Sentences with phrase «thoughts about complex issues»

In the classroom, I felt like I could voice some of my true thoughts about complex issues related to immigration, poverty, race, and education.
providing assistance with service learning projects, including frameworks for thinking about the complex issues they are investigating
Instead, the author hopes that presenting this case study will give readers pause for thought about a complex issue, and promote a community of people who, by sharing information, enable good consumer decision making.

Not exact matches

Sometimes we can think very critically about certain things and comprehend very complex issues.
The purpose was, of course, to sharpen the church's thinking about the social issues now perceived to be far more complex than previously supposed.
I know that seems simplistic, and the issues that surround us today are complex, but I think before we dive into a discussion about living in a culture moving in a different direction than Christian views, we need to remind ourselves that God is still God, and God is still good.
But then I think that it has been a complex issue to talk about especially when you have the Speaker's order that you should not talk about it.
«My fellowship experience made me better at connecting with people; working with complex systems; synthesizing details, data and diverse views; refining analytical structures; and thinking strategically and creatively about forces and interactions in related to natural resource issues,» he said.
Today, as we celebrate Martin Luther King, jr., I am thinking about the continuing plight of black boys and men in America, especially the issue of unequal treatment by our school system — including with regard to discipline and punishment — and the related reality of our nation maintaining a massive prison complex disproportionately filled with black and brown men.
1995 Cotter, Holland, Beneath the Barrage, The Modern's Little Show, The New York Times, April 7, p. C27 Hainley, Bruce Next to Nothing: The Art of Tom Friedman, Artforum, November, pp. 4 - 5, pp. 73 - 77 Kastner, Jeffrey, lo - fo, Frieze, September / October, pp. 72 - 73 Kim Levin, Choices, The Village Voice, May 2, p. 11 Mitchell, Charles Dee, «Critical Mass»: More Than Meets the Eye, Dallas Morning News, February 3 Narbutas, Siaurys, Modernus Menas Padeda Atlaidziau Zvelgti I Pasauli, Lietuvos Rytui, August Rich, Charles, At MoMA: A «Mad» Muse, The Hartford Courant, April 1 Schjeldahl, Peter, Struggle and Flight, The Village Voice, April 18, p. 79 1994 Connors, Thomas, Evanston Art Center, New Art Examiner, May Green, David, Doors of Perception, Burelle's, May, p. 18, p. 23 Mollica, Franco, Tema Celeste, Autumn, p. 64 Perretta, Gabriele, Flash Art (Italian edition), Summer Romano, Gianni, Tom Friedman, Zoom, no. 12 Romano, Gianni, In and Out Liquid Architectures (Through a Few Objects, Temporale, no. 31, pp. 34 - 37 Romano, Gianni, Interactive Child, Arquebuse, May, pp. 24 - 25 Tager, Alisa, Emerging Master of Metamorphosis, The Los Angeles Times, May 3, p. F1, p. F8 Trione, Vincenzo, De Soto, Ulisside del Bello, Il Mattino, May 27 1993 Artner, Alan, Sharp Conceptual Show Dares to be Different, The Chicago Tribune, January 22, section 7, p. 56 Auer, James, There's No More Than a Hairbreath Between Art, Reality in This Exhibit, Milwaukee Journal, January 17 Blair, Dike, review, Flash Art, November / December, pp. 112 - 114 Flynn, Patrick J.B. review, Hair, Artpaper, February Heartney, Eleanor, New York, Dans les Galeries, Art Press, October, pp. 24 - 28 Humphrey, David, New York Fax, Art issues, May / June, pp. 32 - 33 Levin, Kim, Choices, The Village Voice, February 23, p. 65 Lillington, David, Times, Time Out, June 16 Lillington, David, Times, Metropolis M, Winter, pp. 47 - 49 Nesbitt, Lois, Artforum, Summer, pp. 111 - 112 Paine, Janice T. Hair Pieces: Exhibition Worth Combing, Mikwaukee Sentinel, January 8, p. 8D Shepley, Carol Ferring, Tom Friedman Shapes Art Out of Everyday Things, St. Louis Post - Dispatch, January 14, p. 3E Southworth, Linda, An Extraordinary Exhibition at Arts and Letters, The Washington Heights Citizen & The Inwood News, February 28, pp. 10 - 11 1992 Bernardi, David, News Reviews, Flash Art, May / June, p. 149 Cameron, Dan, In Praise of Smallness, Art & Auction, April, pp. 74 - 76 Faust, Gretchen, New York in Review, Arts, March, p. 79 Kahn, Wolf, Connecting Incongruities, Art in America, November, pp. 116 - 121 Marrs, Jennifer, Simple Style With a Complex Meaning, Courier, October 2, p. 15, p. 18 Smith, Roberta, Casual Ceremony, The New York Times, January 3, section C 1991 Artner, Alan, Friedman Debuts with Winning Simplicity, The Chicago Tribune, February 22, section 7, p. 56 Barckert, Lynda, The Work of Art, The Reader, March 1 Brunetti, John, New City, March 14, p. 14 Heartney, Eleanor, Art in America, December, p. 118 Hixson, Kathryn, Chicago in Review, Arts, May, p. 108 Levin, Kim, Choices, The Village Voice, September 17, p. 104 McCracken, David, Gallery Scene, The Chicago Tribune, February 8, section 7, p. 68 McCracken, David, Gallery Scene, The Chicago Tribune, August 30, section 7, p. 54 Goings On About Town, The New Yorker, September 23, p. 12 Palmer, Laurie, Artforum, May, p. 151 Patterson, Tom, Trio of Solos: Thoughts on Three Current Shows at SECCA, Winston - Salem Journal, September 1, p. C6 Smith, Roberta, Art in Review, The New York Times, September 13, p. C5 1990 Harris, Patty, Four Summer Art Shows, Downtown, August 29, pp. 12A - 13A Levin, Kim, Choices The Village Voice, August 7, p. 102
Beth and I hope we'll inspire students to think about creative and engaging ways to translate these complex issues for the public citizenry.
«I think I understand the climate debate better than anyone, not because I know more about climate but because I know more about the logic of complex issues.
Well since it is about accepting a very complex subject that is not always amenable to discussing various issues in sound bites and because the worst impacts occur in the future I don't think it can be definitive in the minds of many people.
Though this may be an appropriate tool in some cases, its usefulness to the job of shedding light on what people think about complex political and scientific issues is debateable, and may in fact reveal more about Lewandowsky than sceptics.
This will not only help focus and structure thinking about the challenges of future SRM governance in the context of complex environments, but it will also actively facilitate interdisciplinary and trans - sector deliberation on the issue.
Betsy Stotler: Okay, well we are a boutique firm and we specialize in complex collections for healthcare facilities, so longterm care, assisted living, anything related to that, and complex just means more than just go get a judgement and have 10 judgements in the basement of a courthouse, it's kind of like think tank brainstorming about ways to get nursing homes paid when there are Medicaid issues rather than just dementia who don't know much about their finances or can't communicate and it's another way I describe it is it's when estate planning has gone wrong or didn't exist and we need to fix it retroactively to make sure it doesn't ruin the nursing homes chances of ever getting paid for a resident, and then it often usually helps the resident in the process.
I miss the freneticism that comes with closing a deal, but equally as my role is now more about providing strategic legal advice, having the time and thinking space to consider complex legal issues is welcomed.
Since then it has been a multi-billion pound case study in Whitehall incompetence, the MoD's appalling «planning» system and corrupt procurement, and Westminster's systemic inability to think about complex long - term issues.
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