After all, I was a college
writing professor for seven years.
Not exact matches
Nor does it do much
for employee morale: As Stanford organizational behaviour
professor Robert Sutton
wrote in his 2007 bestseller, The No Asshole Rule, brutish managers «infuriate, demean and damage their peers, superiors, underlings and, at times, clients and customers, too.»
«Paradoxically, big get - togethers can be easier to prioritize than smaller ones,»
writes Vanderkam, offering the example of a busy
professor who plans an annual getaway
for her old college friends and their families.
As University of Texas associate
professor Richard J. Reddick
writes for Fortune, King «unflinchingly held a moral mirror to the nation's face.»
Adam Grant, the Wharton
professor who is Sandberg's friend and
writing partner, has been by her side, offering the comfort of research into resilience and tools
for emerging from grief.
Book review: Harvard Business School
professor Leslie A. Perlow
writes a practical guide
for achieving work - life balance.
«Based on a series of studies performed by our team over the past 5 years, this «dose» of exercise has become my prescription
for life,» Benjamin Levine, a
professor of internal medicine at the University of Texas Southwestern who
wrote the study, said in a statement.
As Mark Thoma,
professor of economics at University of Oregon,
writes, «When we see income inequality rising, we ought to start looking
for bubbles.»
«The next couple of months are crucial
for the future of Ireland,» said Kevin O'Rourke,
professor of Economic History at Oxford University, who has
written extensively on Ireland's role in the Brexit talks.
Additionally, emails uncovered by the Journal show that Sokol apparently asked Google
for money to help persuade other
professors to
write policy papers based on unspecified patent issues in conjunction with a Google - backed online conference.
Your
professors bear some blame; they lauded florid
writing and set minimum lengths
for papers.
Writing for Quartz recently, a team of business school
professors summed up the current state of the research on personality and career performance, highlighting the many fascinating ways your personal traits are likely affecting your work and your bank balance.
«No one should be asked to leave a restaurant, rejected
for an apartment or mistreated at work because of who they are,» Anthony Michael Kreis, a law
professor at Chicago - Kent College of Law,
wrote in an email to CNBC.
But it may be more difficult
for tech firms to justify scanning conversations in other situations, said Ryan Calo, a University of Washington law
professor who
writes about tech.
In an op - ed
for The New York Times, Marc Mauer, executive director of the Sentencing Project, and David Cole, a
professor of law and public policy at Georgetown University,
write that many liberals and conservatives alike acknowledge the US criminal justice system needs reform.
Galen Cranz, a sociologist and
professor of architecture at the University of California Berkeley who has long crusaded
for more active work environments
writes via e-mail: «It will take cultural change in order to make significant change.»
Since some might wonder, I'll point out that I'm not technically a professional journalist myself — I'm a
professor who dabbles at blogging — but I take my independence seriously, and I assure you that the first time anyone in management at Rogers Media (owner of Canadian Business) tries to tell me what to
write in this space, that will be the very last day I
write for them.
Richard J. Reddick, associate
professor of educational leadership and policy at the University of Texas,
writes for Fortune that some people of color might be cynical about Starbucks» response to the crisis that was precipitated by a store manager calling the cops on two black men sitting at a table (after a mere couple of minutes of them not buying anything.)
«So this is why I conclude that the silence in the night sky is golden, and why, in the search
for extraterrestrial life, no news is good news,» Oxford philosophy
professor Nick Bostrom
writes on his website.
Every class you take brings you in contact with
professors, teaching assistants, and students who could one day
write you a recommendation
for an internship or give you a lead on a job.
He continues to
write for Inc., The New York Times Sunday Magazine, and other publications, but these days he builds his portfolio around another major holding: he is a tenured
professor of journalism and mass communication at New York University.
Mark Leiser, a law
professor who
writes a tech law column
for The Drum, says he was denied boarding on an Easyjet flight after he tweeted critical remarks about the airline (he said that a delayed flight had caused a soldier on his flight to miss a connection and that Easyjet had refused to help).
Professor Ragan of McGill University, a highly respected economist who was a former adviser to Jim Flaherty,
wrote in a recent report
for the C. D. Howe Institute that there was nothing the Federal government could do to strengthen economic growth and job creation.
As Jone L. Pearce, associate
professor at the Graduate School of Management, University of California at Irvine,
wrote in «Why Merit Pay Doesn't Work: Implications from Organization Theory,» pay
for performance actually «impedes the ability of managers to manage.»
Kevin Werbach, a business
professor who has
written extensively on the subject, said that while gamification could be a force
for good in the gig economy —
for example, by creating bonds among workers who do not share a physical space — there was a danger of abuse.
«Clearly, the current regime is not fit
for the government's purpose of gaining a social licence to frack,» Michael Bradshaw,
professor of global energy at Warwich Business School,
wrote in an email.
One person they turned to
for funding was David Cheriton, a Stanford
professor of computer science, who
wrote them a check
for $ 100,000.
Perhaps the best counter-analysis can be found here, on the PBS Frontline website, from the independent «virtual» news organization TehranBureau, and
written by MUHAMMAD SAHIMI, a USC chemistry
professor who has been
writing about Iran, its nuclear program and its domestic developments
for many years....
Referring to a draft article co-authored by Gallagher which suggests that proposals drafted by Harvard Law School's Shareholder Rights Project may constitute a violation of SEC rules, Minow quotes Columbia law
professor Robert Jackson, who
wrote, «It is wildly inappropriate
for a sitting SEC commissioner to issue a law review paper accusing a private party of violating federal securities law without any investigation or due process of any kind.
A group purporting to represent Internet interests, mostly from the US but including a few Canadians (
Professor Geist
for one), has
written to the lead ministers responsible
for the NAFTA negotiations.
Ten years ago,
Professor Mihaela Firsirotu and I
wrote a piece
for the C.D. Howe Institute titled Changing the Nature of Governance to Create Value (No. 189, November 2003).
All of this occurs, of course, in the name of academic freedom, the guarantee that
professors will not be sanctioned
for the substance of what they
write and teach.
Law
professors write solely
for other academics, but since their underlying religious / ideological / political positions are relatively conventional, they can also reassure their co «ideologues outside of the academy that someone really smart who speaks the language of modern moral / legal theory is on their side.
As a student at the Catholic University of America, I am proud of these
professors and members of religious life
for writing this letter.
A book called Disinformation, co-
written by General Pacepa and the American
professor of law Ronald Rychlak (best known
for his book Hitler, the War and the Pope, a well - researched defence of Pius XII's record during the Second World War), which spells out these revelations at greater length, is «dubious at best» — or at least, the bits
written by Pacepa are: the reviewer NCR admits that «what Rychlak contributes, drawn from his earlier work on Pope Pius, appears solid».
SCIENCE AND CONSCIOUSNESS John Searle,
professor of philosophy at the University of California, Berkeley, has been
writing for years and years on the quandaries of the brain - mind - consciousness connections.
(I want to give credit to the Chicago Tribune's article on Larycia Hawkins» dismissal from Wheaton College, Wheaton College suspends Christian
professor who wore a hijab,
for providing me with the inspiration and an outline to
write this satirical piece.)
Daniel V. A. Olson, assistant
professor of sociology at Indiana University South Bend was working at the Center
for the Study of American Religion in Princeton, New Jersey, at the time this article was
written.
So far, «most of the high - profile cases involve state or local actions that would not be covered by the federal protections,» said John Inazu, a
professor at Washington University School of Law who has
written several times about such cases
for CT..
But the argument that
Professor Smolin attributes to Arkes is nowhere in the book; and what Arkes does argue
for never appears in Prof. Smolin's review — in fact, Smolin
writes as if he is oblivious to it.
«The progressive Catholic vision is a tolerant, introspective vision, and personally I see it as offering nothing but positive outcomes
for the learning experience,» said Jacques Berlinerblau, a Georgetown
professor who
writes about religion and politics.
It goes on
for a while — he is a
professor of cultural studies — but its message is well worth considering, all the more so because of the remarkable circumstances under which it was
written.
Messiah College history
professor John Fea
writes about human depravity and its implications
for studying the past on The Anxious Bench:
The fragment,
written in Coptic, a language used by Egyptian Christians, says in part, «Jesus said to them, «My wife...» Harvard Divinity School
Professor Karen King announced the findings of the 1 1/2 - by 3 - inch honey - colored fragment on Tuesday in Rome at the International Association
for Coptic Studies.
Denny Burk, an Associate
Professor of Biblical Studies at Boyce College and influential leader in the complementarian movement,
wrote a response to me yesterday in which he readily admits that complementarianism is simply a gentler word
for patriarchy.
Even though my
writing these words — homosexual conduct is sinful, and homosexual desires are objectively disordered — makes it very nearly impossible
for me to be employed by a Fortune 500 company, become a
professor at a major university, get appointed to government office, or in any way receive preferment in establishment institutions in America.
In 2005 I
wrote a review
for First Things of St. Louis University
professor Donald T. Critchlow's fine study of Schlafly's political career, Phyllis Schlafly and Grassroots Conservatism.
I want to express a special note of thanks to my publisher,
Professor Herbert Richardson of the Edwin Mellen Press
for his confidence in me and asking me to
write this book; to Maureen Muncaster, also of the Edwin Mellen Press,
for her support and facilitating the process of publication; Lois Holden, Production Manager; and Marguerite Rupnow of Lewiston Business Services,
for her understanding and making the arrangements
for the final typing possible.
Meanwhile let me say that I hope that the present volume may be followed by another, if I am spared to
write it, in which not only
Professor Royce's arguments, but others
for monistic absolutism shall be considered with all the technical fullness which their great importance calls
for.
Among the best is that by
Professor Robert Fastiggi who
wrote, «I agree with Pope Francis that there are many beautiful insights about marriage» in Cardinal Kasper's presentation, but on the issue of communion
for the divorced and remarried, Kasper is decidedly wrong,
for reasons laid out by Fastiggi and by Francis's own doctrinal chief, Gerhard Cardinal Muller.