Theodore Maiman was one
reader of the article who decided to see if he could test the idea by building a working laser.
Not exact matches
For
readers who might be skeptical
of solar power, the Pembina Institute recently published two
articles debunking some
of the myths about renewable energy production and potential in Alberta.
Then we wrote this
article, fulfilling the prophecy
of a supposed RELEVANT
reader who tweeted: «Aaaand que RELEVANT with an
article titled «You won't believe what Chris Pratt just said about prayer!»
A
reader who wishes to know, for instance, why
Article 1, section 9, clause 1 prohibited Congress from making any alteration until 1808 in «the Migration or Importation
of such Persons as any
of the States now existing shall think proper to admit» can turn to Volume III and find 28 contemporary documents on slavery and the slave trade.
the
article is irresponsible in not making clear to the
reader that these images were created hundreds
of years after the fact by enemies
of Christ (Romans)
who subsequently saw it as political beneficial to gain political control
of the otherwise uncontrollable christian cult for the purpose
of expanding the roman empire.
So I mainly follow links on twitter now (and facebook to a lesser extent), following people
who are good sources
of the things I'm interested in, and trusting that the good quality
articles will float to the top... When I want more things to read I turn to Google
Reader, but normally end up just picking up on the few blogs I'm really interested in.
A
reader of his
article might be quite surprised to learn that Leo XIII declared as early as 1891 that «the public administration must... provide for the welfare and comfort
of the working classes»; or that so recent an encyclical as Centesimus Annus pronounced that «the mass
of the poor [
who] have no resources
of their own to fall back on... must chiefly depend on the assistance
of the State,» and that «wage - earners... should be specially cared for and protected by the Government.»
One
of these is Niall Ferguson,
who recently wrote an
article in the UK's Daily Telegraph in which he asked his
readers to imagine....
All I can really do is to recommend once again to the
reader — and to Griffin himself
who evidently has not read them — the
articles cited in Note 12
of my paper, where many
of the objections made in his paper (and others besides) are considered and answered.
For
readers who are not very knowledgeable about entrepreneurship, I should first point out that a Business Plan is Phase One
of Starting a Business, Phase Two is Sending Press Releases to the Media, and Phase Three is Declaring Bankruptcy, but more about those important stages in another
article.
putting AKB or AOB on
articles (as you suggested yesterday) will have one major benefit
of allowing
readers who are fed up with the broken record that is the AOB's to consciously let them get on with it in quiet isolation.
If they don't want to discuss other matters then simply ignore the
article and let
readers who WANT to discuss it get a chance
of a voice.
The New York Times sports - editorial page puts
readers to sleep each Sunday with
article after
article by prep school English teachers
who have discovered running, to say nothing
of running at dawn.
I though that as
readers of my
articles on MomsTEAM are likely to have an interest in this subject, as I'm sure every one
of you has been affected by an overweight relative or friend
who is dealing with cancer, heart attack, stroke, and / or diabetes, and want to keep your kids from having those kinds
of health problems.
Those
readers who have read my
articles over the years and / or have attended my workshops can really appreciate how thrilled I am to be one
of the founding members
of the Alliance and one
of the creators
of «The Proclamation for Transforming the Lives
of Children.»
For those
of you
who have kids starting to learn to read (or for those
of you thinking ahead to that time), here's an interesting
article about Synthetic Phonics (it's a PDF, so you need Adobe
Reader — a free download if it's not already on your computer — to view it), a way
of teaching phonics to kids that's having great success in Scotland and seems to be particularly beneficial to boys.
In her 2013 book, Parenting Without Borders: Surprising Lessons Parents Around the World Can Teach Us, Christine Gross - Loh,
who has also written a series
of articles for The Atlantic magazine, takes
readers on an educational around - the - world parenting tour.
I recently read a post by another mom, a terrific writer
who fills her numerous blogs with all kinds
of «great mother»
articles: gardening, cooking, natural parenting, crafting, just the kind
of articles that make the
reader (me) feel inadequate that I'm not doing those kinds
of things on a regular basis in MY house.
Although the visual effect was jarring in this instance, the ads did provide a chance to put the McCain / Palin talking points in front
of a
reader who had chosen to click on an
article about Palin (or, at least they would have if they were high enough on the page to be visible...).
One thing regular
readers know is when I run a series
of articles asking the «
Who is?»
In 2008, Science Careers offered
readers worldwide a collection
of articles illustrating scientific career opportunities in and out
of research, advising
readers on landing good jobs and excelling in scientific careers, and profiling scientists
who succeeded in research as well as some
who looked elsewhere for fulfillment.
Readers who focused just on the language
of the
articles suffered from the backfire effect.
Researchers
who conduct animal studies often don't use simple safeguards against biases that have become standard in human clinical trials — or at least they don't report doing so in their scientific papers, making it impossible for
readers to ascertain the quality
of the work, an analysis
of more than 2500 journal
articles shows.
So, in this case, Kate was able to put a version
of that story up online and we were then able to use the feedback that we got from
readers and from other professional scientists,
who were responding to that
article.
«The
reader who is interested in social neuroscience is confronted with an overwhelming amount
of information, when he or she starts to read scientific
articles related to this field.
After publishing my
article on food confessions a couple months ago, I received an amazing amount
of response from
readers who wanted to share their...
To everyone
who has participated and to the
readers of this
article: I am grateful for your presence, your positivity, and your openness in exploring the possibilities.
Oh, and you'll probably lose your abs (to the 76 percent
of the remaining 14 percent
of readers who left us earlier in the
article - SEE YA!).
Chas Smith,
who ghost wrote most
of the
articles in the early Weider publications, has explained this and Reg Park warned
readers of the same thing through the pages
of his own magazine (the Reg Park Journal).
If you're a longtime
reader of my books and
articles, or a clinician
who's been seeing these kinds
of changes in patients, the study is not really news at all.
I'm not a
reader of fashion
articles or magazines due to lack
of spare time, so I'm always delighted to glean some vital info on the fashion world from ladies like you
who are kind enough to enlighten their audience.
I want
readers who find this
article to have multiple points
of view, not just mine.
Foster a community
of supportive and encouraging fellow
readers: Students
who are surrounded with
readers who are passionate about reading online news
articles or listening to picture books being read aloud can view themselves as members
of a reading community.
So it seems to me that any
reader interested in educational best practice
who found their appetite whetted by this
article with its breadth
of reference, should pursue and encourage others to pursue some
of the particular areas touched on, with a view to improved / changed / refreshed teaching and instructional practice.»
Secondary and tertiary questions for the
readers of this
article, therefore, are: How are you supporting the overall development
of children
who learn differently than yourself?
Editor's Note: Education World received a couple emails from
readers who chastised us for this
article's glowing representation
of the Success for All program.
We've watched some
of our most reluctant
readers — Spanish middle - school boys
who happened to be big soccer fans — start out slowly reading sports
articles on eBook screens and grow into voracious
readers of print books on every imaginable subject.»
A roomful
of articles and books and a teacher
who is an avid
reader entice middle schoolers to read and enjoy science.
The
article sparked outrage among
readers,
who were appalled that millions
of tax dollars were spent annually paying the salaries and arbitrating the cases
of teachers
who came to work inebriated or practiced corporal punishment.
Students
who are the «least diversified
readers» (reading only one type
of text with frequency) have the lowest reading literacy achievement, while students
who are «diversified
readers in long and complex texts» (
who frequently read fiction and nonfiction books in addition to magazine and newspaper
articles) have the highest reading literacy achievement.
D.C. Merrill in his 1995
article «Tutoring: Guided Learning by Doing» reports that surveys
of students
who were tutored in reading have shown positive results for students» self confidence as
readers, motivation to read, and view
of their control over their reading abilities.»
This got shoved into the front
of my brain yesterday when one
of my favorite local bookstores linked off to an opinion
article written by a twenty - something
who was stridently against electronic
readers — to the point that they'd confessed to having irrational hatred for seeing other people reading them.
I have read
articles by several Indie writers
who contend that getting a traditional publisher contract is more likely if you already have published work product and a following
of readers.
My concern, reflected in my
article, is that the industry is in such a hiatus, that the proliferation
of poor work is just too high, as it is having a negative effect on writers
who are nearer their goal, it is harming
readers who are picking up too much trash, and the Grand Illusion does not assist writers in properly being helped.
Your pool
of potential
readers is limited if you're still conducting exclusively traditional book promotion campaigns and ignoring social networking; producing
articles, podcasts, and book trailers; syndicating your blog; using your Web site to create an online community; distributing newsletters electronically to those on your mailing list; publishing eBooks to offer free peeks at your book's content or to gain
readers who might potentially get interested enough in your topic to buy your book (or, perhaps, to hire you); and so forth.
And that is the point that I hopefully made in the
article, that there are authors
who not only rant but
who enlist their legions
of readers to counterattack a negative review.
Right now, Wikipedia is the confused
reader's best friend, and if the
article is up to date, it will give a pretty good sense
of who the character is and what changes it has been through.
This just means those
articles will have the potential to receive more
readers,
who might otherwise never be aware
of the subject matter that could interest them.
Not because I think the opinions displayed in the
article are worth the time it takes to write these words, but because there may be
readers who actually believe some
of this nonsense.
Mercy, Thanks so much for this... as one
of the authors
who have benefited greatly from the opportunities given to indies, it is so frustrating to see
articles like this that are filled with innuendos, unverified opinions, and bias — knowing that to the casual
reader it all sounds plausible — that it was great to have someone call the author out on this.