Those who merely
read about College, without studying the careful manner in which that judgment is supported, may indeed fear that it provides a foundation for the blustery attacks on higher education by the secretary of education.
Read about the college transition in the article «Mental Health Issues Overlooked in College Transition»
The other reason is because once I was
reading about these college kids who collected leftover food from restaurants to make compost for their plants.
Did you really decide to apply to Harvard after
reading about the college in an encyclopedia when you were in middle school?
Hmm, so maybe they wouldn't mind
reading about college - aged protagonists either.»
Not exact matches
I frequently speak
about this when I lecture on
college campuses, but even if you are not a full - time employee at a major company, internships will get you so much farther than any book you
read or class you take.
As a
college professor, I spend most of my days
reading, writing and thinking
about theoretical topics.
Not only did I do extensive research and consult with other top professional reviewers (you can
read more
about that below), but I also hold a bachelor's degree in both music performance and audio production from Ithaca
College.
Reading a lot like what a
college fraternity president might send out to his brothers, the email spelled out in sophomoric terms rules not only
about drinking and what not to do with kegs but also
about sex.
For more information
about The Vanguard 529
College Savings Plan, obtain a Program Description PDF, which includes investment objectives, risks, charges, expenses, and other information;
read and consider it carefully before investing.
And so when I
read Ben Graham, sort of a light bulb went off just this little article and I started
reading everything I could
about what he had written, both security analysis and the intelligent investor, and eventually led my way to Warren Buffett and you know, sort of the rest is history, it's a very good age, you know I was younger than 21 at the time you know junior year of
college to recognize that this was what I was going to be doing the rest my life.
We bought our first house in 2009 (while still in
college,
read more
about how I bought a house at the age of 20).
While we can't reveal too much, it will be addressing the hotly debated topic of paying
college Read more
about Week 49 — Secret Basketball Project -LSB-...]
An online publication for freshmen, by freshmen, providing students a platform to
read and share relatable content
about their first year of
college — while also giving them the opportunity to be involved in the process of running their own publication
I hadn't taken any personal finance classes,
read any investing books, and surely didn't learn anything
about managing money in high school or
college.
While I think it is wonderful that so many people are excited to write and blog
about about personal finance, personally I would be cautious
about religiously following the advice of a
college freshman who just finished
reading Rich Dad Poor Dad and now believes himself to be a personal finance expert and wants to make a buck blogging
about it.
You may also want to
read the letter I wrote to a
college student
about how to be successful, happy, and fulfilled in life.
After
reading about three dozen books on the subject by
college and seminary professors, I think I can make a pretty sound judgement.
In
college, I was an English major, wasting my parent's tuition money learning how to
read, and then learning how to say worthless things
about what I'd
read.
I can remember in
college and graduate school
reading Eliot, Yeats, Auden, Beckett, and Camus while bemoaning with everyone else, including the teacher, the loss of a shared vision
about the purpose of human life.
Not Republicans versus Democrats, nor liberals versus conservatives, nor rival schools of foreign policy you
read about in
college courses.
I studied physics extensively in
college, work in industry that requires it and
read regularly
about current advancements.
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»....
I studied religions in
college and still
read books
about different religions because I think they are interesting.
I like how an agnostic, possibly atheist, CNN writer interviews some agnostic liberal preachers and
college profs and then tries to pretend he / they have any clue
about a book they have never
read (the Bible) or a God they are too blind to recognize.
As part of my studies in
college, I had
read the Kinsey studies
about how common homosexual experiences were among straight men — and I fancied myself something of a sophisticate at the ripe old age of 21.
Within the first week of my freshman year of
college, my Introduction to World Literature class included a
reading of Gilgamesh, an ancient Mesopotamian myth
about a hero who is described as 1/3 man and 2/3 god.
It was
about 1927, when Farrer was just a 22 - year - old Oxford student (Baillol
College), that he indulged in a binge of
reading about the gnostic socio - cultural milieu from which early Christianity emerged.
I hope
reading what
college staff and students have to say
about the quality and range of training options available today, will give you a broader understanding and a deeper appreciation of what a precious resource these places of learning and growth are.
PS, I used to be a Calvinist, I attended a Calvinistic Bible
college and Seminary, and I have
read about 100 books on Calvinism written by Calvinists.
Hi Stacy, I think I
read on your site some weeks back
about the CLEP test for students entering
college.
She didn't realize I've been
reading you for
about three or four years starting in
college and that when I went home to visit her I was testing out your recipes in her kitchen (many of them like the squash quesadillas and beer and cheddar bread were big hits) Thank you for this website and I'm looking forward to the book!
It worries me when I
read stories, like the one from the MMQB on Tuesday,
about his mom calling his
college coach to remind him that Jackson was signed to play quarterback not kick returner.
Rather than divide the world into camps — Muslim versus Christian, East versus West, good versus evil — Kathleen studied Islam in
college, andafter 9/11 she
read about the oil trade, the Afghan fight against Sovietoccupation in the 1980s, the roots of Osama bin Laden's terrorist organization.After Don died, his children talked
about the Crusades and colonialism, and, Kathleen says, «very early on it became clear that — you know what?
I was pleased to
read Kelli Anderson's article
about the NBA players who are returning to
college during the lockout (SCORECARD, Nov. 7).
If you ever wanted to know more
about how the kids and I go
about our unschooling lives, what drew me to unschooling, my thoughts on getting into
college, and my favorite things
about unschooling, I encourage you to
read my interview.
Even though I have two 20 - something sons, one a recent grad and one in his final year, and I
read a lot
about popular culture and was quite aware of hookups, I still was kind of clueless
about how hookup culture's changed how
college students enjoy — or, more accurately, don't enjoy — sex.
But I just finished
reading two books
about what's happening on
college campuses now — American Hookup: The New Culture of Sex on Campus by sociologist Lisa Wade and Unwanted Advances: Sexual Paranoia Comes to Campus by feminist and social critic Laura Kipnis — and I actually do feel quite blessed that my
college days are long past.
My son is now in
college, so you can
read about how my son developed over time and what it was like for me as a parent of a gifted child.
In the article you'll
read about people who may be a lot like you —
college - educated, living in the suburbs — who suddenly lost their financial footing in today's bad economy and now struggle to feed their families every day.
And there was something
about Baby
College that not only gave them lots of useful information, just, you know, taught them important things
about discipline,
about reading to your kids that I think will really help them.
So much to consider and so much to still explore, but
reading about these schools really did add a lot to those discussions in the woods, even if it was just me quoting from the book to anyone who was nearby - «Did you know that today's
college graduate will have as many as seven career paths over the course of their working years?»
My
college friend Meg, an experienced mom and author of The Rug Merchant (link provided for those who are looking to
read quality fiction that is not
about babies), emailed me to ask for tips on replicating this activity for her sister's shower.
Top photo via Wikipedia The Parkland students continue to amaze — just today, I
read about how David Hogg launched an advertiser boycott against conservative talk show host Laura Ingraham in the few HOURS after she mocked his rejection from some of his
college choices.
He also spoke
about the public education system, saying young people are graduating from high school without having the
reading, writing or math skills needed to excel in a
college environment.
You're not alone —
about half of voters haven't heard or
read anything
about the issue, according to an Oct. 6 Siena
College poll.
Roettenbacher
read about the Altair results while she was in
college at Ohio Wesleyan University.
I'd first
read about H.M. in my freshman psychology textbook at
college, in the fall of 1971, less than twenty years after the experimental surgery that robbed him of most of his existing memories and also of ability to form new ones.
The biologist at University
College Cork in Ireland was required by the school to attend 2 years of counseling for
reading aloud from a scientific paper
about fruit bat fellatio.
More than 20 years after University
College London's viral oncologist Robin Weiss
read about an odd, sexually transmitted cancer in dogs, he has turned up surprising clues
about its origin in a canine ancestor hundreds, or possibly thousands, of years ago.