Example sentences of "[adj] teachers ' " in BNC.

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1 Indeed , he met it head-on : first infuriating the powerful gun lobby by signing a law banning assault weapons , then reforming New Jersey 's nearly bankrupt car-insurance programme , then fighting to change an absurdly generous teachers ' pension plan .
2 After Alan Duff , very few teachers ' books would have stood a chance . ’
3 Mr Lang talks about reviving the priority given to literacy and numeracy , about restoring teachers ' standing in the community , about discipline , pride , respect .
4 Yet the Government 's spending assessment requires savings of £4m that will cost 140 teachers ' jobs .
5 2 Teachers ' perceptions of the value of microcomputers in the primary curriculum .
6 Although that curriculum is often represented as diminishing teachers ' choices and initiatives , it is important for heads and their colleagues to note how matters of culture which have many facets can be handled alongside a national concern that schools should be more readily comparable with each other and should be readily accountable , not least in their pupils ' attainment levels .
7 As a consequence , the complexity of some teachers ' classroom organization appeared to greatly increase the proportion of the time during which children were distracted , awaiting attention or working only sporadically .
8 As they relate to decision-making about priorities and responsibilities in the classroom , these differences must affect many English teachers ' sense of purpose and professional confidence . [ … ]
9 A BAN on classes with more than 30 children was demanded last night by the Tories ' favourite teachers ' union .
10 A Science radio lesson with poor reception and without accompanying teachers ' notes ;
11 Some authorities , on the other hand , have been able to develop another type of supportive service , utilizing the education advisory staff in cooperation with burgeoning teachers ' centres .
12 at the heart of the assessment process there will be nationally prescribed tests done by all pupils to supplement the individual teachers ' assessments …
13 Some books were purchased at the divisional library and these were augmented by orders based on individual teachers ' specialist knowledge and individual visits , undertaken on their own initiative to bookshops in various places .
14 For this reason , programmes of teacher education need to recognise and respect individual teachers ' responsibility for their own growth .
15 The other was that in defining individual teachers ' roles , schools were asked to recognize the importance of job-satisfaction .
16 A recent step forward was the announcement in October 1990 of the formation of a broad-based teachers ' organization — the South African Democratic Teachers ' Union — which brings together a number of teachers ' unions previously separated on racial , geographical and political lines .
17 A recent step forward was the announcement in October 1990 of the formation of a broad-based teachers ' organization — the South African Democratic Teachers ' Union — which brings together a number of teachers ' unions previously separated on racial , geographical and political lines .
18 He was a real teachers ' pet , worse than me .
19 An official teachers ' guide may recommend project work and locally based enquiry , whereas the official timetable renders such initiatives impossible by dividing up the day into small fragments .
20 They felt that there were some fundamental problems within the education system on the islands , problems that the official teachers ' union were failing to redress .
21 Three point three has been rather involved er aspects of examining average teachers ' salary costs basically will fall down given that we 've had a sixty five percent return from schools and we will be able to use this year , coming year the actual mandatory points in determining how delegation of salaries should be proceeded with .
22 I suspect that other considerations are in Mr MacGregor 's mind : appraisal would require the equivalent of an extra 1,828 full-time teachers , according to the steering group , and a total cost of £36-£40m — or 0.5 per cent of the annual teachers ' salary bill .
23 The increasing use of diagnostic information and the requirements of public examinations should bring to the fore teachers ' role in assessment in comparison with their somewhat peripheral involvement hitherto .
24 The government admitted to 3,500 full time vacancies at the start of the 1989/90 school year , but the six teachers ' unions reported an extensive survey which showed total vacancies of more than 8,000 affecting at least 250,000 children .
25 It could be argued that the long-running teachers ' dispute of 1984 — 87 has eroded and undermined this trust .
26 During the latter half of 1990 intercommunal and linguistic tensions were again raised by a long-running teachers ' strike which from September severely disrupted both state and private schools in French-speaking Wallonia , where teachers were demanding pay increases in line with those paid in ( more prosperous ) Flanders .
27 The school 's organisational groups are familiar to all secondary-school teachers ' ‘ academic ’ teams , ‘ pastoral ’ teams and teams of organisers and leaders .
28 A worrying report , published by three teachers ' unions just a few minutes before national curriculum boss David Pascall issued his ‘ back to basics ’ clarion call , revealed a staggering 80,000 teachers — one in five — want to quit their jobs .
29 It clearly had very different meanings in these teachers ' minds , but although we talked about these together , it was not so easy to put them into words .
30 They saw the school as condoning these teachers ' attitudes .
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