Any institution becomes a community - whether it's a high school or a boarding school or a publishing company or a small town where everybody knows certain things about people.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
A community is a group of people who have come together, and they work and they live to try and improve the standard of living and quality of life - and I don't mean money.
An institution is beyond any individual. It breathes and lives on its own and always will.
Institutions develop because people put a lot of trust in them, they meet real needs, they represent important aspirations, whether it's monasteries, media, or banks, people begin by trusting these institutions, and gradually the suspicion develops that actually they're working for themselves, not for the community.
High school students ought to seek out campus communities where they feel not only empowered to engage their talents, but also challenged to leave their comfort zones. The ability to embrace new opportunities emerges, in part, from a willingness to take risks and to fail.
Community colleges provide higher education where people live, helping to build strong ladders of opportunity that allow people to secure a foothold in the middle class.
I think it'd be useful for parents to know kind of what is the culture of an institution.
There is much more to schools than buildings. There are academic activities, how it reaches the community and its proximity to other programs.
One of my beliefs is that there are certain institutions within a community which stand for the spirit and heart of that community, there's the church, the local football team, the local pub and the theatre.
I don't really know what 'community' means. And I never use that word.
It's more than a game. It's an institution.
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