Sentences with phrase «thinks about the eighth»

When Horace Mann Middle School principal Orlando Johnson thinks about the eighth - graders he sent off to high school last year, he worries about how they will fare.

Not exact matches

«If you don't have the guts to be entirely in real estate, which I think is more in the eighth or ninth inning, I think stocks are still in the third or fourth inning, which nobody is talking about because I think multiples should be much, much higher,» Chase told CNBC PRO.
Now there are times that the yield curve is inverted because we are predicting a slowdown in the economy but I don't think, you know, here we are into the eighth year of economic expansion, ninth maybe, and it doesn't really seem to be any particular reason that that economic expansion is going to die any time soon, so the traditional inverted yield curve «we're about to go into recession» I don't see.
I only used about an eighth of a cup or more, instead of a fourth of a cup, of cream de menthe, and I think it was a lot better that way.
And in the eighth seat, only a foot or so from Jill, Lofman thought about what was to come.
During my six weeks in the hospital and another six weeks in a cast, all I could think about was my eighth - grade football season coming up in August.
«When I first got here, I didn't think about how long I would stay at this club — but now I am starting my eighth season so I am very happy with this.
«If you think about it, this is a kid who basically went from eighth - grade football straight to varsity,» Murphy said.
Finley: Bears know all about Notre Dame G Quenton Nelson, but their silence «surprising» - Chicago Sun - Times - Maybe the Bears think Quenton Nelson will be long gone by the time they pick eighth in next month's draft.
At that time, the sun likely resembled Iota Horologii, because the star is young: it's thought to have escaped from the Hyades star cluster, which is just 600 million years old, or about one - eighth our sun's present age.
While we do talk about our thoughts on the eighth installment in the FAST &...
Cribbing more from the cringey French dramas of Catherine Breillat (think: a less perverse Fat Girl) than the warm and fuzzy «80s staples of John Hughes, Eighth Grade is the painfully real attempt at comprehending what it means to grow up in a generation overwhelmed with information, which in turn transforms nearly everything about the process into a competition (even more so than it organically is).
Another way to think about it: proficient for today's eighth graders reflects approximately what the average twelfth grader knew in mathematics in 1990.
«I think there is some sort of age - old comfort in «story time,» something about the teacher reading a story,» eighth - grade teacher Holly Sessions told Education World.
First segment of a six - episode series about a workshop where eighth - grade students in New York City are asked to dream up the basic elements of the classroom of the future using design thinking.
Since I had just edited a reporter's story out of Vermont, about eighth - graders trying out new Core - inspired learning techniques, I thought I would take the literacy test for eighth - graders.
He expects about half of the eighth - grade class of 120 students will stay for ninth grade and thinks Mann's high school program will be attractive to families who might otherwise go to a charter, private, or magnet school.
With more than two decades of experience, I have seen my share of the unusual, but one event in one eighth grade class forever changed the way I think about instruction and grading.
For his part, Bass is thinking about next year's seventh - and eighth - graders who will need to solidify the skills too few of their older schoolmates have mastered.
Given that only about one - third of eighth graders in the US are proficient in math, and that over 60 % of community college students are required to enroll in developmental math courses, it seems clear that our current practices are not improving student thinking and problem - solving ability in mathematics.
I think this is the eighth shareholder letter that I have written about.
Eighth: I honestly don't give a flying hoot about another's thoughts and opinions when I alreday know I can produce.
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