Sentences with phrase «read course with»

Gone are the days of creating click and read course with only text and images.

Not exact matches

And in the course of working with numerous consultants, business owners, startups and even Fortune 500s, I've come to realize something startling: Most of us know what good copy looks like, and what it reads like, but when we put something down, we don't know how to follow the rules.
When I first read Tuesdays With Morrie, the simplicity of this book and the gorgeous relationship between Mitch and Morrie became one of those zingers, and got me thinking about the people in my life who have had a lasting impact, whether or not they were aware of their role in altering the course of my life.
In the first - year, MBA candidates must read, absorb and debate some 270 case studies in 10 courses, often fighting for «air time» with equally clever students just as eager as they are to score points with professors.
Of course, you may not always agree with what you're reading — and neither does Gates.
With easy - to - use blog software, an instructor or course designer can add reading lists, case histories, photos, links, updates, and other material; the blog can also serve as the class's online discussion forum.
With a host of other features, including the Kobo Reading Life software which gamifies the reading experience, they seem to be better placed in the e-reader conversation — pending, of course, whatever Amazon unveils later thiReading Life software which gamifies the reading experience, they seem to be better placed in the e-reader conversation — pending, of course, whatever Amazon unveils later thireading experience, they seem to be better placed in the e-reader conversation — pending, of course, whatever Amazon unveils later this year.
If you like my approach, either after taking my online franchise course at Franchise Business University, or after you've spent time reading some of my articles, consider working with me.
When I read some of your posts, it seems to me that if you had billions of dollars (or even a few hundreds of millions), instead of spending it on yachts, mansions, islands and other toys (not that there is anything wrong with that per se of course), you would probably sigh the Giving Pledge too or at least donate a lot to charity.
Over the course of the past year, there have been many changes with Loyal3, including the elimination of... [Read more...]
It reduces reconciliation with third parties since outside organizations can be given access to your ledger (of course, only reading from or writing to the permissioned sections)
One obvious way out of the lawsuit would be for Allergan to say «come on, Pershing Square, your reading of the poison pill is absurd, of course it doesn't mean that, why are you embarrassing yourself with this lawsuit?»
Of course, if you are weird like me, you may sometimes find pleasure in reading some of them... Dividend Growth Investor recently posted... Two Dividend Growth Stocks Showering Investors With More Cash
But do you think that Jerome Powell... You know I go back and read some of his earlier stuff and of course his initial position as a Fed governor, he had a lot of issues with the massive build - up of the balance sheet.
Of course, Guy gas written about his personal story, but it resonated so much with me that I have kept this book in my must - read book advisory list for any budding value investor.
There are still some kinks to be worked out with all churches, of course, but at least it's more of a progress than what I am reading and seeing back in North America.
Of course I wouldn't write «by Joe», but if this writing was to first be heard by a group instead of read (as some scholars have suggested), I might try to bring my audience to attention right off the bat with a mention of the one who just passed who was an important founder of the organization I'm addressing: «Joe, blah blah blah...»
Obviously, Theo, Vic Dalahast and answerscot have not completed the free on - line Berkley course on evolution nor have the read the recommended historic Jesus references so why bother having discussions with them?
You can not write or prepare a book with the language of a PHD reading course to an infant.
More significant, it has encouraged faculty to treat contextual education as a «real course» with substantial content — syllabi, readings, reflective pedagogical practices.
At first, he constructed highly eclectic reading lists for his courses, attempting to cover the field of church studies with examples of its many parts and divisions.
I haven't been writing for very long, right now I just try to blog regularly and of course read as much as possible, but as with anything else that's important, I need to be more intentional and always allowing what I love to do grow and evolve.
... At last he broke off his reading with a groan as he discerned the right course and determined to take it.
With those long rides of his, he might even have got through the twelve volumes, always regarding them, of course, as recreational reading between his bouts with the BiWith those long rides of his, he might even have got through the twelve volumes, always regarding them, of course, as recreational reading between his bouts with the Biwith the Bible.
In preparing to teach a course, I looked through a folder of accumulated notes and realized that I first taught the course to an adult class consisting of three women: Jennifer, a widow of about 60 years of age with an eighth - grade schooling, whose primary occupations were keeping a brood of chickens and a goat and watching the soaps on television; Penny, 55, an army wife who treated her retired military husband and her teenage son and daughter as items of furniture in her antiseptic house, dusting them off and placing them in positions that would show them off to her best advantage, and then getting upset when they didn't stay where she put them — she was, as you can imagine, in a perpetual state of upset; and Brenda, married, mother of two teenage sons, a timid, shy, introverted hypochondriac who read her frequently updated diagnoses and prescriptions from about a dozen doctors as horoscopes — the scriptures by which she lived.
I'm not a scholar on this, of course, but I remember reading that this all started just a few hundred years ago, and more or less aligned with the church's rejection of alchemy under pressure from the growing influence of the Enlightenment (during which they tried to suppress Galileo, formed the horrors of the Inqusition, and more...).
I remember in college, many moons ago, thinking that since I was so very opinionated about religion, I really should make sure I was familiar with the Bible... So I read it... cover to cover... I can tell you, I honestly didn't enjoy it... it's NOT a great read... bits are interesting, and of course very familiar... I took me almost the whole year, but I got through it... So imagine my surprise some time later when I found myself at an after conference gathering, that just so happened to have an inexplicably number of overtly religious attendants (inexplicable because it was a hi - tech network security conference) and after listening quietly for a while, jumped in with the statement «well, you've all read the bible cover to cover, as have I»....
When, during the course of his reading what he came to say, applause and cheers broke out, he would hesitantly look up from his text with a small smile of pleased surprise and say, in effect, «That's very nice but now let us return to the subject at hand.»
There was this time during the Cain boom when he had just spent the section of a debate dealing with criticism of 9 -9-9 by crouching in a fetal position and chanting «you haven't read the analysis, you haven't read the analysis» (rhetorically of course) and the sexual harassment stuff came out.
Of course that means a person would have to actually study and read the Bible ENTIRELY, along with prayer and meditation.
I had read Invisible Man before, but of course in re-reading it recently saw a great deal more — particularly interesting was how many Whitmanian and Croly-esque notes of «democratic faith» were sounded by Ellison in it, but always with a more tragedy - attuned, and more down - to - earth, sensibility.
and you're like, «wait,, I read a ton of history and I never heard of that, except in states with official atheist policies of course, let me look that up»
In the course of that I read a little book called something like, Living With Diversity in the Local Congregation.
It is true, of course, that when the hypothesis is applied, some passages at once fit in with the Petrine theory, especially in chapter 1; but others definitely do not, and surely no one with only this Gospel before him would ever suspect that it was a mélange of Peter s reminiscences he was reading.
Of course, I don't always agree with everything he says, so will be reading it with a critical eye, but that's the way we should read everything, right?
Weigel contrasts Benedict XVI's insights with those of Tony Blair... well, it's an unequal contest, of course, but the way in which Weigel brings this out, with reference to various events in recent British history (Princess Diana's death, the Iraq wars, Anglo - American relations) makes for an exciting read.
Of course, we read Scripture together in our churches and work to understand it, but similar practices of reading and discussing other books in our churches and neighborhoods can form and strengthen bonds between us and transform our community and how we live and work together (and interact with other communities, locally and around the globe).
Of course the best are in the original languages, but since I can't read those, I stick with KJV and ESV.
You mention global myths of a great flood as supporting evidence, but even the article only states,» [a] lmost every culture has a legend about a great flood, and — with a little reading between the lines — many of them mention something like a comet on a collision course with Earth just before the disaster.»
In addition to the argument from the wonders and the apparent intelligence of the world, and from the course of human history, past and future, as he believed it might he calculated, Second Isaiah had one other consideration which is presented with such brevity that there is danger of reading into it perhaps more than he meant.
You have to take all the advanced math courses, like calculus and trig, and read a lot of books with big words in them, and then spend time doing experiments and research projects until you begin to grasp the underlying concepts.
If I had any influence on seminary education, I would like to see a course where students read some first - rate theology of creation» along with Attenborough and Eisner and Nasrecki, and maybe E.O. Wilson on ants thrown in for good measure.
Of course I also spend time taking pictures of the beautiful world, spending time with my wife, reading books or magazines, playing video games, enjoying a great meal, engaging in citizen scientist projects, spending time in thought or contemplation about the universe or our planet, or in other words generally loving and enjoying life!
I have my diffences with people who read everything metaphorically, but of course, some things are indeed ancient history, and some things are indeed metaphors and analogies.
It begins with basic apologetics to lure a casual reader into interest in ultimate things, becomes gradually more christological, and then ends with demands for mission in the world — all in the course of a 40 - day reading program.
I think the discrepancy lies in the fact that theology is the remaking of the word of God into something academic — which is, of course, the antithesis of reading with a view to do.
Of course, I am not a theologian or well read or educated in the Bible with all the pertinent historical, cultural, or grammatical facts required to understand and interpret the text in my intellectual grasp, so I may have misunderstood your meaning, missed a point, or maybe we're saying the same thing but each from a different perspective, like is said those who misread Paul's Roman epistle and James» epistle.
He was reading with a raging excitement Erasmus's Novum Instrumentum, with its new text of the New Testament, while preparing for his next lecture course on the Letter to the Galatians, due to start at the end of October; and he was preparing sermons to be preached in St Mary's.
If people believe with absolute conviction that what a plain reading of the Bible tells them is wrong, then it seems to me that the best course is to reject the Bible rather than make up bizarre and far - fetched excuses for how it can be right if you just stretch the words way out of shape and add some extra made - up stuff.
Somebody who could read Rex Stout or the morning paper with pleasure and increase of self - understanding was for that very reason taken as already situated to grasp the church's message (which did not of course mean that he or she would necessarily believe it).
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