Sentences with phrase «schools i read about»

The trouble is, Faith's starting to ask for tee - shirts from schools I haven't visited recently — schools she reads about, or sees when we watch a basketball game, or learns about when a faculty member stops by for dinner at our apartment.
It was the Louisville of downtown hotels, the lower floors of the big movie houses, the high schools I read about in the daily newspapers... On my side of the veil everything was black: the homes, the people, the churches, the schools... I knew that there were two Louisvilles and in America, two Americas.

Not exact matches

My boss was telling me the other day about a t - shirt that read, «I Got a B + on My Daughter's School Project.»
The book, Swimmy, by Leo Lionni, which Kalin read with the careful intonation of an elementary school teacher, is about a small fish that bands together with other fish to scare away a hungry tuna.
I read books about the female brain, met with science and math elementary school teachers and nonprofit educators who were doing programs to get kids interested in STEM.
Almost 80 per cent of Western Australians have doubts about the mass media according to a recent study by the School of Marketing at Curtin Business School.More than two - thirds (77 per cent) of respondents said they had at some time heard or read a...
Read more about the school closings.
It's only when you get into the modern era you stop reading about debt... and the economic models that are taught in the schools leave debt out of account.
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.
A student who says she reported warning signs about the suspect in the Parkland school tragedy more than a year before last week's mass shooting said her friendship with him quickly turned to fear in the years leading up to... Read More
After reading Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell and The School of Greatness by Lewis Howes, I understood that reading is a lot about what you read.
«During early adulthood, about half of Boomers (51 %) and Gen Xers (54 %) said they approved of U.S. Supreme Court rulings that banned the required reading of the Lord's Prayer or Bible verses in public schools; 56 % of Millennials took this view in 2008.»
I'm concerned about Tony's theology, whose philosophical foundations I criticized pretty consistently while I was involved in EC in 2004 - 7 before bowing out because Tony seemed more into pushing with some arrogance a pomo philosophy he never really studied in school than he was into fostering dialogue (I went back to just reading the wonderful books of Brian McLaren which is how I got involved in the first place).
What is less clear to me is why complementarians like Keller insist that that 1 Timothy 2:12 is a part of biblical womanhood, but Acts 2 is not; why the presence of twelve male disciples implies restrictions on female leadership, but the presence of the apostle Junia is inconsequential; why the Greco - Roman household codes represent God's ideal familial structure for husbands and wives, but not for slaves and masters; why the apostle Paul's instructions to Timothy about Ephesian women teaching in the church are universally applicable, but his instructions to Corinthian women regarding head coverings are culturally conditioned (even though Paul uses the same line of argumentation — appealing the creation narrative — to support both); why the poetry of Proverbs 31 is often applied prescriptively and other poetry is not; why Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob represent the supremecy of male leadership while Deborah and Huldah and Miriam are mere exceptions to the rule; why «wives submit to your husbands» carries more weight than «submit one to another»; why the laws of the Old Testament are treated as irrelevant in one moment, but important enough to display in public courthouses and schools the next; why a feminist reading of the text represents a capitulation to culture but a reading that turns an ancient Near Eastern text into an apologetic for the post-Industrial Revolution nuclear family is not; why the curse of Genesis 3 has the final word on gender relationships rather than the new creation that began at the resurrection.
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.
Read a little bit about science, or go back to school, before you make unqualified comments like this.
Not Republicans versus Democrats, nor liberals versus conservatives, nor rival schools of foreign policy you read about in college courses.
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.
Mainly, because in all the verbiage about freedoms of beliefs there is something so important, so blatantly acute yet everyone do not even mention it, except - oh genial me: Why would anyone in the whole world support any type of creed / belief / religion where a whole lot of humans — as in millions of human women — are not allowed to go to school, to even just read and write - less become a teacher, doctor, lawyer, president of their own companies, their own countries, mutilated by the millions when they reach puberty, WHY is this allowed?
Silverton Friends Church, for instance, (where my co-author John Pattison is a member) gathered a diverse group of its members and spent most of the past school year reading about the LGBT community and discussing how they would respond together to tensions about sexuality in their congregation and their denomination.
Answer: I wrote you about viewing anything through the ways of the world, as usual, you keep your silly debates going because you ignore anything I write on His truth, that, and know your school didn't teach you diddly so you sharpen your knowledge on His truth through other Christians that read the Bible and explain their knowledge of His truth..
In 1962 and 1963, when the U.S. Supreme Court removed Bible reading from American public schools, social conservatives were overwhelmingly concerned about the moral effects.
If Santa Clausism became the dominant «religion» of the country, tried to influence the government, inst / itute laws and public policies and demand that it be taught in public education - start every school day with a reading from «Twas the Night Before Christmas» and have «Ho Ho Ho» on your money - I'm just betting that you would have something to say about it on an internet forum and elsewhere!
I've heard or read varying degrees of that same attitude when it comes to some of the conversations about «biblical» womanhood as people heap guilt on mothers or fathers for everything from choosing public school education to relying on babysitters or daycare, from Sunday School to family strucschool education to relying on babysitters or daycare, from Sunday School to family strucSchool to family structures.
I've spent far more time than I care to admit combing through complementarian literature, reading debates about whether women can read Scripture aloud in church, whether female missionaries should be permitted to give presentations on Sunday evenings, what age groups women should be allowed to teach in Sunday school, whether women can speak in small group Bible studies, what titles to bestow upon worship leaders and children's ministry coordinators so that they don't appear too authoritative, and on and on and on.
Not an easy read, but one that will school you mightily about Christian political thought, and about Ralph's grand Strauss - rivaling theory of modernity.
And after reading some of this Mystery Genocide Manual (Qur «an), I'd have to say that it's about as peaceful as Freddy Krueger ripping up high school students.
Trying to argue for intellectual diversity and good faith by sticking up for kink is like trying to get high - school students excited about reading Romeo and Juliet by comparing it to Fifty Shades of Grey — it's not just ridiculous, but dishonest.
Then I finally read it because I've been so torn about schooling and education and what the best path will be for our family in the fall.
I gained some perspective on the present situation in Tübingen when I read extensively about the history of theology there and reviewed the controversy evoked by the famous «Tübingen schools» (both Protestant and Catholic) in the 19th century.
I have known laymen to invite a friend who is or who may be interested; I have known other persons who just «turn up» because somehow an announcement has reached them or they have read about the school in the public press.
The current discussion of what's theological about theological education can be read as the first discussion of theological schooling in which both models of excellence are explicitly engaged.
After she read A Year of Biblical Womanhood, Grandma called me up to tell me about a time when she was demoted from an administrative position at a Christian school because the new pastor of the associated church believed women should be forbidden from leading in any capacity.
And a whole bunch of plays / scripts for the forensics / speech team I coach at my high school... (I read books / blogs about atheism all the time, so when I get a chance, it's nice to read things that are totally different.)
If you were to read an article about a groups advertising campaign to promote reinsti.tuting slavery, ritualized child abuse or lowering restrictions on toxic dumping in school zones are you saying you wouldn't comment because you aren't interested in engaging in any of those things?
Hippy, yeah I get what you're saying about not learning anything new in school, and not much from the teachers you had, I also read constantly and learned more through my books and travel than in classrooms.
Wow, I randomly read through some of the comments associated with this awesome recipe and holy cow that's a whole lot of conversation about high school.
I was so amped to start reading about your juicy love life juggling in med school.
Full of thoughts that pertain to setting up play dates, after school schedules, napping, diapering, feeding, picking up toys, reading books, snuggling, killing bugs and ultimately we forget about things like grilling pizza.
:D And I loved reading about how so many of the people you went to high school with ended up surprising you with their career choices & endeavors.
You can read about my experience at the cooking school here.
I read this whole article in the NYTimes about how some schools are teaching «emotional intelligence,» which I think is amazing.
Funny to read your post just as I've finished writing one about my guy's first day of school (I'm posting it tomorrow).
... Read more» about Superfood Cornbread Muffins: Back - to - School with MightyNest
... Read more» about Back - to - School for MOMS + Sparkling Peach Green Tea
... Read more» about Back - to - School Menu + -LCB- Almond Joy Green Smoothies -RCB-
We didn't cook with many sweets at culinary school (I wrote about it here: «Culinary School: Three Semesters of Life, Learning, and Loss of Blood» http://amzn.to/eOKJWw), but reading this, I wish wschool (I wrote about it here: «Culinary School: Three Semesters of Life, Learning, and Loss of Blood» http://amzn.to/eOKJWw), but reading this, I wish wSchool: Three Semesters of Life, Learning, and Loss of Blood» http://amzn.to/eOKJWw), but reading this, I wish we had.
By: Bettina Elias SiegelMSNBC has a story up today about a practice that's old news for school food services directors, but may not be widely known by TLT (The Lunch Tray) readers — i.e., quietly giving «alternative» meals to students who come through the lunch line without the ability to... Read more
I'm finishing up the school year with my students, then off to embark on my new journey (you can read about that here).
For the High schoolers reading this... When you get a chance talk to Team Captain Andrew «cousin to Danny» Holzman about what is going on at Nova HP.
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