Sentences with phrase «aspects of a continuum»

«Having certified more than 112,000 teachers, we are perhaps best known for our Board certification process, but the National Board is also engaged in far - reaching initiatives to improve and elevate teaching practice across all aspects of the continuum, from the earliest days of preparation through the many aspects of teacher leadership,» said...

Not exact matches

But... the infinite regress in question is an example of the «non-vicious» type of regress, since it concerns possibilities, and these not (on one view of potentiality) as a definite multitude, whose number is infinite, but as a continuum, which in the words of Peirce is «beyond all multitude,» as God was formerly described as being; and indeed, as we shall see, the continuum of possibilities is one aspect of God which may be truly so described.
But each moment of divine conceptuality can only entertain possibility as a continuum (which is always generic) and can only create one determinate result, a result that includes all the generic aspects of all previously specified determinations by including the determinations themselves, the «abstract is in the concrete, [so] any concrete contains the entire unlimited form» (Divine 144).
An Enquiry into the Status of the Human Embryo in the Christian Tradition by David Albert Jones, Continuum, 266pp, # 16.99 The aspect...
The concrescence includes the entire past continuum and at least some aspects of all past entities in that past section of the continuum.
While the words «life» and «mind» refer to aspects of such great significance in the whole process that we might wish to attach special terms such as transcendence or emergence to them, we must recognize that the qualitative side of evolution, like the material side, is a continuum.
Successful reform efforts require leadership support, and they should address all aspects of the learning environment — from the curriculum and teaching, to how classrooms are configured, said James Collins, who is the Virginia M. Ullman Professor of Natural History and the Environment at Arizona State University: «You can't fix one point on the continuum and expect the continuum to change.»
Kozak says comfort in social situations is only one of many aspects of introversion, and introverts might land anywhere along a continuum from very comfortable to very uncomfortable in this arena.
As students traverse different courses and grade levels throughout high school, they should experience all aspects of the Student Voice implementation continuum represented in the following table.
It also created the Educator Preparation and Employment PK - 16 Leadership Council to ensure alignment between the various aspects of the teacher career continuum.53
But it does takes into account some aspects of those proposals, particularly in emphasizing a «continuum of professional learning,» said Peter Shulman, the state assistant education commissioner overseeing teacher quality.
Full - color photos on high - gloss paper show every aspect of the piece, while art historian and philosopher Arthur C. Danto places Sachs» art along a continuum of Duchamp, Warhol and Lichtenstein.
As the artist notes herself: «Perhaps the most interesting aspect of the work is its play upon the continuum that exists between traditional painting and new media.
Creating a continuum of services that are intentionally aligned to reach children for as long as possible can help ensure that early childhood services and programs effectively support all aspects of young children's healthy development.
As part of self - awareness, consultants should recognize where they fall on the continuum of high and low context aspects of communication and what adaptations may be required for effective cross cultural communication.
I am confident and well versed in all aspects of the treatment continuum.
Past versions of FACES have not been capable of capturing the curvilinear aspects of the Circumplex model (i.e., cohesion and adaptability were found to be linearly related to adjustment instead of extremes on either end of the continuum predicting maladjustment).
More precision could be gained and more information provided to our readers, if the system included more levels of discrimination (especially at the upper end of the continuum) or if measures could receive separate ratings for different aspects (e.g., internal consistency and generalizability) of their evidence base.
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