Sentences with phrase «by narrowing the scope»

First, it is helpful to focus clinical practice sharply; not only to a subspecialty, but on an even narrower niche where one is the expert in only certain diseases within that subspecialty; by narrowing the scope, clinician - scientists find it easier stay on top of the rapid advances in both clinical and research fields.
By narrowing the scope of a project, teachers and their students can have short - term success that builds stamina for more complex projects later.
Unfortunately, the outcome of her article was predetermined by the narrow scope of her question.

Not exact matches

But focus, by definition, narrows the scope of our thinking, and given how complex and fast moving most business problems are, we should relearn the skill of simply opening our mind and giving ourselves half an hour to think, in an unstructured, creative way, about whatever pops up.
By adopting a purely reactionary stance against the idealism of Hegel (and the philosophical tradition in general) Nietzsche ends up providing us with a vision of nature and the world which is overly narrow in scope.
Narrowing scope: An event that was misunderstood by the attacking side that they later admitted was wrong (specifically of their own accord), but not as part of the post-war surrender process.
If you read the Constitution, the powers of the Federal Government are limited in the Articles and further limited by the 9th Amendment which basically says that the people have more rights than the constitution says, but they don't want to narrow the scope by listing it all.
He was convicted in 2009, but the U.S. Supreme Court later narrowed the scope of the honest services law and Bruno moved successfully to have his conviction vacated, or voided by the courts.
Narrow the scope of research supported by the fund.
The narrow scope and narrow determinism of the action in «Christine» is unfortunately matched by the narrow — albeit immensely skillful and committed — acting that Campos elicits from Hall.
The President's initiative, however, is much narrower in scope than the executive order that had been sought by the National Council of La Raza, a Hispanic lobbying group.
We were motivated to do this project, in part, by the fact that so many of the public images of youth are narrow in scope and negative in tone.
The complaint notes that this action is similar, but narrower in scope, to 18 separate lawsuits pending in federal district courts around the country which allege a university defendant breached its Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) fiduciary duties by allowing TIAA to collect excessive fees from the university's retirement plan.
By the definitions above and with a narrower scope applied to equities & indexes, to be «long» the call means «to have the right but not the obligation to force the liable to buy a specified asset at a specified price with a specified expiration for that right» while to be «short» the call means «to have the obligation to be forced to sell a specified asset at a specified price with a specified expiration for that right».
In fact there were so many dogs being killed in enormous city and county shelters the likes of which she had never seen in the East, she decided to narrow her scope to seniors and special needs dogs and began working tirelessly to make an impact by helping as many as she could get to safety.
«By narrowing our focus and scope, the Marvel Heroes team can ensure the best possible experience on console at launch,» says Gaz.
Bharucha is ultimately betrayed by his inability to envision beyond the narrow scope of his personal experiences at New England's upper echelon liberal arts colleges.
In a 1998 book, edited by Bill Nordhaus (Economics and Policy Issues in Climate Change), Dick Schmalensee wrote about «Greenhouse Policy Architectures and Institutions,» and lamented that the Kyoto Protocol exhibited narrow scope (covering only the Annex I countries) but aggressive ambition for that small set of nations.
[22] Pielke goes on to argue that scope for action has been narrowed by the «advocacy» he complains of.
Even though I think climate science tends toward indicating a level of confidence in causation not supported by a particular analysis, I think the scope of what VS shows is narrower.
We expect such new orders to contain a more detailed factual case for suspending entry from the affected nations, a narrower scope carefully omitting foreign nationals already legally in the US, and greater procedural details on how case - by - case exceptions will be made, omitting any preference for religious minorities.
The lord chief justice Lord Judge has said that UK courts are not bound by rulings of Strasbourg - based court of human rights, while the President of the Supreme Court has admitted that his court is not always «supreme» because it has to follow the lead of the European court of human rights in Strasbourg, whose rulings are sometimes too narrow in scope.
In so doing, the Court significantly expanded the scope for taking social interests into account within competition law analysis and rejected the more narrow and liberal approach taken by the Dutch National Competition Authority (NCA), the Dutch government and — not surprisingly — the European Commission.
Narrowing the scope of who may be a «harasser» under the Code by focusing on workplace hierarchy alone ignores the reality of modern workplaces and the myriad ways in which power is understood, negotiated, and acted upon in society.
In other words, while it is the duty of police officers to preserve peace and prevent crime, and these duties are broad in scope, the powers that may be lawfully deployed in the execution of those duties are not co-extensive — rather they are narrowed by competing social values.
The Court concluded that the scope of family - related activities attracting CHRA protection was significantly narrower than the family - related leaves permitted by the collective agreement.
There, the Supreme Court narrowed the scope of human rights protections by determining that law firm partners are not entitled to such protections because they are not employees.
Bill's clients value this approach because it allows for efficient trial preparation by narrowing the issues in dispute, reducing the scope and cost of discovery, and reducing the risks at trial.
As noted by Barbara Guastaferro, the assumption that the purpose of the clause is that of applying in exceptional cases of conflicts between EU law and domestic constitutional law — in an attempt to narrow the scope of application of the supremacy doctrine — has to be challenged; while the potential for a use of the clause in governing the ordinary functioning of EU law should be, on the contrary, highlighted.
The decision written by Abella was joined by only two other judges (Justice Michael Moldaver wrote a concurring judgment, joined by Justice Andromache Karakatsanis, which was more narrow in scope, while Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin and Justice Thomas Cromwell were in dissent and concluded a general warrant was sufficient even for seizure of prospective text messages, because they are stored on the databases of service providers).
Current voice interfaces to search engines address the above problems by limiting the scope of the voice queries to a very narrow range.
CEAA 2012 narrows the scope of effects to be considered in EA by specifically limiting environmental effects to those that are within legislative authority of Parliament (s 5).
Exclusions narrow the scope of coverage provided by the insuring agreement.
It is possible that the pictures, rather than the affective states created by them, may have led the subjects to focus on the details of the picture thus causing a narrowing of attentional scope.
The court concluded that the Act's scope should not be narrowed by the ADA.
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