Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Robert Lenkiewicz" ¶ 12
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

pupils and include
Some examples include: to develop reasoning about perennial questions, to master the methods of scientific inquiry, to cultivate the intellect, to create positive change agents, or simply to teach pupils how to think.
Symptoms of hydrocodone overdose include respiratory depression ; extreme somnolence ; blue, clammy, or cold skin ; narrowed or constricted pupils ; bradycardia ; coma ; seizures ; cardiac arrest ; and death.
In 1845, the first football laws were written by Rugby School pupils ; other significant events in the early development of rugby include the Blackheath Club's decision to leave the Football Association in 1863 and the split between rugby union and rugby league in 1895.
Symptoms of overdose may include dry mouth, dilated pupils, ataxia, urinary retention, hallucinations, convulsions, coma, and death.
It is the oldest school in Bray and its notable past pupils include the former President of Ireland, Cearbhall Ó Dálaigh.
It is the oldest school in Bray and its notable pupils will include President of Ireland Cearbhall Ó Dálaigh.
Other symptoms include profuse sweating, pinpoint pupils, the sudden entrance into menopause for women and impotence for men, neck stiffness, and elevation of blood pressure and heart rate.
Other pupils or assistants include Raffaellino del Colle, Andrea Sabbatini, Bartolommeo Ramenghi, Pellegrino Aretusi, Vincenzo Tamagni, Battista Dossi, Tommaso Vincidor, Timoteo Viti ( the Urbino painter ), and the sculptor and architect Lorenzetto ( Giulio's brother-in-law ).
Houses or dorms usually include study-bedrooms or dormitories, a dining room or refectory where pupils take meals at fixed times, and a library, hall or cubicles where pupils can do their homework.
Correspondents include Bishop Leuthere, Hadrian, King Geraint of Dumnonia, Eahfrid, Cellanus, Sergius and Aldhelm ’ s pupils Wihtfrith and Æthelwald, who was responsible for part of the Carmen rhythmicum.
Its notable former pupils include: ex-England Rugby players Rob Andrew, now Director of Elite Rugby for the Rugby Football Union ( RFU ), the Underwood brothers, Tony and Rory along with present England player Mathew Tait and his younger brother Alex, member of the Newcastle Falcons and England U20s team.
Other former pupils include renegade spy Richard Tomlinson and Professor Edward Mellanby, the discoverer of vitamin D.
Current pupils of the school include Brandon Sykes and Manchester United development school member Owen Sykes.
However, the American English use of the word " student " to include pupils of all ages, even at elementary level, is now spreading to other countries, and is occasionally found in the UK ( particularly in the state sector ), as well as Australia and Singapore.
These symptoms include acute hearing, increased heart rate, increased blood pressure, dilated pupils, increased perspiration, increased oxygen intake, stiffening of neck / upper back muscles, and dry mouth.
Gurdjieff's notable pupils include:
He then moved to St Aloysius ' College in Hornsey Lane, Highgate, London, whose former pupils include Peter Sellers and Joe Cole.
His own works, which circulated in manuscript in his lifetime, include brief works on the Procession of the Holy Ghost, and letters to his brothers, to L. Bruni, Guauni, Traversari, and to Pallas Strozzi, as well as two which were eventually printed, his Erotemata Civas Questiones which was the first basic Greek grammar in use in Western Europe, first published in 1484 and widely reprinted, and which enjoyed considerable success not only among his pupils in Florence, but also among later leading humanists, being immediately studied by Thomas Linacre at Oxford and by Desiderius Erasmus at Cambridge ; and Epistolæ tres de comparatione veteris et novæ Romæ ( Three Letters Comparing Ancient and Modern Rome ).
New enka singers, who debuted in the ' 70s, include Sayuri Ishikawa and Takashi Hosokawa who were both Michiya Mihashi's pupils.
During the 16th century the school educated writers including Ben Jonson and Richard Hakluyt ; in the seventeenth, the poet John Dryden, philosopher John Locke, scientist Robert Hooke, composer Henry Purcell and architect Christopher Wren were pupils ; and in the 18th century, philosopher Jeremy Bentham and several Whig Prime Ministers and other statesmen ; recent Old Westminsters include prominent politicians of all parties, and many members of the arts and media.
Former pupils include comedian Jasper Carrott and musician Bev Bevan of the Electric Light Orchestra.
These include having a larger eyeball, a larger lens, a larger optical aperture ( the pupils may expand to the physical limit of the eyelids ), more rods than cones ( or rods exclusively ) in the retina, and a tapetum lucidum.
Reflexes include pupillary response ( fixed pupils ), oculocephalic reflex, corneal reflex, no response to the caloric reflex test and no spontaneous respirations.

pupils and Bishop
* The Bishop of Hereford's Bluecoat School-A co-educational voluntary aided comprehensive school for pupils aged between 11 and 16, formed in 1973 from two former church secondary schools, the Bluecoat foundation, dating back to 1710 and the Bishop ’ s School, a secondary modern school founded in 1958.
On May 1, 1804, the adjoining school was opened and blessed by Hussey's successor, Bishop John Power, and their pupils transferred to the new building.
His funeral elegies celebrate his eloquence, and his poetic, philosophical, and theological talents ; his merit as a teacher is reflected in the merits of his pupils, amongst whom were Eudes of Châtillon, afterwards Pope Urban II ; Rangier, Cardinal Bishop of Reggio ; Robert, Bishop of Langres ; and a large number of prelates and abbots.
It opened in 1854 with twelve pupils under Samuel Williams, an Anglican missionary, and nephew and son-in-law of Bishop William Williams.
This movement was led by Maurice Bishop and his former pupils, Bernard Coard and Hudson Austin.
The Marion Centre is a new department at The Bishop of Llandaff High School for pupils with Autistic Spectrum Conditions ( ASC ).
Bishop Hussey opened the new complex, christened “ Mount Sion ” on June 7, 1803, and pupils were transferred to the new school building the following year.
The Bishop Henderson primary school, named after the then Bishop of Bath and Wells, was built in the 1980s and provides places for 400 pupils aged 4 to 11.
Bishop Stopford's has about 1079 pupils aged 11 to 19.
After almost a century of attempts by the Church to found a church secondary school in Enfield, Bishop Stopford's was founded on St. Polycarp's Day 1967 and opened its doors to its first pupils on 7 September 1967.
Former pupils are known as " Old Stopfordians ", not to be confused with simply Stopfordians ( the demonym of Stockport being " Stopfordian "), or the former pupils of Bishop Stopford's School at Enfield, who are also known as Old Stopfordians.

pupils and Dan
Suzy is immediately attracted to him, making Dan McGill so jealous that he tells the pupils that he is Satan.

pupils and Wheatley
The school proved highly successful, and among Shipley's pupils were Richard Cosway, William Pars, and Francis Wheatley.

pupils and Joe
His pupils include Danny Carey, Terry Bozzio, Pat Mastelotto, Joe Porcaro, Simon Phillips, Roy Wooten, and Aaron Harris.
In an interview, Green Day lead singer and guitarist Billie Joe Armstrong recalled that he arrived at their house and saw Mike sitting on the floor with highly dilated pupils, holding his bass guitar.
At the age of 11, Coppell went to Quarry Bank Grammar School in South Liverpool, where musician John Lennon and footballer Joe Royle had previously been pupils.

pupils and .
Tall, blonde, blue-eyes, fair, buxom without being heavy, she cut a fine figure of budding womanhood as she swished among the pupils in her fresh, starched summer dress.
The education program for retarded children conducted by the East Greenwich school system has pupils from at least one neighboring community.
Then people wonder why Russian pupils are more advanced than American students.
Undoubtedly you have read the case histories of some of his prize-winning pupils ( every pupil has a physique title of some kind or other ).
But Schnabel was a great teacher in addition to being a great performer, and the fact that four of the ten versions I listened to are by Schnabel pupils ( Clifford Curzon, Frank Glazer, Adrian Aeschbacher, and Victor Babin ) also sheds light on the master's pedagogical skills.
However, the teacher who understands the influence of emotions on behavior may be highly influential in helping pupils gain confidence, security, and satisfaction.
It is the classroom teacher, however, who has daily contacts with pupils, and who is in a unique position to put sound psychological principles into practice.
Teachers and administrators in many elementary schools have assumed that dividing the pupils in any grade into groups on the basis of test scores solves the problem of meeting the needs of individuals.
One study, which involved 1,524 pupils in grades one to six, found that 12 percent of the pupils were seriously maladjusted and that 23 percent were reading a year below capacity.
and to utilize opportunities, arising in connection with regular classroom activities, for gaining a better understanding of his pupils.
Most school systems today maintain a system of cumulative records of pupils.
One upward-mobile teacher may be a hard taskmaster for lower-class pupils because she wants them to develop the attitudes and skills that will enable them to climb, while another upward-mobile teacher may be a very permissive person with lower-class pupils because he knows their disadvantages and deprivations at home, and he hopes to encourage them by friendly treatment.
This last point is important because if high school pupils are aware that few, if any, graduates who have chosen a certain vocational program have obtained a job as a consequence of the training, the whole idea of relevance disappears.
I discovered in the course of a visit there that almost all the pupils were Negroes.
The physical facilities at Dunbar are impressive, but more impressive is the attitude of the pupils.
And over 66 per cent of the elementary schools with 150 or more pupils do not have any library at all.
A certain teacher scheduled a `` Fear Party '' for her fourth grade pupils.
I've always admired him, and when I heard he was taking a few pupils, I went to him and joined his class ''.
Let your pupils learn on someone else, Doctor.
He taught French for a year at Eton, where Eric Blair ( later to become George Orwell ) and Stephen Runciman were among his pupils, but was remembered as an incompetent and hopeless teacher who couldn ’ t keep discipline.
One of his notable pupils was conductor and composer Hans Münch.
" The Germantown school, however, was faltering ; soon only eight pupils remained.
Among his pupils were many of the dominant intellectuals of the Carolingian era.

1.270 seconds.