He will spend a few weeks under tutorship of officers at Corsham Police Station before starting work on the streets. |
|
Classes take place twice weekly under the tutorship of a professional artist. |
|
A person under tutorship loses all her civil rights, including the right to vote. |
|
One large company in the sector decided to train all of its supervisory personnel in tutorship in order to encourage loyalty among its employees. |
|
This tutorship is formalised in an agreement between the vocational school and the company. |
|
The applicant who opposes the authorization refusal motivations could bring the matter before the tutorship minister. |
|
Has tutorship helped to identify any training requirements the young person may have? |
|
Finally, he accepted a ten-month university tutorship in Launceston. |
|
His department thought highly of him and granted him a tutorship. |
|
A tutorship is instituted if your inability to take care of yourself or administer your property is partial or temporary. |
|
By law, the Curateur public is required to oversee all cases of tutorship and curatorship of persons of full age and tutorship of some minors. |
|
A person who is legally incompetent is, according to circumstance, subject to the provisions on guardianship, tutorship and custodianship. |
|
Depending on the degree of incapacity, protective supervision may be in the form of a curatorship, tutorship or advisership. |
|
For example, potential sponsors may be under a guardianship, tutorship or a power of attorney. |
|
He surprised everyone by graduating from Oxford with only Second Class Honours, but won a fellowship with a tutorship at Oriel College. |
|
In 1897 Sedgwick received a fellowship and tutorship at Trinity College, and two years later succeeded Alfred Newton as professor of zoology at Cambridge. |
|
In fact, the mid-century represented a golden age of yoga tutorship. |
|
The graduate show, which has been under the tutorship of Willie Walters, proved that even under the leaking roof of the old building, CSM students have flowered and flourished. |
|
The transmission of knowledge by tutorship systems, for example, is a good way of exploiting the experience of senior citizens and subjecting them to less physical stress. |
|
No doubt that was to justify the two hours of the meeting and the promising exchanges of views letting forecast for the future a broader dialogue between the judicial officers and their tutorship. |
|
|
If no tutor or guardian is appointed for the individual requiring tutorship or guardianship within one month, the agency of tutorship or guardianship will provisionally perform the function of tutor or guardian. |
|
Also at the local level, it would be interesting to develop tutorship or compagnonnage programs inspired by models that have proved successful in other countries, Germany for example. |
|
The third part of the brochure contains three templates for practical sheets which can be handed out to employers or company managers, to tutors and to young people involved in a tutorship approach respectively. |
|
This application must contain the same information as the initial application, except for the child's birth certificate and the judgment of tutorship. |
|
If just cause can be demonstrated, a tutor or guardian may be appointed by the agency of tutorship and guardianship at the tutor or guardian's place of residence. |
|
A specific tutorship training module has been developed for this purpose. |
|
There was also an accent on languages, science and particularly design, where a collegiate atmosphere flourished under the tutorship of Owen Frampton. |
|
After Young's tutorship, Milton attended St Paul's School in London. |
|