Sentences with phrase «see the relationship between language»

An emphasis on listening can allow teachers and school leaders to clearly see the relationship between language, identity, and community.
How do you see the relationship between language and your work?

Not exact matches

It is this naïveté that The Handmaid's Tale addresses with its appended «historical» commentary, challenging us to think about something otherwise difficult to see: the relationship between the crises of our civilization and its historic textual politics — the continuing story of who controls, legitimates, engenders and eliminates whom and what through the power of authoritative language, grounded in the Word.
The body language between David Cameron and Nick Clegg revealed a much more comfortable relationship than we often saw between Tony Blair and Gordon Brown.
In the meantime, Grahn says: «We are seeing relationships between rhythm and language abilities, attention, development, hearing acuity, and even social interactions.
We don't know the relationship between the families, but we see Blige's body language — she stiffens, her chin rises, she grabs her husband's hand and her genius is that it's subtle but practically shouts out cues to the audience: fear, tension, wariness.
At first glance, the paintings seem like formal abstraction, investigations of relationships between shape and line, but, when seen in terms of the development of MacPhee's visual language, they are more complex than simple arrangements of form.
Frustrated and bored with that what he saw as the tedious constraints of that idiom, Baldessari scrapped it early on in his career, turning his efforts instead to «phototext» works that muddy the distinction between photography and painting, questioning the relationship between visual and verbal language.
These toxic stress - induced changes in brain structure and function mediate, at least in part, the well - described relationship between adversity and altered life - course trajectories (see Fig 1).4, 6 A hyper - responsive or chronically activated stress response contributes to the inflammation and changes in immune function that are seen in those chronic, noncommunicable diseases often associated with childhood adversity, like chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), cirrhosis, type II diabetes, depression, and cardiovascular disease.4, 6 Impairments in critical SE, language, and cognitive skills contribute to the fractured social networks often associated with childhood adversity, like school failure, poverty, divorce, homelessness, violence, and limited access to healthcare.4, 19,58 — 60 Finally, behavioral allostasis, or the adoption of potentially maladaptive behaviors to deal or cope with chronic stress, begins to explain the association between childhood adversity and unhealthy lifestyles, like alcohol, tobacco, and substance abuse, promiscuity, gambling, and obesity.4, 6,61 Taken together, these 3 general classes of altered developmental outcomes (unhealthy lifestyles, fractured social networks, and changes in immune function) contribute to the development of noncommunicable diseases and encompass many of the morbidities associated epidemiologically with childhood adversity.4, 6
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