Sentences with phrase «writing professor on»

The ABA Sourcebook on Legal Writing Programs recommends that in a program using tenure - track professors «each professor in a required first - year legal writing course should have no more than 30 to 35 students» and that this faculty / student ratio should be reduced when the writing professor teaches another course at the same time.145 In a program using full - time legal writing professors on long - term or short - term contracts, each professor should have no more than 30 to 45 students each semester, «assuming the professor is not teaching any other course,» and «[s] maller numbers are better.»

Not exact matches

«We need to know what we're getting into,» warns Wendy Dobson, a professor at the Rotman School of Management at the University of Toronto who has written extensively on China.
Karl Moore, a management professor at McGill University who has conducted research on CEOs and introversion, has written that introverts tend to be better listeners.
The professor asked the students to take a few minutes each day to reflect on the following questions in writing:
«What we found is that people who spent money to buy time reported being almost one full point higher on our 10 - point [happiness] ladder, compared to people who did not use money to buy time,» wrote Elizabeth Dunn, an author of the study and a professor of psychology at the University of British Columbia.
Timothy A. Pychyl, a professor of psychology at Canada's Carleton University, has written on Psychology Today, that identity is «knowledge of who we are.
«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.
Written by Philip Auerswald, a professor of public policy at George Mason University and a senior fellow at the Kauffman Foundation, The Coming Prosperity: How Entrepreneurs Are Transforming the Global Economy is due out in April, but you can get a taste of Auerswald's most optimistic take on the entrepreneurship and global economy with this video of an animated, 10 - minute talk he gave recently to lawmakers.
«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.
«The gift date itself on average represents a turning point in the stock's trajectory, with company prices moving lower in the months after a gift is made,» David Yermack, a professor of finance at the NYU Stern School of Business, wrote in a 2008 article in the Journal of Financial Economics.
«Based on evidence gathered from focus groups and interviews conducted in U.S. coal communities, we argue that coal communities that have experienced mine closures have already begun an economic and social transition, one that is based on reshaping their culture and sense of identity,» wrote professors of Indiana University in a paper published in the March issue of Energy Research and Social Science.
While initially, this may not seem to be the most useful content marketing feature, think of the app as enabling you to leave feedback the way a professor writes on your term paper.
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.
To investigate the impact of not looking our best on our behavior, Stanford professor Margaret Neale and PhD student Peter Belmi asked a group of both women and men to write about a time they felt either attractive or unattractive and then quizzed them on their attitudes to inequality and hierarchy.
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.
And it was also several years ago that I suggested you take a look at a book on statistics written by a University of Toronto math professor.
7th US Circuit Court of Appeals nominee Amy Coney Barrett, a Notre Dame law professor, was questioned intensely about her Catholic faith as a result of past writings expressing her beliefs on whether Catholic judges should recuse themselves from death - penalty cases if they believed they would be unable to impartially uphold the law, writing that — in limited situations — judges should step back in cases that conflict with their personal conscience.
The report's author, Professor Sir John Beddington, wrote that «commonly held negative perceptions surrounding HFT are not supported by the available evidence» but said that «policymakers are justified in being concerned about the possible effects of HFT on instability in financial markets.»
John Kindt, professor emeritus of business administration at the University of Illinois, has written passionately about how playing lotteries and other state - sanctioned gaming has a negative effect on local businesses.
In a Winter 2015 article published in the California Management Review, Harvard Business School Professor Karthik Ramanna writes that the rules on accounting and auditing are examples of «thin political markets» in which those who have the most to gain set the rules.
Here's Stanford business school professor Bob Sutton writing on the origins and importance of the idea way back in 2006:
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.
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).
But a few key words and phrases from Stocky's statement stand out, as Zeynep Tufekci, a University of North Carolina professor who often writes about technology and society, highlighted on Twitter Tuesday.
Stanford Graduate School of Business Professor Jeffrey Pfeffer wrote in the journal, Academy of Management Perspectives, that, «Although most of the research and public pressure concerning sustainability has been focused on the effects of business and organizational activity on the physical environment, companies and their management practices profoundly affect the human and social environment as well.»
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.
Writing on Twitter, the professor Richard Florida argued that the 20 finalists should band together and resist the temptation.
David L. Gould, who had been a professor at the University of Iowa until Hsieh convinced him to move to Las Vegas and take the title «Director of Imagination,» wrote a public resignation letter blaming the layoffs on «a collage of decadence, greed, and missing leadership.»
Indeed, Finke said that he's most proud of a series of articles that he wrote last year along with American College professor Wade Pfau and David Blanchett, head of retirement research at Morningstar, that looked at the impact of low asset yields on the sustainability of retirement portfolios.
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....
Speaking last week before the UK Parliamentary Commission on Banking Standards (Commission), Professor John Kay said it was incredibly difficult to write rules that make a ringfence sufficiently robust.
Responding to a tweet by Cornell professor Emin Gün Sirer, Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey wrote that «we are on it.»
Meanwhile, Professor Stephen Bainbridge of the UCLA School of Law has written extensively on this subject and summed up his feelings by stating that «if this nonsense is not illegal, it ought to be.»
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.
Hein is professor of literature at Wheaton College and here offers the first full - length biography of a writer who had an inestimable influence on such as C. S. Lewis, J. R. R. Tolkein, and Frederick Buechner (who writes the foreword).
In 1993, Francis F. Seeburger, a professor of philosophy at the University of Denver, wrote a profound book on the thought processes of addicts called Addiction and Responsibility.
your life must have so much meaning, I am not writing an essay to my college professor, I am posting a comment on a message board sue me, seriously grow up.
Writing recently in the Wall Street Journal on campus rape accusations, Peter Berkowitz asks, «Where are the professors... who will insist clearly and in public that due process is a fundamental component of American political institutions and culture... indispensable in a free society to the fair administration of justice?
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.)
To articulate this way forward Wittmer (professor of historical theology at Grand Rapids Theological Seminary and author of Heaven is a Place on Earth a brilliant examination of the new creation) has recently written a second book, Don't Stop Believing: Why Living Like Jesus is Not Enough.
And our reviewing Professor of Psychology would write on such a paper, «Most Caucasian men treasure their white male status, their athleticism, and especially their penis....
On Sacrifice by Moshe Halbertal Princeton, 152 pages, $ 24.95 Moshe Halbertal, a professor of Jewish thought at both New York and Hebrew Universities, writes books with very large theses.
Perhaps it was as a diversion from writing books on Tolstoy and Dostoevsky that the author, a professor of Slavic languages at Northwestern, decided to write on the shortest of literary genres, the quotation.
On page 15 of «The Interpreters Bible», Dr. Herbert F. Farmer, Professor of Divinity at Cambridge University wrote about the indispensability of the texts, their importance and how the «truth» of them should be approached, after an exposition of the traditional conservative Christian view of person - hood, sin and the salvific actions of Jesus (aka Yeshua ben Josef), known as «the Christ» in human history.
Hirsch, an authority on writing and a professor of English at the University of Virginia, assumes that responsibility himself, aided by his Virginia colleagues historian Joseph Kett and physicist James Trefil.
This chapter appears to have been, at least in some degree, the spur to the writing of An Essay on Metaphysics.15 Ayer's programmatic assault on the possibility of metaphysics could not leave Collingwood, the current Waynflete professor in metaphysics at Oxford, unaffected.
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