We need to bridge the gaps of academic achievement among all student groups. |
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It shows enterprise and the ability to get on with other people, and these are often better guides to character than academic achievement. |
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An excessive interest in high academic achievement or a fondness for art or music are viewed by many young men as unmasculine. |
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The length of time in a two-way bilingual program is positively correlated with student academic achievement. |
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They had been taught more purposefully, coached in exam technique and raised and educated in settings where academic achievement was valued. |
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All of these factors contribute significantly to their high dropout rates and poor academic achievement. |
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A laddish culture, that despises academic achievement and is tolerated by far too many parents, must be changed. |
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Gibson's studies clearly suggest that appropriate behavior cannot be the most important determinant factor of academic achievement. |
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Burrell received a 2004 Jazz Educator of the Year award from Down Beat magazine for academic achievement and excellence in jazz education. |
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I chose to interview eleven Vietnamese refugee youths who received scholarships for their academic achievement. |
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But school is still only one strand of their education and academic achievement isn't everything. |
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The teachers have helped establish the school's orderly and serious atmosphere, and its culture deeply respectful of academic achievement. |
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A number of studies have been carried out to determine how the academic achievement of bilinguals compares with that of monolinguals. |
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Those in Rho Chi and Phi Lambda Sigma share common interests in attaining and nurturing meritorious academic achievement. |
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But the report said teaching was poor, academic achievement was well below average and disruptive pupils were out of control. |
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If you want to aspire to any sort of academic achievement you need to be able to express yourself clearly. |
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Judge Hastie greeted me warmly in his chambers and commended me on my academic achievement. |
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Similarly, academic achievement at least in terms of grade point average, was an important factor here and in the previous study. |
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Some disabilities, such as severe autism, can profoundly limit the academic achievement of students. |
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Added to high academic achievement must be the many successful business enterprises clustered supportively around the university. |
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Winners are selected on the basis of high academic achievement, integrity, leadership potential and physical vigor, among other attributes. |
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He is now a post-doctorate research fellow at Edinburgh University but his potential for this subsequent academic achievement was not apparent at primary school. |
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This award will be presented to Mr. Chapman for reaching the highest marks for, academic achievement, conduct and deportment, and involvement in sports and outside activities. |
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His physical condition made him a laughingstock among his peers, and his friendlessness hindered his academic achievement. |
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They also analyzed the long-term academic achievement of these students. |
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A variety of perspectives converge on the belief that schools serve multiple purposes, with academic achievement as a primary responsibility. |
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As all studies on this thematic show, the academic achievement is higher in a single-sex school than in a mixed-sex school. |
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The first is that homework is busywork, with no effect on academic achievement. |
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While the gap between boys' and girls' academic achievement is evident in all social strata, the humbler the origins, the wider the gap. |
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–Does academic achievement in high school directly correlate to college performance? |
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It also helps to create school environments where civic responsibility and academic achievement thrive. |
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Last year, one of the young mothers was awarded the Governor General's medal for academic achievement. |
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It includes strategies for promoting high academic achievement as well as off-setting problems of alienation, disengagement, and emotional distress. |
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Home conditions were often unconducive to academic achievement. |
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Although they function closely together, language proficiency and academic achievement are two distinct constructs and should be measured separately. |
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A 12-year-old student said Common Core has been a step backward for him since he attends a school with one of the highest academic achievement ratings in California. |
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Poverty impairs individuals' cognitive development and, ultimately, their academic achievement. |
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It is also documented that physical activity can enhance emotional and social growth, academic achievement and intellectual development. |
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Ensure at least one art class in every public school to stimulate student creativity and academic achievement. |
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My college life was enriched with family, friends, sorority sisters, successful academic achievement and a loving boyfriend. |
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Children who had the first six years or more of formal instruction in their own language fared the best in later academic achievement. |
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At the current rate of progress, it will take over 20 years for them to reach parity in academic achievement with other Canadians. |
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The anticipated outcomes are improved academic achievement and improved graduation rates for First Nations students on reserve. |
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The Children's Parliament is composed of 357 delegate children between the ages of 10 and 18, selected on the basis of academic achievement. |
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The ongoing involvement of non-residential parents with their children does seem to be clearly linked to their academic achievement. |
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In addition to observable factors like academic achievement, family background, and ability, some analysts have tried to control for self-selection into various institutions. |
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State law bans social promotion, or the practice of allowing students to continue to the next grade regardless of their academic achievement. |
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Upon graduating, she was awarded a scholarship from the Hotel and Restaurant Suppliers Association, as well as the Prix Milupa, for outstanding academic achievement in Geriatrics. |
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Brighton College has a reputation for outstanding academic achievement, with fees ranging from about £21,000 a year for secondary day pupil and £33,000 for boarders. |
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Six civil society institutions in the countries themselves select the participants, who all have to demonstrate excellent academic achievement and passable knowledge of English. |
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Prizes, of course, and high academic achievement. |
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You need a GPA to measure academic achievement. |
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Multiple studies link music study to academic achievement. |
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Teachers play a tremendous role, not only in the academic achievement of students, but in forming the character that will shape the rest of their lives. |
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The Department of History aims for a high level of academic achievement, and in order to keep up, a lot of your time with us will have to be spent in lecture rooms and in the university library. |
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Children and young people were indoctrinated and their academic achievement did not depend on their intellectual abilities but on their political docility. |
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A vibrant church might also boost the number of religious schools, which in turn could raise academic achievement. Finally, religious faith itself might be the channel through which churchgoers become richer. |
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With a doctorate in Economics and as a labour-relations specialist, King was the first Canadian prime minister to have attained such a high degree of academic achievement. |
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School boards need make school staff, students, and parents aware of their commitment to both the academic achievement and the physical development of the students in their schools. |
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The guarantee of a job, irrespective of academic achievement may provide some reasoned explanation as to lack of motivation to achieve excellence academically. |
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There is a growing body of research evidence that character development and greater student engagement in the life of the school are linked closely to academic achievement. |
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These accelerated schools are based on the conviction that all pupils in the same age group are capable of reaching the same level of academic achievement by the time they are of school-leaving age. |
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Comprehensive assessments of attention, memory, intelligence, learning, motor and perceptual functioning, executive functioning and academic achievement as well as socioemotional health are conducted. |
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Some researchers also suggest that the stress created by the conflict surrounding the breakup of the family, or the reconstitution into a blended family, subverts academic achievement. |
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Sigma Beta Delta inductees are nominated for their academic achievement, dedication to service, and personal and professional development. |
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Claims that meet this profile represent a student who is diagnosed with a learning disability and who demonstrates significant difficulty with academic achievement and behaviours that affect learning. |
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A comprehensive school is a secondary school that is a state school and does not select its intake on the basis of academic achievement or aptitude. |
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While DAP guidelines address both academic achievement and the development of positive social skills, the authors of the current study chose to focus on the latter. |
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These days, headlines of academic achievement are as likely to feature homeschooled children as their peers from traditional public and private school settings. |
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