Colleges
in sentence
161 examples of Colleges in a sentence
They get into competitive colleges, they get good jobs, and sometimes they make a success of themselves in a superficial manner, and they make a ton of money.
"Cover Girl 1994" was my first major work that was critically well received in the US and Europe and quite instantly became a part of the school anthologies at universities and
colleges.
In order to sustain our work into the future, we use technology centers where we partner with local universities and
colleges
to take the technology to them, whereby they then can help us with digital preservation of their heritage sites, and at the same time, it gives them the technology to benefit from in the future.
In a country with over 4,100
colleges
and universities, it feels like this should be the norm.
Now, in the last six years, I've taught at seven different
colleges
and universities in four different states.
There are campaigns spreading across university campuses to make their
colleges
conflict-free.
We started working in the farming industry, at councils, at secondary
colleges.
And now what she's looking at in New York are colleges, because she's determined to go to school in New York.
Now,
colleges
can't do it.
Then we have the scholar William Deresiewicz's writing of elite American
colleges.
It's a new university in California, in the Central Valley, working very closely with community
colleges.
The U.S. News & World Report ranks
colleges
just as the consumer report rates washing machines.
And
colleges
and universities that invest in these securitized loans profit twice.
But at the other end of the spectrum, there's a lot of harm going on there as well, where parents feel a kid can't be successful unless the parent is protecting and preventing at every turn and hovering over every happening, and micromanaging every moment, and steering their kid towards some small subset of
colleges
and careers.
We tell our kids, don't just join a club, start a club, because
colleges
want to see that.
I mean, show the
colleges
you care about others.
And then with our kids, our precious kids, we spend so much time nudging, cajoling, hinting, helping, haggling, nagging as the case may be, to be sure they're not screwing up, not closing doors, not ruining their future, some hoped-for admission to a tiny handful of
colleges
that deny almost every applicant.
What I'm saying is, when we treat grades and scores and accolades and awards as the purpose of childhood, all in furtherance of some hoped-for admission to a tiny number of
colleges
or entrance to a small number of careers, that that's too narrow a definition of success for our kids.
What I'm saying is, we should be less concerned with the specific set of
colleges
they might be able to apply to or might get into and far more concerned that they have the habits, the mindset, the skill set, the wellness, to be successful wherever they go.
The
colleges
want to see top scores and grades and accolades and awards, and I'm going to tell you, sort of.
And if we could widen our blinders and be willing to look at a few more colleges, maybe remove our own egos from the equation, we could accept and embrace this truth and then realize, it is hardly the end of the world if our kids don't go to one of those big brand-name schools.
This resulted in 1.4 million dollars being raised for our scholars to attend field trips to
colleges
and universities, Summer STEAM programs, as well as college scholarships.
I mean that every minute of every day, many students in elementary schools through
colleges
feel that if they make a mistake, others will think less of them.
What if we empowered all kids as scholars, asked them what
colleges
they were going to, designed a summer school they want to attend to completely eliminate the summer learning loss and close two-thirds of the achievement gap?
And that's the pathway that allowed her to become accepted to one of the most elite
colleges
for women in the country, and she received her bachelor's at 36, setting an incredible example for her young son.
As far as
colleges
go, there's about 350
colleges
around the world teaching video game courses.
They take the poorest kids, and over 96 percent of their high school graduates go to four-year
colleges.
I mean, admission into elite
colleges
is scarce, and so bribery becomes attractive.
And from these examples, the AI learned to avoid the résumés of people who had gone to women's
colleges
or who had the word "women" somewhere in their resume, as in, "women's soccer team" or "Society of Women Engineers."
Open more medical
colleges?
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