Sentences with phrase «work culture seems»

But overall this holistic approach to building a healthy work culture seems to be paying off.

Not exact matches

Some argue that this isn't really the perk it seems to be, because it implies a company culture that encourages women to put children on hold in order to work harder.
After Jobs and Steve Wozniak started Apple in 1976, Apple also adopted parts of an Atari culture that strived to make work seem like play.
Glad Brian is working on the culture fit but the name dropping just seems a tad unnecessary if he were just to emphasize that culture is sometimes just doing the right thing.
Especially in open offices where you can't help but be in close proximity to your coworkers and their stress levels and in work cultures where leaders flaunt their busy behavior, it's easy to fall into matching and mirroring this behavior almost without thinking because it seems to be the norm of doing a good job.
They work to secure media attention for their own work as well as for plant - based and cultured meat companies, and they have been covered in more than 480 scientific and mainstream media venues.16 Little is known about the impact of these interventions on public opinion, though it seems that raising public awareness of cultured products may be valuable, especially since the field is so new.
I get what you're saying and in essence, I agree, the church seems to the world a myopic organism, focused less on the work of the church in Acts which provided real spiritual and physical care for the masses, and more on church culture and agenda.
The bishops seem to see American society and its institutions as a market rather than a community united by a common culture — a place where strangers work and pursue their economic interests, not a society where people share common bonds and shared responsibilities.
While she derides the form it takes among the pick - up artists, her basic argument seems to be that evolutionary psychology explains the behavior of those involved in the culture, even if it doesn't work.
I know this sort of thing seems to happen in Scripture (the flood, Sodom and Gomorrah, etc), but I just struggle with what this says about God's ability to work with any sort of person, society, or culture....
So many times our two cultures worked together in peace for the benfit of both, in addition to the wars of Jihads and Crusades, that we always seem to hear about so much more.
anywho — yes the breathing and meditation is hindu, many cultures have these, i like the buddhist ones — they just seem to work better for me..
They are not a rich club like Arsenal but they have been punching above their weight because they have a manager who seems to understand what tactics are & developed a very hard working culture & strong attitude.
I am presently living and working in a different culture which bases marriage and being together as a societal and emotionally stable state to be in; the values and expectations just seem to be so different, and where interestingly, private life really is a private affair and not some kind of «peep show» as in out Western culture of show and tell all as much as possible on Television and Films.
It seems as though the classic baby bottle shape has become iconic in our culture, however, the standard bottle doesn't always work for little mouths and tummies.
While it may seem you have more pressing priorities than teaching your child to be a smart spender and saver, keep in mind that the consumer culture is working on your child already.
Those working with the virus don't seem to be worried about increased competition per se, but Saphire hopes the field's culture doesn't change too much.
Now, there are no grains left; however, I've been making kefir by using some of the cultured milk and it seems to be working just fine.
As our birth culture becomes more and more medical, we seem to be losing traditional wisdom and ways of working with families throughout pregnancy and birth to keep them healthy and well - set up for a healthy, natural birth.
Modern culture makes dating hard work and it seems that being.
With his once counter-cultural, gothic aesthetic now firmly lodged in mainstream culture, Burton seems content to simply repeat himself on an increasingly grand scale, rather than think outside the box as in his best work — the elegant fairytale of Edward Scissorhands or the black and white oddness of Ed Wood.
Jersey boy Smith moves this film to Pittsburgh's suburbs, where the snow seems to fall with the grime already on it, and his working - class milieu and customer - service culture remain intact.
To some extent, «Shame» follows in the tradition of «The Lost Weekend» and «The Man with the Golden Arm,» as well as «Last Tango in Paris,» but McQueen's work seems broader, more resonant in our instant - gratification, must - have - it - now culture.
If we lead from a belief that our staff is comprised of learners, of people who are not fixed vessels of knowledge but curious explorers, then opening up time and space for educators to create new things (rather than make iterative adjustments to what exists in the form of curriculum, assessment, etc.) seems to be an incredibly cost - effective way to grow a healthy, collaborative culture and nourish an innovative working environment.
89, and her colleagues at the Challenge Success project at Stanford University, spell out something that seems especially important these days: Our fast - paced, high - pressure culture is working against kids being able to develop in a healthy, happy way.
Important characteristics of school culture include a caring atmosphere, significant family volunteering, and a supportive environment for teachers «work.158 Widespread trust among participants promotes collaboration within schools and communities.159 Parental involvement benefits students, particularly; it also seems to benefit families, enhancing their attitudes about themselves, their children «s schools, and school staff members.160
As teachers change, as student characteristics change, as assessment instruments change, and as school cultures change, a program that seemed successful a few years back may no longer work as it did.
It may seem obvious to many that teachers should be treated as professionals — applying their knowledge, experience, and expertise to the complex work of instruction — but the culture and traditions of schools have continually undermined efforts to give teaching a truly professional status.
In the age of online celebrity / fan forums, DVD making - of extras, directors» commentaries and pop - culture conventions, it seems more than ever that a work of art's communication with its audience will always be two - way.
In a culture that, according to Akiba MMO «s CEO Keiko, essentially skipped the PC and jumped straight to mobile phones, having a big, bulky machine that's primarily used at one's place of work hardly seems like something that would have awesome games on it.
Although plucked from his imagination, Yung - Chun's paintings seem to highlight everything that is wrong with our culture today — from overuse of the internet to our general social ills, it's an impressive series of work, with many scenes set in his own house and with his white French bulldog, who makes the occasional appearance.
Banks's work seemed to me to be a logical step forward historically for her position — it spoke to me as both formal sculpture engaging with the tradition of minimalism, but also as work that dealt with this kind of criminal culture.
Considering the different nature of their practices Emily Speed and David Webb seem a curious pairing, but similarities start surfacing when examining their work through the lens of a shared fascination with a certain visual culture.
Seen from the other side of the culture wars, his work, which had been neglected for many years, no longer seems out of step or heretical.
As with earlier work, this most recent series mates discussions of how natural form enters culture and how the cultured mind focuses back on its natural influences; contemplated are the origin and destiny of humankind and what movements and forms seem inherent to its physical and spiritual presence.
Decoding the roles that images play in an image - oriented culture, the work of Pictures Generation artists seems even more relevant than it ever was.
Smith's complex, yet spontaneous - seeming art is inspired by our culture's cycle of acquiring and discarding: «I think my work is very American, and the way we consume and cast off is unique to us.»
The titles are almost as engaging as the works themselves: In Ted Cruz and Tom Cruise and Ted Bundy Take Poppers on Tropical Cruise Simulator at King of Prussia Mall (King of Prussia, PA), Dedicate Lives to Edible Arrangement Innovation Culture, 2016, Blair deploys acrylic and sand on canvas in a pattern composed of what seem to be warped pineapples and melon slices.
At first glance, San Pablo's work may seem very stream of consciousness thanks to his mixture of humor, eroticism, counter-culture, pop culture, cartoons and Philip Guston references.
Many works declare positions that seem anthemic but then become more and more ambivalent with time, and, in this piece, «Culture Vulture» is both a mark of pride for its owner and an occasions for reflection on the more predatory sides of the arts industry.
In the work of this artist — born in 1972 in San Antonio, Texas, and now working in Los Angeles — certain relics of art history seem mingled with the debris of the media world, as if both — the avant - garde and pop culture — had exploded in the collision.
The huge amount of life, culture and colour that seems to leap out of this beautiful work by photographer Amanda Mustard, only shows just how fascinating and beautiful Egypt truly is.
Jeanette Winterson once argued that our experience of art «suggests that the monolith of corporate culture is only a partial reality», an idea that may seem especially pertinent when viewing works by Parsons such as Forms 1.
The presence of humor and absurdity in her work is used to disarm the intensity that seems inherent when engaging in the discourse of black culture.
Is it because Kelley's vernacular strives — or dives — for the lowest of low culture and presents so much of his lower - middle - class childhood that the high production quality of his last work, Kandors (2011), seems off?
Appropriating from a range of sources including books, personal notes, her own works of art and images of material culture, SaxonHill cuts, rips, photographs, paints, folds and layers until she creates an experience or image which seems essential and believable.
Pop art, comic canvases, and other works steeped in mass - culture influences seemed to steal the show.
Varejão is so prepared to back up her work that she has photocopies in her hands of some of the most important books and images that stood out to her while researching a culture and an ethnicity that at first seemed foreign: photos of Hopi women wearing a hairstyle of whorls, drawings of Mimbres's burial rituals, images of her own previous series where cracked paintings looked to make ties with 11th century Chinese Song dynasty ceramics, and American Indian portraits by George Caitlin were only a few of the many pages that she held and showed me during our time together.
When art and culture supposedly belong to the young, when curators look to artists in their twenties to tell us where art is going, what we actually want to see, it seems, is the work of an eighty year old painter too weak to hold a brush, who resorted to scissors in creating images of life - enhancing freedom and joie de vivre.
She makes all these allusions to subcultures, art history, and pop culture in a way that reads as tongue - in - cheek but also a bit like a tribute to how much weirder others» work can seem compared to one's own.
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