Not exact matches
I'm no
master just
yet, but I've learned a lot about the
language, and the app itself
We begin to formally educate a child at the age of six, and twelve years later frequently find we have failed, not because school material is intrinsically difficult (the task of learning a new
language is much more so,
yet the child
masters it in thee years); we find failure because we have ignored the fact that the developing personality has a natural sway, to and fro, which Whitehead says results in a «craving» to be continually refreshed by the experience of starting anew.
Whilst
mastering natural
language is easy for humans, it is something that computers have not
yet been able to achieve.
Imagine kindergartners bubbling answer sheets just after they learn to hold pencils, high school students who complete all their graduation requirements but aren't able to pass the exit examination and graduate because they haven't received the remediation they need, or students being asked to take high - stakes tests in a
language they haven't
mastered yet.
ELL students who have not
yet learned to read in their primary or home
language face the enormous challenge of acquiring the initial concepts and skills of literacy in English, a
language they have not fully
mastered.
If one looks through the history of literature and letters, one indeed sees the outliers, the innovators and those ahead of their times all obscured, all ignored by the conventional wisdom of their eras, and
yet it is always the innovators who push forward the
language, and given the number of
masters who have died penniless, money is no measure of the artistry or «authorhood» of a writer.
(1910 - 1962) American,
yet imbued with visual culture of Europe, Franz Kline exemplifies the development of pictorial
language from a figurative form that derives from Rembrandt and the other great
masters whose work he knew well from visiting European museums, to abstraction.