Famous Quotes & Sayings

Treating Children Fairly Quotes & Sayings

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Top Treating Children Fairly Quotes

Treating Children Fairly Quotes By Ilsa J. Bick

We were like matching bookends, almost touching but with volumes between us and stories, so many stories. — Ilsa J. Bick

Treating Children Fairly Quotes By Wendell Phillips

Agitation is the atmosphere of the brains. — Wendell Phillips

Treating Children Fairly Quotes By Eric Weiner

Nothing kills creativity faster than a wall. — Eric Weiner

Treating Children Fairly Quotes By Mario Sorrenti

I've had moments where I've felt like I was on another planet because I saw something beautiful. To me, taking pictures is being alive. — Mario Sorrenti

Treating Children Fairly Quotes By Matt Chandler

Remember, marriage is not a contractual arrangement. True love doesn't say, "Make me feel this way if you want me to stay." That's not love. Instead, true love says in commitment, "I'm giving myself to you regardless. — Matt Chandler

Treating Children Fairly Quotes By Rex Stout

Likewise, the division between popular and serious work was a scheme perpetrated by academics in need of creating a false pantheon of living writers when it became impossible to come up with fresh dissertation topics (to earn degrees and prestige) concerning the writers in the true pantheon, who had been analyzed to exhaustion. — Rex Stout

Treating Children Fairly Quotes By Christia Spears Brown

That assumption - that labeling and sorting children based on gender doesn't really matter as long as everyone is treated fairly - would hold true if children only paid attention to the more overt, obvious messages we adults send. If children only listened to our purposeful messages, parenting would be easy. Most (but not all) parents and teachers take great effort in treating their children fairly, regardless of gender. Parents don't need to say to their daughters, "You probably won't enjoy math" or say to their sons, "Real boys don't play with dolls." Most parents wouldn't dream of saying these blatant stereotypes to their kids. But research has shown that when we label (and sort and color-code) by gender, children do notice. And it matters - children are learning whether you mean to be teaching them or not. — Christia Spears Brown