Not exact matches
With more than half of the world's population now living in cities,
urban sprawl is a growing
problem — particularly in North America, where single - family homes and two - car garages are
common.
This
common problem, which surfaces in school after school, led us to consult some of the most successful
urban educators we know — teachers and principals who have been involved in founding new, small high schools in New York City and Boston, Massachusetts.1 These schools, which serve low - income, minority communities, have begun to routinely graduate and send to college more than 90 percent of their students.
A
common thread connecting most
urban schools is limited site availability, which creates major
problems when new schools, expansions or additional programs are required.
More importantly, Freire alumni will be building the future of
urban communities everywhere as
problem solvers and decision makers in government, private industry, education, the arts, and any other sphere that benefits the
common good.
In the dense
urban environment we live in - typically with small apartments and few yards - it's easy for
common dog behaviors to quickly become
problem behaviors.
▪ HSVB&IRC and its role in the community ▪ History of the humane movement ▪ Lost & Found Pets - the importance of proper identification ▪ Pets in rental and condominium housing: How renters and landlords / HOA's can find
common ground ▪ Living with
urban wildlife ▪ Resolving nuisance wildlife concerns ▪ Disaster preparation for pets ▪ Pet first aid and CPR ▪ Spaying / Neutering (Adults and Children) ▪ Dog bite prevention - for schools, communities, professionals and the general public (Adults and Children) ▪
Problems pertaining to breed - specific legislation ▪ Animal abuse and its link to domestic violence ▪ Animal abuse and its link to child abuse ▪ Animal abuse and its link to school violence ▪ The problem of hybridized pets (wolf / dog and exotic / domestic cats) and exotic pets ▪ Animal hoarding: A community problem ▪ Preventing pet theft ▪ Greyhounds and problems with greyhound racing ▪ Pet - proofing your home ▪ Paws Come with Claws: Scratching behavior in cats and alternatives to declawing ▪ Safe travel with pets ▪ Pets and the military (what to do if deployed) ▪ General issues pertaining to humane care of companion
Problems pertaining to breed - specific legislation ▪ Animal abuse and its link to domestic violence ▪ Animal abuse and its link to child abuse ▪ Animal abuse and its link to school violence ▪ The
problem of hybridized pets (wolf / dog and exotic / domestic cats) and exotic pets ▪ Animal hoarding: A community
problem ▪ Preventing pet theft ▪ Greyhounds and
problems with greyhound racing ▪ Pet - proofing your home ▪ Paws Come with Claws: Scratching behavior in cats and alternatives to declawing ▪ Safe travel with pets ▪ Pets and the military (what to do if deployed) ▪ General issues pertaining to humane care of companion
problems with greyhound racing ▪ Pet - proofing your home ▪ Paws Come with Claws: Scratching behavior in cats and alternatives to declawing ▪ Safe travel with pets ▪ Pets and the military (what to do if deployed) ▪ General issues pertaining to humane care of companion animals
Multiplicity was an international survey of artworks sharing an interest in the politics and poetic potential of contemporary
urban environments and exposing the irresistible pull of the similarities — intercultural meeting points,
common problems, goals and dreams — around which people converge.
packed with
common problems awaiting for solutions - global warming,
urban air pollution, contaminants in drinking water / contains samples of distributions of variables, it is actually a very large Bayesian belief network, which can be used for assessment - level analyses and conditioning and optimising different decision / and discussions about the actual topics related to real - world decision - making, there is also a meta level in Opasnet.
Whereas a child's inhibited conduct is associated with a risk of troubled peer relationships and internalizing
problems (e.g., loneliness and depression) in Western cultures, these difficulties are much less
common in inhibited children from Eastern cultures, though new research shows that children from India and
urban China are equally at risk.