Example sentences of "[noun sg] of children [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Development of any successful national campaign has failed , e.g. the use of ORS to prevent deaths from diarrhoea — the biggest killer of children in the developing world .
2 Dr. Lynne Michelle , of Edinburgh , has highlighted in her studies on the perception of children of the promotion of cigarettes the grave danger , almost the entrapment of a younger generation by irresponsible elements in the industry and , sadly , the example set by other adults , including parents .
3 The review had made no mention of children with special needs .
4 Travellers ' contact with social work services frequently resulted in the loss of children into care and an alien culture .
5 He is married to Catherine Peckham , an epidemiologist at the Institute of Child Health in London , who is currently involved in a major coordinated study of children with HIV around Europe .
6 Jane Rowe 's study of children in long-term foster care reinforces my view that social work practice often actually creates or increases a sense of insecurity .
7 Summertime Kirchberg echoes to the splash of children in water , laughter on the tennis courts and the exclamations of walkers as they discover another tranquil vista .
8 As well as defects apparent at birth being recorded , developmental screening of children by a health visitor on three occasions before their 4th birthday allowed newly detected abnormalities to be recorded .
9 A year earlier , on Feb. 28 , 1989 , the international human rights organization Amnesty International had made allegations concerning the imprisonment and torture of children in Iraqi prisons .
10 Mr Knight said he was particularly worried that Labour would , at county level , support the fostering of children by homosexual couples .
11 A farmer from Hereford has come to the aid of children at a Romanian Orphange .
12 … preventing sight restrictions ( eg parked cars ) , thus improving the visibility of children to drivers and vice-versa , provided these measures do not raise the speeds driven at these points . ’
13 Whilst improvements in the material well-being of children during the period under consideration is measurable in the decrease in child mortality rates , and advances in education provision and medical care ( in other words the material evidence of the control and monitoring of children by the state ) , the historical changes which occur in the emotional/psychological category , ‘ the child ’ , are largely unknowable .
14 She started cutting the hair of children at her local toddler group and eventually their mothers asked her to do their hair , too .
15 Since April 1983 , when the Education Act 1981 was introduced , LEAs have had important responsibilities regarding the identification and assessment of children with special educational needs and the provision of suitable education for such children .
16 It is true that much was written about the moral upbringing of children during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries ; but this topic was itself clearly linked with the expectation of death , rather than with the hope of a balanced and integrated life .
17 Evangelicals and others in the mid-nineteenth century still placed the central responsibility for the upbringing of children upon the family .
18 A whole range of means of assisting families of children ‘ in need ’ is spelled out in the legislation , giving some substance to the local authority 's duty to promote the upbringing of children by their families .
19 What is needed is a relaxation of the law as it now stands to allow the controlled admission of children to certain pubs at certain times of day .
20 I am not proposing a free-for-all , but the admission of children to certain pubs on the application of the licensee and the approval of the local licensing bench .
21 Yet it is clear in references to natural justice that our conception of law is bound up with ideas of notice , fair hearing , representation and open judgment , aspects of which have been denied in the admission of children to the care of the state , and particularly in parental rights resolutions by local authorities .
22 The panel has however endeavoured to ref to fulfil its remit by analyzing the whole confirmation service in the book of common order and we come to the conclusion that really the admission of children to the sacrament of the lord 's supper would necessitate only minor adjustments to the service as we now know it .
23 It is important that the category of children with moderate learning difficulties , which has escalated to frightening proportions , is not replaced with a new category of disruptive pupils .
24 Profiles of Development ( Webster and Webster 1990 ) is a package designed to assist teachers to assess , teach and monitor the progress of children in relation to the National Curriculum .
25 Social workers wanting to assess the progress of children in their care look closely at the child 's placement .
26 The educational progress of children in care
27 Furthermore , a longitudinal study which charted the progress of children in discordant homes , also reported by Rutter , documented the marked reduction in psychiatric risk which followed a substantial improvement in the home environment , when compared to the progress of children remaining in unhappy , quarrelsome homes .
28 A randomised trial of children in South Australia who were prone to recurrent respiratory infections showed a reduction in respiratory events for those taking vitamin A , but not a reduction in total days of illness .
29 Restrictions on the interaction of children with peers and care-takers necessarily limit the language access .
30 With this Act LEAs were required , for the first time , to provide for the medical inspection of children in elementary schools .
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