Taught
in sentence
1163 examples of Taught in a sentence
Another student gave us feedback that she had learned to design with empathy, as opposed to designing for functionality, which is what her engineering education had
taught
her.
What Jeff's story
taught
us is that the customer was focused on the wrong thing.
So if you take the system, as I was taught, and weed out all the error-prone health professionals, well there won't be anybody left.
I want to introduce you to some of those entrepreneurs I've met and share with you some of what they've
taught
me over the years.
Theory and empirical evidence Have already
taught
us.
Another problem I want to quickly mention is that there's a whole heap of problems with the way people are actually
taught
to use nonlethal weapons, and get trained about them and then tested and so on.
She told me and
taught
me that true beauty comes from within and that validation and self worth must also come from within.
I
taught
them Spike, just like I did for you, and I want you to see the reaction on their faces when they did this.
One of the things that we're
taught
in high school is that all animals require oxygen in order to survive.
And on the very first day, our counselor gathered us all together and she
taught
us a cheer that she said we would be doing every day for the rest of the summer to instill camp spirit.
In many ways, we've been
taught
to think that the real question is, do people deserve to die for the crimes they've committed?
It's just
taught
me very simple things.
Which
taught
me, by the way, that it is true that people in Vancouver on the West Coast wake up much later and say "Good morning" much later than the people on the East Coast, who are more adventurous.
So we learned the majority of anatomic classes taught, they do not have a cadaver dissection lab.
Professor Willie Lynch
taught
you well, huh?
In fact, she's the one who
taught
me as a young girl how to read.
So, in the tradition of Catholic scholars, the nuns also
taught
us to question received teachings.
CA: Melinda, I'm guessing that some of those nuns who
taught
you at school are going to see this TED Talk at some point.
And, you know, the nuns who
taught
me were incredibly progressive.
I hope that they'll be very proud of me for living out what they
taught
us about social justice and service.
And what they
taught
us was that designing a checklist to help people handle complexity actually involves more difficulty than I had understood.
And it's
taught
us really one thing, and that is to truly make good public space, you have to erase the distinctions between architecture, urbanism, landscape, media design and so on.
It took us three years, but we went through 29 countries, and we
taught
local health workers to go district by district, and they examined the eyelids of over two and a half million people.
So thanks to this student, who questioned what everyone else had assumed to be true, this project
taught
me an important lesson about life, which is to always question assumptions.
And so that project
taught
me another lesson about life, which is that, when in doubt, improvise.
So, by questioning this assumption that all the needles have to be parallel, this project also
taught
me an important lesson: When in doubt, when your path is blocked, pivot.
I started getting very interested in Maria Montessori and her methods, and the way she went about things, and the way she thought it very valuable for kids to discover things on their own rather than being
taught
these things overtly.
But over the years, I've come to appreciate some of the important lessons my mother
taught
me about life.
Students today are often immersed in an environment where what they learn is subjects that have truth and beauty embedded in them, but the way they're
taught
is compartmentalized and it's drawn down to the point where the truth and beauty are not always evident.
I've
taught
myself to sew, cook, fix plumbing, build furniture, I can even pat myself on the back when necessary, all so I don't have to ask anyone for anything.
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