Sentences with phrase «often feel invisible»

In the first study of its kind, the National Native American Bar Association found that Native Americans often feel invisible and are «systematically excluded from the legal profession.»
Because of the size of the faculty in high schools, teachers often feel invisible, unappreciated and unrecognized by the administration.These teachers often become less productive.
In the mid-century, «the problem that has no name» described by Betty Friedan had not yet led to the women's movement, and women in film and in real life often felt invisible, as though all women cared about was keeping the house clean and the children happy.

Not exact matches

As we age and our bodies change after pregnancies, we often begin to feel invisible in public.
Do you sometimes — or oftenfeel like you're invisible to others?
Normally wearing jeans and a hoody in public makes me feel weirdly both exposed and invisible, but this month it's often what I've felt I've needed simply because I just couldn't be bothered to care about my appearance so much.
«As a doctoral student at Harvard, I often felt that my work focusing on Native education was invisible...; receiving this award is a wonderful surprise, as it indicates that HGSE's Alumni Council and institution recognizes this work and validates it as an important contribution to the field of education.
According to research by the Runnymede Trust for the NUT (2017), that may be because they often feel they face «an invisible glass ceiling» that stops them being considered for more senior staff jobs.
Pale from birth with close - cropped, white - blond hair and invisible eyelashes, he'd often felt during his thirty - six years that the Australian sun was trying to tell him something.
Yes, it still feels like Sonic is often one with gravity and is being helped around the levels by some invisible force, and yes the homing attack can occasionally hinder opposed to helping you, also the loading times are horrendous and the camera isn't exactly perfect.
Past and present, memories, feelings, and associations converge, evoking ambiguous narratives which force viewers to reexamine their own perceptions of society and to see that which they often allow to become invisible.
To «evanesce» literally means to disappear gradually, vanish, or fade away — an apt description for how Hinkle feels society so often renders black women invisible.
Carbon emissions themselves are invisible, odorless and hard to measure, and offsets can be even more difficult to conceptualize, so organizations often feel uneasy about what their money is actually being spent on.
So often it feels like you're just kind of floating, anonymous and invisible, through online job app after online job app, right?
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people with a disability often describe being «doubly disadvantaged» and feeling invisible in existing support and service delivery systems.
This outsider position often leaves stepparents feeling invisible, powerless, rejected and lonely.
Over the last six years Sinithia has worked with carers who often feel isolated and invisible.
Other symptoms include often feeling misunderstood, invisible, not cared for, or empty.
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