Humanising Pedagogy Quotes & Sayings
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Top Humanising Pedagogy Quotes
There are no friends at cards or world politics. — Finley Peter Dunne
Patriotism is as fierce as a fever, pitiless as the grave, blind as a stone, and irrational as a headless hen. — Ambrose Bierce
Splendid architecture, the love of your life, an old friend ... they can all go drifting by unseen if you're not careful. — Ian McKellen
If coupling should but make us whole / And of the selfsame mind and soul, / Then couple let's in celebration; / We have contained the population. — N. Scott Momaday
It's not the hand you're dealt that matters. It's how you play the cards. — Karen Marie Moning
Our responsibility is to protect people and help them into work. — Douglas Alexander
The reviewer's view knew not of the true part of the writer's view, so good or bad, do not brew, and let them through to another part of you. — Mark Donnelly
When I meet viewers in person, it always seems to be entire family units. — Rosanna Pansino
My mother was very agnostic. She would never set foot in the synagogue, she couldn't be doing with it. — Janet Suzman
You get fifteen democrats in a room, and you get twenty opinions. — Patrick Leahy
When you make a decision to write according to a set schedule and really stick to it, you find yourself writing very fast. At least I do. — Francoise Sagan
A Gentleman's agreement cannot be broken without breaking the person who has entered into it. — Carlos Ruiz Zafon
Failures are part of life lessons.
Keep trying no matter how many times you fail. You will one day succeed. — Lailah Gifty Akita
Look deep inside the eyes of a woman, see the man you want to be. — Tim McGraw
One more point must be made with regard to the general conditions of learning an art. One does not begin to learn an art directly, but indirectly, as it were. One must learn a great number of other - and often seemingly disconnected things - before one starts with the art itself. An apprentice in carpentry begins by learning how to plane wood; an apprentice in the art of piano playing begins by practicing scales; an apprentice in the Zen art of archery begins by doing breathing exercises. 1 If one wants to become a master in any art, one's whole life must be devoted to it, or at least related to it. One's own person becomes an instrument in the practice of the art, and must be kept fit, according to the specific functions it has to fulfill. With regard to the art of loving, this means that anyone who aspires to become a master in this art must begin by practicing discipline, concentration and patience throughout every phase of his life. — Erich Fromm
