I have friends who are moms who make the same complaint about a lot of he recipes I post —
too much prep time, too many ingredients.
It's become my modus operandi these days, as I think in terms of quick and easy meals, no - stress meals, without
too much prep work.
Also this recipe involved
too much prep - I don't think cooking the puréed ingredients did anything other than dirty a pan.
The best part about making this salad for dinner is there is not
too much prep work to do.
Too much prepping distorts the value of the test.
Not exact matches
I would love to have this as a side for a party, but I won't have
too much time to get things
prepped and cooked before the actual party.
Canned sliced mushrooms make great sauces
too and require zero
prepping — those who love mushrooms as
much as we do know how
much time it takes to clean them and chop them!
Also this week:
prep for upcoming class, work on garden, harvest / preserve rhubarb as needed, get back into walking after being a sicky last week, make kimchee, finish GFCF cake packet, work 15 hours typing data entry (at least — 20 would be better, but doubt I can do that
much), and work on getting clothes that are
too small out of the girl's closets — maybe... We will see how
much of that gets done, but it's good to have a goal!
My ideal healthy lunch has lots of veggies, minimal carbs and is something I can mass meal
prep on a Sunday without taking
too much time out of one of my days off.
Next time, I'm going to spin up the oregano, evoo and dried spices in a chopper and toss it all together before skewering - I thought the «painting on» process was messy and left
too much of the savory stuff in the
prep dish.
Makin them was fun, time consuming but not difficuI put smaller batches in my mini
prep and yeah it still balls up also watch out you don't chop the nuts
too much.
Whole 30 recipes don't have to be complicated, and this rosemary chicken recipe proves you can have a delicious meal on the table without
too much chopping and
prepping.
It gets hard sometimes to think of new ways to enjoy fresh, seasonal produce, especially without
too much complicated
prep.
The biggest problem in meal
prep is trying to take on
too much.
Hey, I'm a leftovers kind of girl
too This week has been SO
much less stressful since I
prepped my lunches Sunday.
Reminded of the traditional American practice of running a Derby horse off several
preps, Boutin shrugged and said, «They are asking
too much of their young horses.
This is a very simple recipe and one that doesn't require
too much planning or
prep time.
Aside from the decreased
prep time and removable snap - in insert, I don't really see
too much of a difference between this and the 3.1
But it's perfect if you're looking for something that doesn't take up
too much space, and want to
prep baby's meals «as you go».
The PM thus blew a long, masterful raspberry, one so finessed it could only have been learnt in the shadowy confines of
prep at Eton targeted at the back of a gowned professor; he yah - boo - sucks - to - youed repeatedly about Ed and his pals spending
too much time with the big boys in that silly red uniform with the hammers and sickles from the school next door, Unite City High — which soon became Unite City blues...
New York State teachers say
too much time is spent on test
prep and some parents want their children to opt out.
In order to make sure you are not cooking
too much food, or finding yourself with a bare kitchen and a hungry stomach, sit down before you meal -
prep and take a look at your calendar for the upcoming week.
Too much variety will slow you down and make meal
prep feel tedious.
Too much stress is the number one killer of contest
prep.
So they begin their
prep with an already lowered metabolic rate,
too much fat lose, and not enough time to lose it.
Cooking for one can be daunting — all of the cleanup and
prep can just be
too much sometimes when there's no one there to help (or enjoy the meal with you).
It might pay to go easy on the fragrance
too — 36 % of men and 25 % of women think
too much perfume / cologne is the biggest date
prep misstep.
When the detective asks Jill what she wanted to be when she was studying at a prestigious
prep school, she can't summon an answer — and Katz doesn't help Kirke indicate whether she has
too much to say about that or
too little.
•
too much school time is given over to test
prep — and the pressure to lift scores leads to cheating and other unsavory practices; • subjects and accomplishments that aren't tested — art, creativity, leadership, independent thinking, etc. — are getting squeezed if not discarded; • teachers are losing their freedom to practice their craft, to make classes interesting and stimulating, and to act like professionals; • the curricular homogenizing that generally follows from standardized tests and state (or national) standards represents an undesirable usurpation of school autonomy, teacher freedom, and local control by distant authorities; and • judging teachers and schools by pupil test scores is inaccurate and unfair, given the kids» different starting points and home circumstances, the variation in class sizes and school resources, and the many other services that schools and teachers are now expected to provide their students.
For example, if there is
too much test
prep, ask that the principal monitor it and take steps to reduce it.
Some parents claimed the math and English tests for grades 3 - 11 are unnecessarily confusing and said test
prep steals away
too much instructional time.
We also let people get away at the school level with doing way
too much test
prep.
While we have general agreement on the importance of an annual test to measure whether students are learning to read and do math on grade level, we still often find
too much test
prep in our schools.
There is widespread support for the annual assessment, but an overreaction to that assessment with
too much test
prep.
About 89 percent of teachers who believed they spent an appropriate amount of time on test
prep felt it was a «very good» or «good» use of time, while 68 percent of those who thought test
prep took
too much time said the activities were a «very good» or «good» use of time.
The survey of 400 teachers found that 57 percent thought they spent «
too much time» on test
prep, while 43 percent said test
prep time was «about right» or «
too little.»
Those who believed test
prep time was about right spent half of it on activities they chose, while those who thought they spent
too much time on test
prep got to choose their own test
prep activities about 31 percent of the time.
Or, perhaps, five years ago, you hadn't done
too much Verbal reasoning
prep, but now you work in an environment that requires you to use reading comprehension skills all day long.
Educators repeatedly express concern that standardized tests focus
too much on basic skills and not enough on deeper learning, and that testing, including test
prep, takes
too much time.
@usedgov: Where you have
too many tests, or are spending
too much time on test
prep, that doesn't lead to good results.
Too much focus on testing and test
prep, narrowing of the curriculum, stressed students, concerned parents, exasperated teachers --- taken together it makes for a combustible mix of anger and frustration that leads many to the regrettable but understandable conclusion that taking a standardized test designed to measure student learning is not in the interest of student learning.
Coleman admits in his essay, «there should be concerns raised over excessive testing and devoting
too much classroom instruction to test
prep.»
However, one critic of the report cautions against making
too much of its findings because the report fails to delineate what students actually experience at various teacher
prep programs at colleges and universities throughout the nation.
Some DC education activists, teachers, and parents are concerned that standardized testing and test
prep are taking
too much time away from instruction.
The tests take
too much time away from real learning and replace it with test
prep.
-- The 2014 proposed rule, focused on increasing teacher
prep program accountability, received thousands of comments — many of them negative — about how
much it would ultimately cost states, whether it would stretch their data collection capacities and whether it relies
too much on student test scores.
Too much school time is given over to test
prep — and the pressure to lift scores leads to cheating and other unsavory practices.
But I see my local schools being effected by what reformers have gotten done...
too much time spent
prepping for tests, ignoring the needs of above average and average students, rubric after stupid rubric, etc..
Before these jobs, let's see, I was fired from a pharmacy for talking
too much, I worked in a flower shop for a woman that had been struck by lightning twice; I was a landscaper and garbage collector at my undergraduate college; I worked in a clothing store; I catered in a tuxedo; I was a
prep - cook in a restaurant; and I waited tables, of course.
But there's
too much about them that doesn't sit right with me... so I pass them by, a bit wistfully, and convince myself that the act of proper kitchen
prep work is a wonderfully zen pastime.