Sentences with phrase «showing different attitudes»

A PowerPoint «tablemat &» which can be blown - up to A3 size and laminated, containing a variety of images showing different attitudes to women through the 20th Century.

Not exact matches

Canada's Global Skills Visa Program shows our government has a very different attitude towards the issue.
Enns goes on to examine various passages from Second Temple literature to show how «biblical interpreters exhibit for us an attitude toward biblical interpretation that operates on very different standards from those of modern interpreters.
It shows us just how different we can be from God in our attitudes and desires.
Depends on signings, injuries and making sure we show up with the right attitude for the overwhelming majority of our matches, as well as flexibility in how we approach and play games against different kinds of opposition.
Second half we needed to have a different attitude out there and I think we showed that.
I think he has a less restricted attitude and that shows you that he is a completely different player.»
Trying on a new outfit can be like trying on a different attitude, creating something artful, or showing a new side of yourself to the world.
A questionnaire study conducted to identify attitudes and behaviors that were of importance for weight maintenance in different subgroups of age, gender, and body - mass index (BMI) showed that there were major differencesin terms of which attitudes and behaviour that were of importance depending on which subgroup that was examined.
Intriguingly, even participants who evaluated Trump's inauguration performance negatively and those who had preferred a different candidate for president showed the same pattern of results — these participants also tended to report more favorable attitudes as soon as Trump took office.
While there is no simple «cure» for racism or other biases, «the research shows that integration of different sensory signals can allow the brain to update its model of the body and cause people to change their attitudes about others,» says Professor Slater.
Furthermore, a study has shown that women prefer dating older men to younger men due to their financial stability, mature attitude and a different outlook towards life.
In this print from Muybridge's 1881 album The Attitudes of Animals in Motion, Stanford's prized racehorse Phryne L is shown running in a sequential grid of pictures made by 24 different cameras with electromagnetic shutters tripped by wires as the animal ran across the track.
McNeil speaks of why he became interested in art; his early influences; becoming interested in modern art after attending lectures by Vaclav Vytlacil; meeting Arshile Gorky; the leading figures in modern art during the 1930s; his interest in Cézanne; studying with Jan Matulka and Hans Hofmann; his experiences with the WPA; the modern artists within the WPA; the American Abstract Artists (A.A.A.); a group of painters oriented to Paris called The Ten; how there was an anti-surrealism attitude, and a surrealist would not have been permitted in A.A.A; what the A.A.A. constituted as abstract art; a grouping within the A.A.A. called the Concretionists; his memories of Léger; how he assesses the period of the 1930s; the importance of Cubism; what he thinks caused the decline of A.A.A.; how he assesses the period of the 1940s; his stance on form and the plastic values in art; his thoughts on various artists; the importance of The Club; the antipathy to the School of Paris after the war; how Impressionism was considered in the 40s and 50s; slides of his paintings from 1937 to 1962, and shows how he developed as an artist; the problems of abstract expressionism; organic and geometric form; the schisms in different art groups due to politics; his teaching techniques; why he feels modern painting declined after 1912; the quality of A.A.A. works; stretching his canvases, and the sizes he uses; his recent works, and his approaches to painting.
By juxtaposing five artistic positions as different proposals for a way forward, the show explores attitudes towards cultural histories and monumentality as well as the constant human condition of entropy and re-awakening.
I have a similar attitude to other Team studies purporting to show that the modern warm period is warmer than the MWP — I don't think that they've proved this using their data and methods, each study having slightly different problems, but the high degree of linkage between Team studies in terms of proxy selection means that a couple of problem proxies (e.g. bristlecones) can affect a lot of studies that are advertised as «independent».
It reveals two very different cultures: one tempered perhaps by philosophy, wisdom and experience; the other that signals the grab - data - at - any - cost attitude (check out the ugly - truth memo story) that has typified the rise of unicorns over the past decade or so, ignoring warnings about recklessness around data, and showing a moral blind side when it comes to diversity.
Advances in prevention in public health2 provide a model for prevention of adolescent health - risk behaviors by focusing on risk and protective factors predictive of these behaviors.3, 4 Research on the predictors of school failure, delinquency, drug abuse, teen pregnancy, and violence indicates that many of the same factors predict these different outcomes.5, 6 Recent research has shown that bonding to school and family protects against a broad range of health - risk behaviors in adoles cence.6 Yet, prevention studies typically have focused narrowly on a specific outcome, such as preventing substance abuse, and on attitudes and social influences that predict that outcome.7, 8 Previous studies on prevention have not sought to address the shared risk and protective factors for diverse health - risk behaviors that are the main threats to adolescent health.
Crosscultural studies show that very diverse conditions (different family structures, methods of care, parental ideals and attitudes, and socio - emotional conditions) can lead to positive developmental outcomes.
Parent - child interactions affect many different domains of development.41, 42,43 Child - focused, responsive and moderately controlling parenting attitudes have been positively associated with self - esteem, academic achievement, cognitive development and fewer behaviour problems.44, 45 Furthermore, high warmth and contingent responsiveness promote a wide range of positive developmental outcomes.46, 47,48,49 Parental management style and affective involvement may be especially salient for children's prosocial development, self - control and internalization of behaviour standards.41 The quality of parenting has been found to be important for child socialization, 50,51 and parenting variables show direct links with child adjustment.52
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z