Pupil Referral units are to assist in the reintegration of excluded pupils back into mainstream schooling. |
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It tried to gauge how well pupils were able to apply their knowledge in real life rather than simply regurgitate facts and figures. |
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It is part of a drive to dispel a growing myth that work experience is only for those pupils who are bored with the academic curriculum. |
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From the age of 14 the pupils spend two days a week on work experience and all are expected to go to college. |
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On the exchange visits pupils are able to take part in work experience in their host country. |
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Year 12 students co-ordinated the project at the school and gave presentations in assembly to encourage other pupils to take part. |
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The best way to cut truancy rates is to make school worthwhile for all pupils. |
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It reflects well on the whole team from the governors and teachers to the learning assistants and the pupils. |
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The school's Newtonian reflecting telescope gave hundreds of the pupils the chance to watch the transit live on a projected screen. |
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Nearly 3,000 pupils were given the day off on Friday after arctic conditions forced some west Wiltshire schools to close. |
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But there appears to be little hard evidence of pupils failing to turn up for the second paper. |
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Then there is Kawada, one of the transfer pupils, a mysterious rogue who may hold the key to getting them off alive. |
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In a link-up with Humberside Police and the City Council, Cleeve pupils will be gunning for drivers who speed past their school in Wawne Road. |
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Unlike Oxford rival Summer Fields, where most pupils board, at the Dragon day pupils are in the majority. |
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Lloyd says that a dip in the quality of teaching meant that some usually well-behaved primary school pupils began to act up. |
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The appliance of science got pupils from across the borough turning into budding Wordsworths. |
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Arriving at schools, the teams were met by pupils, teachers and residents with a songs, drama and demonstrations of reading skills. |
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There was a big crowd in attendance including present, past and future pupils of the school. |
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The school held an Easter egg raffle in which more than 50 chocolate eggs were won by pupils, with money raised going towards school funds. |
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A damaged Cardassian ship limps into the station carrying a Cardassian reformist and her two pupils. |
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As well as reserved seats, buses have regular drivers, so they and pupils can get to know each other. |
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A school headteacher is to go on a mercy mission to Westminster in a last-ditch attempt to save seven of his pupils from deportation. |
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Ten dead, over a dozen pupils injured, and another school traumatized by a student running riot with guns in the classroom. |
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Despite the dearth of light, his pupils were the size of pin-pricks, and were ringed in jagged circlets of gold. |
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The emotional attachments between the instructor and his pupils are obvious. |
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In our study, pupils who attended schools that had new ventilation systems reported fewer asthmatic symptoms. |
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The school is extremely strict over these issues and many pupils frequently find themselves in serious trouble over minor breaches. |
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Police were today setting up extra patrols outside schools in Leicester to stop pupils walking out to join an anti-war demonstration. |
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His devotion to his work and his love for children made him popular with both pupils and parents. |
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Many old acquaintances were renewed and remembered, both amongst staff and past pupils. |
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Although pupils at Belle Vue Boys school used to wear claret and amber uniforms, they are not the civic colours of Manningham or Bradford. |
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He said more time should be spent on music, the arts and reading to allow pupils to think in a less regimented way. |
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A cheeky calendar starring boys from a posh independent school has won a group of girl pupils a business award. |
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This could also be the reason why few pupils go from public schools to independent schools. |
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They are also visiting two local schools to promote the anti-noise pollution message and to discuss with pupils how problems can be prevented. |
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It promises to be a gala evening of memories and reminiscences as past pupils and their friends swing to the music of the Sixties. |
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He thinks it is just as important to give his pupils a rich and rewarding experience during their six or seven years at the school. |
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Memories of long forgotten schooldays came flooding back for former pupils revisiting their old primary as part of its centenary celebrations. |
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The pupils enjoyed stories, art activities and games and on Tuesday they enjoyed a Chinese meal. |
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She put Hector through his paces in front of 220 pupils during the school assembly. |
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He said the authority wanted to help and support schools and families to make sure pupils attended school regularly. |
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Police and former problematic consumers regale pupils with horror stories and issue warnings of what can happen if one uses drugs. |
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Mr Bradbury was frequently at loggerheads with the county council, particularly in recent years when the council limited the number of pupils. |
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They also expect pupils will have time to play sport, do revision and homework and enjoy arts activities. |
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In 1879, Albert Neisser, one of Robert Koch's pupils, visited Bergen to study leprosy. |
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We have to wait for re-marks, but the first indications are that local schools have yet again helped pupils achieve even more. |
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St Cecilia's, building its way to a full complement of 900 pupils, currently has just 11, 12 and 13-year-olds on roll. |
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She claimed footballers were contributing to pupils swearing and answering back in class as they copy what happens on the football pitch. |
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He also held a question and answer session with year six students and gave a talk to all 400 pupils in assembly. |
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He also asked the pupils how many of them came from farms, and whether they were lambing at home. |
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He encouraged the pupils to continue their efforts, raising awareness and relaying the message to minimise waste and recycle. |
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There were eight houses or forms that divided up the pupils at Bishop Luffa and Sherbourne had now become the odd one out, the unlucky one. |
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A schoolteacher was routinely lecturing his Grade 3 pupils on the times table, when fire broke out in the building. |
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The pupils were aware of the obesity problem and conscious of the need to eat healthy foods. |
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The pupils and teachers are wished all the best as the new school year recommences. |
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Now the row is reigniting with the government about to introduce legislation formally barring pupils from wearing religious symbols in school. |
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Mrs Braham said the living languages evenings are a great way to encourage pupils to learn a new language. |
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I appreciate that it is good for pupils to mix, both disabled and able-bodied, as this reflects the general public. |
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It is hoped the latest clampdown will be particularly effective in tackling pupils who travel out of their own districts when absent from school. |
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The pupils are also going to make a wall hanging for Mrs Hargett to take to Sri Lanka as a gift for the children. |
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If teachers spent much time chasing absentees, it would be at the expense of those pupils who have turned up for lessons. |
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The Rainbow Garden Project is a collaboration of efforts from the Victoria Avenue pupils and local street wardens. |
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Bedford School is not quarantining pupils who have returned from affected areas, but is monitoring their temperatures twice a day. |
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The school needed to guarantee that its qualifications would aid the acceptability of its pupils to universities around the world. |
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The youngest member of the family detained last week was one of several St John's pupils who came to Rochdale from war-torn Angola. |
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The Tynings in Corsham is a residential street used as an access road for double decker buses collecting pupils at the secondary school. |
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The refurbished Main House now accommodates the Sixth Form and the Senior pupils. |
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The Independent Schools accused Edinburgh University of being unfair and claimed it was getting harder and harder for their pupils to get places. |
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The report also said that the pupils had made good progress to achieve the test results. |
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The school is very spacious and bright and will enhance the learning of pupils. |
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Teachers should also take a lead in helping correct the misconception of the now wayward pupils. |
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A fabulous young woman leading a project for wayward pupils explained how difficult it was for boys in her community. |
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The teacher has handed out worksheets describing the weapons and siege engines which could have been used, and she is quizzing pupils about them. |
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One part of the exams was an oral test where pupils were quizzed by two professors of the institution. |
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Most teachers recognise that pupils vary in the speed and manner in which they grasp new ideas and acquire skills. |
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It is advisable that pupils attend two sessions per day, but not back to back as fatigue limits acquisition of skills. |
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Scot runs an athletics club whose members train on the school's playing field for junior school pupils from across the area. |
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The pupils said the boy was known for his disruptive behaviour and had been acting up in the lesson that day. |
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The idea is that history should come alive for the pupils rather than them merely seeing or being told about things that happened from books. |
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Last year, pupils teamed up with traffic police and used hand-held radar guns to record the speeds of vehicles driving along Cowpasture Road. |
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According to the proposals, pupils would sit the exams at their own pace, regardless of their age. |
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At St Mary's Convent of Mercy School, pupils shed tears of joy on opening their results. |
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Since the scheme began as a pilot in September, 1999, more than 2,000 pupils from 820 schools across the UK have been put forward for the award. |
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The performance was put on for year seven and eight pupils at Castle View School. |
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The pupils will depart on their adventure at the start of the summer holiday in July. |
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The Bishop of Killaloe visited the parish to administer the Sacrament of Confirmation on the pupils of the local schools. |
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The rankings reflect how education systems manage to raise the achievement of less able pupils. |
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The best lessons are particularly lively and stimulating, with pupils responding with total concentration. |
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These schools normally admit pupils from their junior department to senior school without sitting a further examination. |
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Most of the competitors were aged 11 to 19 but pupils from six primary schools took part in a junior section. |
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The funds were raised at the Elder Avenue school after junior pupils took part in a sponsored stay awake for 12 hours. |
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Oldfield House Unit meets the needs of junior pupils with emotional and behavioural difficulties. |
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The trust added that junior pupils tend to be driven to school, whereas pupils at secondary school are more likely to walk or take the bus. |
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The event gives the junior pupils from primary schools in and around Appleby a taste of grammar school life. |
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Photographs of the school and its pupils in the 1970s also adorned the walls. |
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He said the school's first option was its feeder junior school and then it considered pupils from other schools if there was space. |
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Conversely, the attainment of all pupils in a school is depressed if a school has few pupils from advantaged backgrounds. |
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Ruth created an Art Project for her pupils whereby they had to design and create a Tea Pot. |
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She was a person of understanding and tolerance and had a rapport on a very human level with all her pupils. |
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Adults are rapt and absorbed pupils, far more dedicated students than are most kids. |
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The whites of his eyes were large in my view and surrounding two jet black preternatural pupils unlike any I had seen before. |
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They must also have an affirmative vote by the majority of the parents of the pupils enrolled in the school. |
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The maintenance backlog alone was more than 100 million and there were too few pupils rattling around in too many schools. |
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Teachers at the school dressed up as African chiefs in traditional costume and pupils each brought in a bucket to take part in the event. |
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She said pupils take drugs at the weekend and are still suffering after-effects when they come back to school. |
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Martin said some pupils had still not received their report cards, which were being kept back because they had failed to pay their school fees. |
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As part of a recent study, pupils are keeping an eye on a freshly picked daffodil which has begun to turn blue. |
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Often mydriasis occurs with the pupils poorly reactive or non-reactive to light. |
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Almost all pupils were achieving appropriate national levels of attainment. |
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One in ten pupils are leaving school in the Blackburn and Darwen area without basic reading and writing skills. |
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She's reporting on a boring school assembly at which the pupils start to talk among themselves. |
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It was there that Robert and his pupils played cricket on a pitch marked out by wickets of willow sticks. |
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By touching the white boards or by using magnetic pointers teachers and pupils can alter and rearrange the information displayed. |
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Irish pupils perform better than the national average in most subjects at Key Stages 1 and 2, and at GCSE and equivalent. |
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Its 205 pupils will be bussed to a school 13 miles away while the building is rebuilt. |
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I was staring into his pupils, the windows on the soul, but all I saw was blankness. |
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A local historian talked to pupils about his experience of living through the Second World War. |
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The idea is to help pupils continue the steady progress they have made in recent years. |
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A total of 27 reception pupils were due to begin their school life at Burrsville Infant School, in Craigfield Avenue, Great Clacton, yesterday. |
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Are pupils and parents really so terrible they can reduce grown-up professionals to quivering wrecks? |
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Under the new regulations, headteachers will have the option to expel pupils or involve the police. |
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Scottish pupils are entitled to 500 hours of instruction within a six-year period. |
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The pupils ran into the recreation room, which had one now vital commodity, a television. |
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More than 13,000 Wiltshire pupils have been putting their best foot forward to mark International Walk to School Week. |
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The headteacher of a school has been criticized for banning pupils from taking part in Red Nose Day activities. |
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I would like to offer my congratulations to all those pupils and staff who have worked hard towards achieving this great set of results. |
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It was part of a rolling programme of work experience for older pupils in the district's schools. |
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Violent and disruptive pupils could be offered psychotherapy in a controversial new move to stem the rising tide of indiscipline in Scotland's schools. |
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Making all pupils feel they are valued and have a contribution to make to the school community is vital in helping children become responsible adults. |
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Teachers, pupils and parents at Brightside Primary School are jubilant about the successes and improvements since the infants and juniors merged two years ago. |
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Disabled and able-bodied pupils got together for a dance and drama day. |
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Staff and pupils spent Friday walking on eggshells, and at one point it was touch and go if the school's spring concert's star attractions would arrive on time to be raffled. |
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The old school is empty since pupils amalgamated with the junior school. |
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The report also recommends driver training in first aid, stricter guidelines on bus quality and suitable supervision of pupils both on the bus and when they have left the bus. |
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Activities included line dancing, a food corner, a quiz about the pupils and a raffle, with teachers getting into the spirit of things by dressing as cowboys and Indians. |
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Under the new contracts for teachers, they will be entitled to time away from pupils while support staff take on tasks such as collecting dinner money and chasing absentees. |
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The spokesperson for the education department said the decision to turn repeaters away was based on the capacity of the school to take in more pupils. |
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The pupils all highlighted their wariness of the debt involved in participation in higher education, with little being known of funding arrangements. |
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As a result, caffeine dilates your pupils, speeds your heart rate, constricts your blood vessels, raises your blood pressure, and tightens your muscles. |
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Year 6 Pupils from the six main feeder pupils to Our Lady and St John RC High School, Blackburn, are at present warming to the idea of their secondary school lives ahead. |
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However, it was no playground quarrel between fellow pupils. |
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The stone was quarried 30 miles away in Kilkenny and crafted in Stradbally, with much of the work being done by past pupils of Scoil Mhuire Fatima. |
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Meanwhile, news of the tragedy was relayed to pupils during morning assembly today at Bitterne Park School where the teenager had been a pupil since last year. |
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The children, pupils of William Harrison School and Beckett School in Gainsborough, were treated for minor injuries, such as whiplash, at Lincoln County Hospital. |
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The new tracksuit will be worn along with the school's white crested polo shirt, whereas the PE kit for the younger pupils in the school will remain as they are. |
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The gray pupils are glazed and the yellowed whites are striated with red. |
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It is allowed to select a proportion of its pupils according to aptitude. |
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The Home Office said two schools, two hospitals and an ambulance station would be kitted out with the new equipment to give better security for staff, patients and pupils. |
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The past pupils came from all over to join in the celebrations. |
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On Monday the 313 pupils were told by their headteacher that the mini chocolate eggs brought in by all the pupils for Comic Relief on Friday had been stolen. |
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A man of good humour and a great sense of fun, he enjoyed popularity among his teaching colleagues and pupils, many of whom were present at the removal of remains and burial. |
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Umalasi, the independent body that quality assures the exams, was able to declare the results a true reflection of the actual performance of pupils without any hesitation. |
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Light rays bounce off the person and onto the retina through the pupil, so if the pupils are large, more light will enter the eyes, and therefore providing a better image. |
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Athy pupils will no longer be able to play truant and hope to get away with it, following the introduction of Ireland's first high tech electronic register. |
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If the report stops teachers feeling demoralised and allows them to focus on their work there will be a knock-on effect for pupils, and that's good. |
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Another activity will help pupils to learn the correct word order. |
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The pupils should be equal, round, and reactive to light in both eyes. |
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The three machines stolen in yesterday's theft were used by pupils for word processing, databases and spreadsheets as well as Internet access for research. |
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They covered all ages, from primary school pupils to pensioners. |
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Finally, the pupils used six tubs to plant strawberry runners. |
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Bruce works his pupils hard, but there is a great atmosphere in his gym, and between yelling at us to try harder, he finds plenty of time to talk smack to everyone. |
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Residents have seen children on the roof of the school on a couple of occasions so we will be talking to our pupils in assembly to see if they have any information. |
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These young activists are the same students and school pupils who were kettled in central London on 24 November after demonstrating to protect higher education. |
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Lessons are well planned and build well on what pupils have learnt before. |
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Schools from deprived areas are still losing a proportion of their pupils, probably those with higher parental support and motivation and hence are even more deprived. |
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One I particularly like concerns a Los Angeles teacher who found that one of her brighter pupils had been helping someone slower to sail through his exams. |
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It is just that their school places an emphasis on what it holds to be important subjects, hires good teachers and instils the necessary ambition in pupils. |
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But Mrs Walsh strongly believes in developing well-rounded pupils and is always keen to recognise good behaviour and kindness with book prizes in a special assembly. |
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A Kingston school which teaches pupils the Alexander technique, a method of improving posture, has launched a book which is used to teach the subject to pupils. |
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These guys are easy to spot when they are on the juice because if you get a good look at their eyes at the start line their pupils are as big as dinner plates! |
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He denied that pupils at his school were taking horse tranquillisers for kicks or that they were less than communicative because of their drug habits. |
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Kate met struggling pupils who are helped by the art therapy charity she supports. |
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The remainder of the boxes were filled by pupils in the local Convent Primary School, children attending the playschool and also the little girls in the Brownie group. |
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So whilst Tim was whisking around in tight circles in his own, go-faster-striped coracle, his pupils were still pulling on old jeans, swimming costumes or wetsuits. |
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The dormitories, bathrooms and lavatories, dining room and kitchen, and the laundry were found to be used as residential accommodation for the pupils. |
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On looking through the hall of fame, he discovered he had joined a band of past pupils who covered many services and callings in their chosen professions. |
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Classrooms need to be re-equipped and a unit created to teach older pupils essential life skills such as how to prepare a meal and keep their homes clean. |
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Various worthies expressed anxiety last week at the high number of pupils failing maths, and at the drop in the number taking the subject at higher level. |
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They hope the pioneering scheme will start in September next year and grow from an initial reception class of 30 pupils to a bilingual school of 180 after six years. |
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In his school, from year 1 to year 6, the pupils are given wipeable white boards so they can experiment with writing more freely than they would with pen and paper. |
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And these are not slow learners trying to catch up with their classmates but talented pupils eager to extend their breadth of knowledge about their chosen subject. |
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He had trained many pupils in the art of cartography such as Portuguese Diogo Ribeiro. |
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The movement was also responsible for the recognition of several new signs of death such as fixed, dilated pupils and auscultation of the heart. |
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Mr. Horrocks served myself and my pupils with three little glasses of wine, and a bumper was poured out for my lady. |
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After receiving the charge with every mark of derision, the pupils formed in line and buzzingly passed a ragged book from hand to hand. |
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It is recommended that teachers and pupils are issued with homework diaries to help implement and monitor the homework timetable. |
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The pupils of her great eyes were large in the doubtful lamplight, swallowing their green fires in deep pools of mystery and darkness. |
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Quite a few who became national athletic champions were also duxes or top academic pupils at their schools. |
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The master's pulse stood still, and he stared helplessly. The buzz of study ceased. The pupils wondered if this fool-hardy boy had lost his mind. |
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This means that full competence in both Frisian and Dutch is aimed at all pupils in the province, whether they speak Frisian or Dutch at home. |
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Under the headmistressship of the late Miss Ruth Lim the school progressed steadily and by 1941 the enrolment was at 200 pupils. |
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It is compulsory for pupils to study a second language up to the age of 14 in England, and up to age 16 in Scotland. |
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All pupils in Wales are taught Welsh as a second language up to age 16, or are taught in Welsh. |
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As a rural community, many of these are small and with fewer pupils than in urban areas. |
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United in Diversity was adopted as the motto of the Union in the year 2000, having been selected from proposals submitted by school pupils. |
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There are 70 local council schools with over 24,000 pupils in the City of York Council area. |
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At school, pupils were taught English, Latin, Greek, catechism and arithmetic. |
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The pupils practiced writing in ink by copying the alphabet and the Lord's Prayer. |
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Schools were harsh and teachers were very strict, often beating pupils who misbehaved. |
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The eyepiece tubes are adjusted for the correct interpupillary distance, that is, the distance between the pupils of one's eyes. |
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The state school system is often bypassed at age 16 by the more able pupils. |
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It has around 470 pupils and is just below the national average based on the results of GCSE test performances, but steadily improving each year. |
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Many of the secondary schools have sixth forms, allowing pupils to optionally take A Levels after the end of compulsory education. |
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Maltese and English are both used to teach pupils at primary and secondary school level, and both languages are also compulsory subjects. |
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It is now a requirement of the Scottish Government that all pupils have two hours of physical education a week. |
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In 1832 there were 3,339 Sunday schools with 59,277 teachers and 341,442 pupils. |
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Additionally, parents of pupils are expected to abstain from alcohol to prove they are followers of the faith. |
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In the old style modular subjects, pupils may mix and match tiers between units. |
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However some pupils may go to a college to study only what is known as a BTEC Extended Diploma in one certain subject. |
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Normally, pupils have to go to their school to collect their results, although Edexcel allow for the option of an online results service. |
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Excellent teaching and clear leadership are what enable pupils to achieve more. |
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The declining number of pupils studying foreign languages in the UK has been a major concern of educational experts for many years. |
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Grammar school pupils were given the best opportunities of any schoolchildren in the state system. |
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These schools normally select their pupils by an entrance examination and sometimes by interview. |
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These schools recruit pupils worldwide, particularly from large emerging Asian economies. |
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Also, facilities already provided by the charitable foundation for a few scholars could profitably be extended to further paying pupils. |
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More recently heads of public schools have been emphasising that senior pupils now play a much reduced role in disciplining. |
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Independent schools, like state grammar schools, are free to select their pupils, subject to general legislation against discrimination. |
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Many pupils aspire to send their own children to their old schools in their historical buildings, over successive generations. |
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However, the progression of pupils to Russell Group universities, including Oxbridge, is complex. |
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Whilst there are boarding facilities available, the number of day pupils greatly outweighs the number of boarding pupils. |
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It is accompanied by allegorical verses on the virtues that pupils of the college were supposed to have. |
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Almost all of the school's pupils go on to universities, about a third of them to Oxford or Cambridge. |
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Of the other pupils, up to a third receive some kind of bursary or scholarship. |
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In 2014, 60 pupils were made offers by Oxford or Cambridge, with 56 eventually going on to take up their places. |
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Former pupils are known as Old Paulines, and may keep in touch with each other through the Old Pauline Club. |
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The games played at Rugby were organised by the pupils and not the masters, the rules being a matter of custom and not written down. |
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A mark for tardiness or for absence is considered by most pupils a disgrace, and strenuous efforts are made to avoid such a mark. |
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After Lely painted a sitter's head, Lely's pupils would often complete the portrait in one of a series of numbered poses. |
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Among his pupils were many of the dominant intellectuals of the Carolingian era. |
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This was a much larger establishment with 200 pupils and a full complement of staff. |
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One of his former pupils recalled being beaten so hard he could not sit down for a week. |
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Ravel took few pupils, and was known as a demanding taskmaster for those he agreed to teach. |
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Rugby football stems from the form of game played at Rugby School, which former pupils then introduced to their university. |
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Police are still searching for the gunmen who hijacked the minibus carrying school pupils taking two of the children with them. |
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In 1845, rugby union was created when the first rules were written by pupils at Rugby School, Warwickshire. |
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As a state secondary school, Mackie Academy now serves over 1,000 pupils and they study his work. |
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This means pupils will be between 15 and 10 months and 16 and 10 months before being able to leave. |
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The Department for Education's annual school census collects data on pupils in nurseries, primary, middle, secondary and special schools. |
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This includes ethnicity data for pupils who are aged 5 or over at the beginning of the school year in August. |
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The Scottish Government's Pupils in Scotland Census 2008 found that 306 pupils spoke Scots as their main home language. |
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There is a gap in performance between pupils from better off families and poorer pupils. |
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It is also about ensuring that pupils achieve on a broad front, not just in terms of examinations. |
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In addition, pupils usually elect to continue with other subjects and many study for eight or nine GCSEs but possibly up to ten or eleven. |
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With very few exceptions, every character was acted by a different player to allow as many pupils as possible to take part. |
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Andrew's International School of The Bahamas, where two of Oldfield's children were pupils. |
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No pupils were compelled to attend, the class dwindled, and Hamilton gave it up when the salary ceased. |
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The first two hours of each day were devoted to mathematics, hours that Monk writes some of the pupils recalled years later with horror. |
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He toyed with the idea of fleeing to Germany and taking his pupils with him. |
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Among his pupils were William Lindsay Alexander, Alexander Duff, and James Aitken Wylie. |
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Glenrothes High School was built in 1966 to accommodate pupils at a higher level. |
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The temple walls are decorated with many examples of the work of both Sherab Palden Beru and his western pupils. |
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The Scottish Government states that all pupils must take the subjects below. |
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This conclusion is based mainly on the percentage of pupils achieving the respective grades in respective exams. |
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In Brittany, it was forbidden for the pupils to speak Breton or Gallo, and the two were strongly depreciated. |
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The town contains a secondary school with over 500 pupils and a leisure centre, as well as four primary schools. |
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Tenby Infants School and Tenby Junior School include Welsh units for Welsh language speaking pupils. |
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However, the majority of the town's pupils attend one of the seven comprehensive schools. |
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The school has two campuses however it is planned in the next few years for all pupils to move to the Corndon Crescent site, formerly Sundorne. |
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The 10 communes with the highest percentage of pupils in bilingual primary education, listed with their total population. |
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The 10 communes of historic Brittany with the highest total population, listed with their percentages of pupils in bilingual primary education. |
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Llio Rhydderch, another of Nansi Richard's pupils, has concentrated on teaching a new generation of as many young harpers as possible. |
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Generations of French pupils had to learn his fables, that were seen as helping teaching wisdom and common sense to the young people. |
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The number of school districts and pupils using primarily Nynorsk has decreased from its height in the 1940s, even in Nynorsk municipalities. |
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The artist most associated with Amsterdam is Rembrandt, whose work, and the work of his pupils, is displayed in the Rijksmuseum. |
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Kent County Council has the largest education department of any local council in Britain, providing school places for over 289,000 pupils. |
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So it's important for schools to be the best school since the subsidies depend on the number of pupils. |
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However, the importance of a school's reputation also makes schools more eager to expel pupils that don't perform well. |
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Flemish pupils are also obligated to follow English lessons as their third language. |
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Many nocturnal snakes have slit pupils while diurnal snakes have round pupils. |
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In some areas primary, infant and junior schools cater for ages four to eleven, after which the pupils move on to secondary schools. |
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Provision for pupils with special educational needs is also made by the mainstream schools. |
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Many of these are for pupils between 11 and 18 years, such as King's College, Taunton and Taunton School. |
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A number of Southampton pupils travel outside the city, for example to Barton Peveril College. |
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The feast day of Saint Gregory also serves as a commemorative day for the former pupils of Downside School, called Old Gregorians. |
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This teaching of German, referred to as the Holderith Reform, was later extended to all pupils in the last two years of elementary school. |
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Older pupils often attend further lessons after a break for lunch, generally eaten at school. |
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One of Cuvier's pupils, Friedrich Tiedemann, was one of the first to make a scientific contestation of racism. |
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However association football, commonly known as 'soccer' in the country, is still a very popular sport amongst high school pupils. |
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The SSPCK had 5 schools by 1711, 25 by 1715, 176 by 1758 and 189 by 1808, by then with 13,000 pupils attending. |
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Earl Mortimer college, is a state comprehensive school providing secondary education for about 650 pupils. |
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His pupils included canal engineer William Jessop and architect and engineer Benjamin Latrobe. |
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The recent spate of vandalism by pupils does not reflect well on the school. |
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There is no secondary school, so most pupils attend the school in Cartmel or Milnthorpe. |
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In January 2009, there were protests by parents and pupils regarding poor quality education and school facilities. |
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Widecombe Primary School is a primary school that educates around 70 pupils. |
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The sialoquent professor could not understand why his pupils would not sit in the front row of the lecture hall. |
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We have not sent our pupils out on private duty except a very few times, but they have an unusual amount of specialing to do inside. |
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Many schools that have moved to synthetic phonics have noted dramatic improvements to the literacy of pupils taught by this method. |
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It is likely to kill interest, and give both teacher and pupils a didactic, textbook attitude at the very beginning. |
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The pupils are wanting in regularity of attendance and there is an unsufficiency of books. |
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Consider the following questions selected from the tests and estimate the proportion of Y8 pupils you would expect to answer correctly. |
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The 45 pupils who man the AYS base have devoted a remarkable amount of time to create a culture of respect, ambition and achievement. |
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When we use these terms it immediately conjures up images of pupils using whizzy technology. |
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Other chapters cover the use of Zernike circle polynomials for non-circular pupils, anamorphic systems, and numerical wavefront analysis. |
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The school, he said, was also seeking to protect pupils from pressure to wear the jilbab. |
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The gravity of her conduct was such that the registrant's readmittance would not be in the interests of pupils or parents. |
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Hundreds of pupils were holding a breakfast meeting at Thurston High in Springfield, Oregon, when Kip Kinkle started shooting. |
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Some have attachment disorder, others cannot cope with large numbers of pupils and staff. |
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Using the Kumon method, one of our pupils was able to complete 400 sums in ten minutes at the math-a-thon. |
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