Not exact matches
Carter offers advice in this vein, reminding
readers that while it's always
smart to listen to your gut when you
feel real fear, hesitating and waffling is generally a sign that's it time to embrace whatever you're worried about.
Our
readers are savvy and
smart, but like most people, they sometimes encounter tasks or topics that make them
feel like... well, complete idiots.
Smart well informed parents, such as
readers of TLT, most likely start off 5 preventive steps ahead of other parents so I can see why in this forum one would
feel comfortable being «blase».
This prediction will puzzle, upset, and maybe infuriate a great many
readers — and, of course, it could turn out to be wrong — but enough clues, tips, tidbits, and intuitions have converged in recent weeks that I
feel obligated to make it: I expect that PARCC and
Smarter Balanced (the two federally subsidized consortia of states that are developing new assessments meant to be aligned with Common Core standards) will fade away, eclipsed and supplanted by long - established yet fleet - footed testing firms that already possess the infrastructure, relationships, and durability that give them huge advantages in the competition for state and district business.
You must follow gut
feelings and intuitions, yes, but successful self - published authors generally back such horse sense with researched facts and figures to stay
smart, sharp, and up to date — to search out their
readers, stay in touch with influencers in their field, and give their books an advantage.