Children will be awarded points for good behaviour, attendance and educational attainment. |
|
My father was not a man to underrate the bearing of Latin satirists or Greek dramatists on the attainment of an aristocratic position. |
|
Almost all pupils were achieving appropriate national levels of attainment. |
|
Staff at the college, in Hulme, have worked hard to raise levels of attainment reached by students. |
|
In Eliot's appropriation of the legend, however, the narrative of masculine attainment is rescripted as an initiation ritual. |
|
Thebes stands for reunion with mother and the attainment of power and Kingship. |
|
The samples were kept for 10 mins to ensure the attainment of thermal equilibrium, confirmed by the constancy of the duplicity. |
|
As one undertakes the various tasks involved in goal attainment, it is normal to experience failure as well as success. |
|
We may drop everything and set out on a crash course that we think will lead to rapid attainment of the goal. |
|
While striving towards paradise has energy and direction, attainment of the goal has none. |
|
Therefore patience, compassion, and love are the keys toward our attainment of enlightenment. |
|
The independent sector has a strong tradition of academic attainment and good exam results. |
|
Information on academic attainment in every single Scottish primary school is gathered by local authorities each year, but it is kept secret. |
|
Your determination, selflessness and courage have brought that freedom struggle forward towards its attainment. |
|
There was a strong link between attendance and attainment in the schools in the survey. |
|
We would look at doing anything we can do to improve attendance and attainment. |
|
Never before had he come across a woman that was so similar to himself, so conniving, and ruthless in the attainment of her goals. |
|
Such advertisements linked everyday acts of consumption to the attainment of historic goals. |
|
So people's goal attainment is being thwarted and they lash our verbally or physically. |
|
Its aim is to set professional standards, measure their attainment and promote ethical behaviour throughout the industry. |
|
|
Wherever I have been, I have worked for the attainment of that noble goal and the records are there to show it. |
|
Low levels of public services, combined with historically low levels of educational attainment, limit the attractiveness for business. |
|
The secret to achieving your goals is mapping out a realistic plan to attainment, with measured success. |
|
In central Africa they signal the attainment of rank by the community's elders and by initiated members of secret societies. |
|
On average they achieve lower attainment in SATS tests and exams throughout school. |
|
Crime has reduced significantly, but poor educational attainment, poor housing and high unemployment continue to disaffect whole communities. |
|
The deck is stacked against private home ownership, thereby frustrating attainment of the traditional social policy objective. |
|
These resources must be mobilized in the interest of ratcheting up educational attainment of entire state populations. |
|
The question then is, what steps are reasonably necessary to the attainment of that purpose? |
|
Within the tapestry of Indian thought, solitude is an extremely important path which has to be traversed for the attainment of moksha or nirvana. |
|
But grammar school heads say this is because their pupils have already reached high levels of attainment by that stage. |
|
There is no use in trying for greatness, as even the attainment of greatness would go unnoticed and unremarked upon. |
|
The laurel tree, which Correggio renders with great naturalism, simultaneously evokes notions of fidelity, chastity, and poetic attainment. |
|
The inspectors did say that there were a number of things the school could do to raise standards of attainment. |
|
The results suggest a lack of social interaction may have adverse intergenerational effects in terms of educational attainment. |
|
Stoicism and Epicureanism had made the search for pure truth subordinate to the attainment of practical virtue and happiness. |
|
Extensive sympodial branching does not necessarily follow the attainment of an upper canopy position of full exposure to the solar zenith. |
|
Conversely, the attainment of all pupils in a school is depressed if a school has few pupils from advantaged backgrounds. |
|
It is not the attainment of a capacity that helps the hero conquer his challenges but the reattainment of it. |
|
Interracial marriage tends to be educationally homogamous and the odds of interracial marriage increase with couples' educational attainment. |
|
|
We need to resist thinking that this proves our superior worth and attainment. |
|
From time to time teachers might also wish to set a test to confirm their judgment of an individual's level of attainment. |
|
There are extremely strong links between levels of absence at a school and levels of attainment. |
|
The report notes that not enough time is allocated in the curriculum to science, affecting pupils' levels of attainment in the subject. |
|
The tragic hero, we are told, still treats the ethical as his telos or goal, even if this entails subordinating particular duties to its attainment. |
|
Our efforts examine workforce characteristics such as occupational specialty, experience and retirement eligibility, educational attainment and pay grade. |
|
Efficiency is defined as the ratio of the observed level of attainment of a goal to the maximum that could have been achieved with the observed resources. |
|
Nearly a quarter of special needs students in Bedfordshire are reaching levels of attainment considered at least average by mainstream school standards. |
|
Murray also errs in reducing educational attainment and professional success solely to genetic endowment. |
|
Apophasis transcends both affirmation and negation, refuting in both any possible attainment of understanding beyond the limitation of conceptual analysis. |
|
Yet others are concerned with the attainment of skills in soloing. |
|
This anger and frustration stems from a sense of cultural besiegement, which they are finding can never be dealt with through the attainment of power alone. |
|
There are no scientific, medical, or technological barriers to its attainment. |
|
It is to be worshipped for the attainment of union with the Absolute. |
|
The inspectors acknowledged that the high number of children in the school with special needs has had an impact on our overall standards of attainment. |
|
Then the college would have a way to assess the attainment of those goals. |
|
The classical iconographic representation of the Buddha's realization shows him touching the earth with his right hand, and calling the earth to witness his attainment. |
|
Taxable household income was strongly related to educational attainment. |
|
This analysis makes allowance for any differences in school attainment, experience in the labor market, or being a native English-language speaker. |
|
Behaviours at interview play a major part in determining the outcome of the job attainment process, for example nonverbal behaviours in unstructured interviews. |
|
|
And she believes the impact on attainment could be impressive. |
|
The council is committed to driving up levels of attainment in York and, as part of this, to ensuring that our children have the right environment in which to learn. |
|
There are many stages of attainment in the Vajrayana breathing. |
|
In general, the attainment of peak pressure conditions in compressional systems such as the Delamerian Orogeny reflects the effects of crustal thickening. |
|
Thus the Kaivalyopanisad accords equal importance to Sraddha, devotion and meditation for the attainment of the highest knowledge. |
|
The awards, recognised high attainment and outstanding continuous improvement. |
|
Hispanic citizens in Virginia have higher median household incomes and educational attainment than the general Virginia population. |
|
Shropshire has the highest educational attainment in the West Midlands region. |
|
It also enables the exam board to add higher grades if pupils' attainment increases further. |
|
Educational attainment in the Valleys is low, with a large proportion of people possessing few or no qualifications. |
|
The purpose of the programme is to improve the learning, attainment and achievement of children and young people in Scotland. |
|
It is considered the mark of poetic attainment when a young poet is able to compose such verse, and is regarded as the height of poetry. |
|
Nevertheless, educational attainment in Macau is relatively low when compared to other high income countries. |
|
Perhaps Asquith's greatest personal attainment was his parliamentary dominance. |
|
Environmental agencies enact regulations which are intended to result in attainment of these target levels. |
|
Yinxi follows the formal sequence of preparation, testing, training and attainment. |
|
The town's educational attainment has continued to improve over the last few years. |
|
He said productivity is the avoidant of waste and loss of time and certainly optimizes the attainment of quality output. |
|
Long-term effect of menarchial timing on status attainment through behavioral mediators. |
|
Commando Joe's works with schools to help improve behaviour, attendance and attainment in students with a range of needs and disabilities. |
|
|
What is good, what is right and what is undisputedly proper should be considered the common attainment of mankind. |
|
Pleasure, says Ibn Sina in section 3, is a perception and attainment of that which to the perceiver is a perfection and a good in itself. |
|
Educational attainment and engagement in writing and publishing form a running thread through these herstories. |
|
Effects of exposure to an estrual female on attainment of puberty in gilts. |
|
Some practices are considered as essential for the attainment of an enlightened life but are looked upon as dreadly or extremely secret. |
|
By 2012, African Americans had advanced greatly in education attainment. |
|
The assessment of pupils' attainment will change, with 'National' qualifications replacing most Standard Grade and Intermediate Grade qualifications. |
|
Educational attainment is greatly espoused by parental reasoning as the British Chinese community cites higher education as a route to ensure a higher ranking job. |
|
Marx then predicted the eventual proletarian revolution that would result in the attainment of socialism, followed by Communism, where property would be communally owned. |
|
Highly educated individuals are less affected by unemployment trends as higher levels of educational attainment make an individual more attractive in the workforce. |
|
The eldest son of a king who died before that was barred from direct inheritance but possessed the right to retake the throne himself on the attainment of majority. |
|
There are also variations in attainment between towns in the north. |
|
The National Pupil Database attempts to match pupils' educational attainment to their characteristics gathered in the school census, including ethnicity. |
|
Unfortunately the effect is quite beyond attainment by such means. |
|
A problem with this is whether the quotas should be taken from a normal distribution or from the specific distribution of attainment in the immediate catchment area. |
|
Comprehensive schools are primarily about providing an entitlement curriculum to all children, without selection whether due to financial considerations or attainment. |
|
The incorporation of GCSE awards into school league tables, and the setting of School level targets, at above national average levels of attainment, has been criticized. |
|
Operations Research involves identifying and measuring goals, determining the variables that affect goal attainment, and then constructing a model to represent the situation. |
|
The region performs second lowest on the educational attainment subindex, while on health and survival, the Middle East and North Africa region is in third place. |
|
For securing the attainment of what he considered to be a most desirable end, he summoned all his abilities with a most praiseworthy energy and perseverance. |
|