Example sentences of "view of [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 For example , it did little to improve parents ' view of teachers when schools in one local authority were told to implement a policy aiming to lead young children to an understanding of such things as lesbianism and homosexuality .
2 Once we adopt this view of teachers or of any other human being , our starting question is no longer why does he/she fail to do X , but why does he/she do Y ?
3 It might also be suggested that for officers of an LEA to concentrate time and resources on prescribing how the physical arrangements of classrooms should be attended to represents a rather demeaning view of teachers and heads , whose proper concern such matters undoubtedly are .
4 From the point of view of teachers , then , the category of gender is but one critical perspective of many .
5 Unlike housing and education , health policies were remarkable for their continuity in the 1980s and the NHS finished the decade battered round the edges but largely intact : still the overwhelming supplier of health care in spite of the growth in the independent sector ; still tax-funded and for the most part free at the point of use ; still growing in real terms even though that did not keep pace with demand in the view of critics .
6 Willis 's work also shares Robson 's view of courts as framers of judicial policy on social and political questions and it contains a number of pointed criticisms of the normativist style .
7 Geoffrey Reynolds , Southern Area Superintendent , has worked to develop an associational strategy for planting new churches , helping colleagues to gain an overall view of areas of growth and of need in the south .
8 Opposite page : Living flame gas with three sided gas front allowing all-round view of flames ; the SP firefront hides a Baxi Bermuda back boiler .
9 Thus from the point of view of journeymen compositors in London and Edinburgh alike , there was an immediate sense in which the whole venture must have appeared socially alien launched in an atmosphere of middle-class philanthropy , pursued by young and perhaps slightly naive women of that class , and seeking to introduce to the trade young girls of perhaps middle-class , perhaps marginal , but not necessarily working-class origin .
10 They are that , while a ‘ top-down ’ view of industrialrrelations might suggest that almost everything has changed — the unions ' political role virtually destroyed , govenment authority decisively asserted , and the balance of power shifted massively towards employers — the view from the shop floor is very different .
11 Freud also considered the view of communists , that it is the institution of private property which has corrupted man 's nature , but that man is basically co-operative and good : people could be naturally well-disposed towards their neighbours if only private property was abolished .
12 That the consequence of this is that we can no longer take the view of females as being passive victims of male advances .
13 That 's the overall and rather special context of this year in , in the year of the youth but every year is an important from the point of view of commodores and clubs and the amount of work that ac goes on on the ground through supporting causes and the effort to recruit membership and it 's in that rather mundane day to day part of R Y A membership that I would like to congratulate you first I think all of you have worked extremely hard and the reports reflect the success achieved and I would particularly highlight the increase in membership , now that obviously has n't been easy and this does require a huge effort of , a consistent effort and it 's not something you can just apply every now and again .
14 Consequently the most influential civilizations originated north of the equator and share a common view of movements in the heavens .
15 The English Tourist Board 's half of that erm is designed to persuade us , to persuade the British that erm is the year that we should discover Britain , this is the year that we should stay at home and take our holidays in the view of everything that 's happened , and in view of prices overseas .
16 Another view of warrants is that , in substance , they are transactions with owners .
17 You may position yourself with your back to the wall , choosing the place giving the best possible view of activities , so that no one will approach from behind .
18 The view of parents lent support to this verdict .
19 Models of interdependence focus on interstate relations but challenge the realist view of states as independent actors .
20 The first phase of Cubism , about 1906 , had rejected the traditional single point view of objects in order to explore their structure , both internal and external .
21 Strip Search promises to ‘ expand your view of comics , comic characters , comic dialogue and situations ’ .
22 The Victorian view of horses as God-given servants of mankind was no help either : many a trainer , and many a book , regarded horses as ‘ stupid ’ , ‘ nervous ’ , ‘ irrationally flighty ’ and so on .
23 He could see part of the canal , part of a garden , barges loaded with potatoes , a rear view of houses being pulled down by workmen , and in the distance rows of trees and street lamps , a complicated little almshouse with its gardens , and finally a grand expanse of roofs .
24 Christine Hardaker 's defence of Anthony Storr 's view of homosexuals as portrayed in his book The Integrity of the Personality just will not do ( letters , October 7 ) .
25 The personnel director of SBCI Savory Milln , Peter Cole , confirmed that this was his view of headhunters ; he would employ a search firm only when he had exhausted his own supply of personal contacts .
26 The picture thus sketched is in strong contrast to the popular view of housewives as a leisured class .
27 As to that other view of housewives as oppressed workers , we need to look more closely at the extent of women 's overall satisfaction or dissatisfaction with housework .
28 After all , it 's not everyone who has a private view of paintings worth £100,000 — a lot of money in those pre-war , pre-inflation days — but which have never been on public view .
29 And , in the view of Liberals , Mr Lloyd George has shown himself a faithless trustee of their traditions and beliefs .
30 In any case it remains very doubtful , whatever the view of liberals within these parties , whether the pro-Soviet elements would allow any fundamental rejection of Soviet policy .
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