appropriations subcommittees on labor, health and human services as well as on education to increase NIH funding by 6.7 percent per year for each of the next three fiscal years, stating that this is needed «to ensure that our best and brightest young people will enter the field and continue to make neuroscience research advances.»
If we in schools want to foster and develop the natural talent of our brightest ICT students, turning smart young people from technology users into technology doers, we need to do it together.
Our schools and students need bright, altruistic young people to pick up the mantle and become the next generation of high - impact practitioners.
This is ultimately what high - potential students need most: a culture of maximum achievement and high aspiration, encouraging advisors who pay attention, stimulating peers, a coherent and challenging curriculum, and well - prepared teachers who are eager to work with challenging, bright young people.
The CEO of Bright Blue, Ryan Shorthouse, gave the following statement to The Guardian: «The Conservative government needs to and should make a big offer to young people.
PF: It needs to hire bright, young people with the intellectual rigor and curiosity to get out of the investment banking stranglehold focusing on biofuels and large - scale wind and solar and start looking at other technologies within cleantech.
Irrespective of background, bright young people need to be able to achieve his or her potential and access jobs in law if that is their chosen profession.
Although Brian is on his way to a brighter future, there are still many vulnerable young people who need your help today.
In 2015, Amnesty International in the «A brighter tomorrow: Keeping Indigenous kids in the community and out of detention in Australia» highlighted the issue of young people with FASD coming in contact with the justice system and the additional preventative resources need to support people with FASD.
Over 10 years, Atlantic invested more than $ 200 million to make programs available that were shown to be effective at providing the support children and young people need to be healthy, do well in school and to help ensure that they have bright futures.
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