Not exact matches
By now you'll no doubt see the
obvious correlations between them all as well, and the really interesting thing
about it all is that in each and every one of them, both the ones I have reported on here as well as others we are yet to review, the
lessons we take from them are not to be found in academic institutions.
There is no way the North Koreans don't know
about this incident, and no way they failed to learn the
obvious lesson.
The three most
obvious lessons appear to be: «Live more simply,» «Do as much as you are able for the poor and disadvantaged,» and «Don't let the way you live and talk
about the faith make it seem something grim and unattractive.»
There are many
lessons to be learned from this story
about Nathan and David, but let us not overlook the
obvious one: if a person as good and decent as David is can succumb to evil and fall prey to self - deception, we can as well.
It's pretty
obvious that most of you are getting your
lessons about the Church from South Park.
Until it gets too
obvious about itself (somewhere around the halfway mark (like an addict nursing a jones, as it happens)-RRB-, that sense of futile outrage at the fruitlessness of trying to affect change in a world that has never been more informed yet remains incapable of avoiding (recent) history's harshest
lessons lends a nice feeling of indignity to what is already a pretty fair genre inversion.
The
lessons focus on not just the
obvious things like how bullying is wrong, but why people do it, the different ways people discriminate against each other, where misconceptions
about difference originate from and how people have overcome prejudice and adversity.
The
obvious starting place is the weather forecasting area, which allows teachers to craft
lessons about weather and how it moves.
Although these decisions are not
obvious from simply viewing the case, they do exist and become a fertile source of discussion for learning
about the complex situations that influence a
lesson.
N.K. Jemisin wrote a liberating blog post
about how writing exactly what she wanted to write propelled her to success: «I think The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms became my «breakout» novel (i.e., the one that actually got published, as opposed to the ones still sitting in my harddrive) because I stopped caring
about what the market wanted... [conclusion] The
lesson here is
obvious: trying to write what the market wanted didn't work for me.
Aside from the
obvious benefits — that education makes us better equipped to do the best work we can each day — it also taught me a great deal
about self - esteem, self - trust, self - pride, self - patience, self - discipline, and maybe even a
lesson or two in self - humbling.
Some of these
lessons were more
obvious than others but there is no doubt that spending time in front of my console / PC taught me a few things
about life.
The
obvious lesson of faux scandals like «climategate» is that they tend to be created by groups or individuals with their own agendas, and journalists ought to be very wary
about covering them.
Everything
about the class from the easy to understand and humorous
lessons to the flexible format in completing the class makes choosing MyImprov.com as your traffic school the
obvious choice.