Word: reflective
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Concretely, this seems to translate into contemplating Core Curriculum reform, making the ranks of tenured Faculty better reflect the composition of the student body and—as Gomes asserts—responding to whimpers from students in a concerned, methodical, “sucking-up” kind...
...tenure more common. Summers also advocates increasing the weight that teaching credentials and evaluations carry in tenure applications. But as for Faculty diversity, the pool of candidates for future tenured professorships ultimately comes from the ranks of current graduate school students—so the Faculty will not accurately reflect the demographics of the undergraduate student body until graduate school demographics change...
...existing rules of the prison where he is to be imprisoned. To make exceptions based on his admittedly keen intellect would be unfair to the other inmates. With any luck Lasaga will use his extended incarceration to think about the severe consequences of his crimes. He should reflect that the tragedy in this case is, of course, not that the American justice system has dashed his glittering geological career, but that a young man has had his innocence stolen by a sinister and selfish pedophile...
...backgrounds but several common experiences—poverty, hardship, incredibly long work hours, immigration, separation from their families, cultural alienation from American society and the constant hurdle of a language barrier. From its position of privilege, Harvard management’s overtures to the janitors are consciously dishonest and reflect an unwillingness to understand what paycheck-to-paycheck life is like...
...everyone 44 to 55, More aims specifically at affluent, educated women, 40 to 60. "Most magazines have a primary baby-boomer audience," says More's editor in chief, Myrna Blyth, 62, who holds the same title at Meredith's Ladies' Home Journal. "What makes More different is that we reflect, report and celebrate this woman on every page." In fact, almost the only criticism you'll find in the More letters column comes from women who think models like Christie Brinkley, 47, are too girlish to be featured in the magazine...