Example sentences of "children [vb mod] be [vb pp] [prep] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Women and children may be captured from other groups and incorporated .
2 Chaudhury ( 1986 ) and Rehal ( 1989 ) identified how parents of ethnic minority children may be disadvantaged during special needs assessments by the failure of LEAs and professionals to take account of language and cultural factors .
3 The costs of children may be divided into direct costs — the outlay on the baby and mother around the time of birth , and indirect costs — the amounts foregone by mothers who take time out of paid employment , and who may return to work part-time and at lower rates of pay .
4 We insisted strongly on the principle that children must be introduced to pre-twentieth-century literature , but we were determined to have no truck with lists of prescribed books .
5 Whilst it was intended that children with minor handicaps would be able to attend mainstream schools , the act required that the blind , deaf , epileptic , physically handicapped and aphasic children must be educated in special schools .
6 I feel that everything I have mentioned in this article is part of good mathematical teaching practice , e.g. that all young children should be allowed to formulate mathematical ideas in familiar language , that all children should be regarded as potential learners and that parents should be helped to understand what the school is trying to achieve .
7 There are bound to be dangers where poisonous liquids are involved and children should be kept under close control .
8 While the Warnock Committee was sitting , the 1976 Education Act established in principle that handicapped children should be educated in ordinary schools wherever practicable .
9 examine at what age , and how , visually impaired children should be introduced to tactile maps ,
10 It had implications for the ways in which children should be introduced to written language , not just to its visual form but to its structure and purposes .
11 Additional encouragement and training for children might be provided by congregational ‘ creative ’ days , when young and old alike meet together to make music , as well as to take part in other activities .
12 Cradle swings for younger children would be made of rubberised material and those for older children would have hand grips up the ropes .
13 In short , they and their children would be condemned to grinding poverty and , if their income comes from the state , to permanent state surveillance , not in this case for cohabitation but for ‘ scrounging ’ .
14 Worried parents fretted that their children would be exposed to X-rated happenings .
15 At each stage , the children will be assessed against appropriate attainment targets , which are to be grouped for the purpose into a small number ( the Task Group recommended no more than four ) of profile components , which will reflect the range of knowledge , skills and understanding the subject encompasses .
16 There also seems to be an expectation that children will be favoured over other relatives when assistance is given .
17 I 've read that our children will be taught about other faiths .
18 The children will be divided into small groups called ‘ cabins ’ .
19 If children can be drawn into normal conversation with adults as they work together , the ideas and experience which they assimilate will begin to have more meaning for them .
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