In subsequent consultation on the issue 75 per
cent of respondents backed changes to the way the tests are run.
Not exact matches
Yesterday's politics.co.ukpoll found 71 per
cent of respondents believed they were wrong to
back away from the fight.
She attracted the
backing of 22.2 per
cent of respondents, ahead
of Nigel Farage with 18.6 per
cent.
But 2,000
respondents to an Ipsos MORI survey have faith in the capacity
of comprehensive schools to enable social mobility, with 47 per
cent backing high - quality schools over other educational alternatives, such as lowering tuition fees, to help poor pupils.
Now Ofqual has confirmed that the proposals will go ahead after 75 per
cent of respondents to a consultation on the issue
backed changes to the way the tests are run this year and next.
The trend is
backed up by a survey
of 150 Canadian lawyers conducted recently by Robert Half Legal where one third, or 37 per
cent of respondents indicated they'd observed an increase in lawsuits due to pictures or information contained in social media, or on mobile devices.
Out
of 532
respondents, 81 per
cent said they worked on pro bono files to give
back to their communities and 67 per
cent did so to improve access to justice.