Sentences with phrase «competence which»

Article 11 The services which REALTORS ® provide to their clients and customers shall conform to the standards of practice and competence which are reasonably expected in the specific real estate disciplines in which they engage; specifically, residential real estate brokerage, real property management, commercial and industrial real estate brokerage, land brokerage, real estate appraisal, real estate counseling, real estate syndication, real estate auction, and international real estate.
Skilled and Conscientious Service REALTOR ® shall render a skilled and conscientious service, in conformity with standards of competence which are reasonably expected in the specific real estate disciplines in which the REALTOR ® engages.
«The services which REALTORS ® provide to their clients and customers shall conform to the standards of practice and competence which are reasonably expected in the specific real estate disciplines in which they engage...»
Among these skills is that of social competence which is often taken for granted as emerging from normative adult developmental processes.
The basic conclusion was that libraries are a tool to enhance lawyer competence which is part of the mandate of the Law Society.
It distinguishes between five levels of professional competence: Level 1 Attestation of competence which: - corresponds to general primary or secondary education, attesting that the holder has acquired general knowledge, or - is issued by a competent authority in the home state based on a training course not forming part of a certificate or diploma, or of three years professional experience.
Most organizations have specific levels of competence which must be completed in chronological order.
He felt that the opaqueness in chains of command and the ambiguity in roles and competences which he witnessed in the EEAS meant the organisation had not fulfilled its potential and would be overcome only by greater integration, although he saw little problem in France's unilateral intervention in Mali.
Students are improving their learning and developing a set of competences which is clearly related to a growth mindset which flipped learning approach promotes.

Not exact matches

The first dimension is competence, which in this case speaks to whether Facebook reliably delivers an enjoyable experience.
Based on a company's objectives, businesses can create an experience, which can help them to achieve their objectives, whether that means reaching new customers or increasing internal competences.
When I started out I ready every annual report on the Asx except for resource companies which I considered beyond my zone of competence.
For Luther after 1518, Christ is central not as pattern but as person; we are saved by the faith which acknowledges his authority, competence, and willingness to rescue those who call on him.
I also thought the statement on the Iraq War, issued by outgoing president Bishop William Skylstad and approved by the conference, was a thoughtful teaching exercise in which, as I put it on the First Things website, the bishops «neither exceed their competence nor shirk their responsibility.»
According to this understanding, the role of religion in political debate is not so much to supply these norms, as if they could not be known by non-believers — still less to propose concrete political solutions, which would lie altogether outside the competence of religion — but rather to help purify and shed light upon the application of reason to the discovery of objective moral principles.
Even those things which lie, as readily admitted in many a papal social encyclical, beyond the Magisterium's strict sphere of competence are still of importance in the shaping of that much - vaunted individual conscience.
The Constitution on the Liturgy confronts us with many tasks which are still outstanding, especially as the Bishops» Conferences have been given considerable competences in this field which should be used courageously.
In very many cases what is called the Church's failure to act is an absence of competence for which the Church can not be blamed.
McCormick discusses areas in which his thoughts have shifted: The nature of the church; the church as the people of God; the church as servant; the church as collegial; the church as ecumenical; the ecclesiological nature of the church; importance of lay witness; the teaching competence of the episcopal and papal branch; the church and moral truth; the place of dissent; birth regulation; ecclesial honesty; the dynamic nature of faith.
The following words are his typical reaction: «I am not speaking theologically, for which I have neither the responsibility nor the competence».
Their first concern is to find gaps in the explanatory competence of the sciences, inadequacies of theory that can not, in principle, be bridged without invoking God's «special» action to supplement the natural causes to which scientific inquiry is necessarily limited.
According to the knowledge, competence, and prestige which they [the laity] possess, they have the right and even at times the duty to manifest to the sacred pastors their opinion on matters which pertain to the good of the Church and to make their opinion known to the rest of the Christian faithful, without prejudice to the integrity of faith and morals, with reverence toward their pastors, and attentive to common advantage and the dignity of persons.
Warm emotional support of each other will help to offset the frustrations which result from lack of competence in these roles and skills.
The Hsi - an - fu inscription displays a grace of style and contains literary allusions and phraseology which indicate competence in Chinese language and familiarity with Taoism and Buddhism.
If he should give up those other statements in which he tries to circumscribe the competence of Christian philosophy more narrowly, the content of his doctrines would be affected very little.
There is no improbability in the impression which the gospels convey that the prefect would have been glad to decline jurisdiction, as he could have done if the charge were reduced, or modified, so that it would come within the competence of the Jewish court.
Only these two decrees formed the subject matter of the work of the Theological Commission of the Council, for the celebrated Schema 13 really fell within the competence of the Commission on the Lay Apostolate and the schema on Ecumenism which was passed, its radiance dimmed a little here and there but not substantially affected, belonged to Cardinal Bea's Secretariat, of which I was not a member.
Rather than leaving this as an uninvestigated discovery, as scientific reductionism and materialism would have us leave it, the Holy Father invites us to remit the question to those areas of study which have the appropriate competence, which comprise human subjectivity and creativity within their appropriate object: namely philosophy and theology.
The book demonstrates the range of Hartshorne's interests and competence, which included aspects of psychology (sensation) and ornithology (oscines)-- his first (Philosophy and Psychology of Sensation) and twelfth books (Born to Sing) were devoted to these subjects.
For lust, arrogance, covetousness, adultery, calculated competence iii compounding wrong, for deliberate murder, and for highhanded indifference to this wholesale shattering of covenant commandment — for all this, you shall know now the kind of violence you have perpetrated on Uriah, and the same loss of sexual prerogatives which you inflicted upon him.
All four types seek to create growth systems that will provide a nurturing environment within which people will develop more competence, creativity, and power to live effectively.
The implicit family rules, which shape the self - image, sense of competence, and esteem of children, are usually very different for girls and boys, even in the same family.
School experiences of success are important here, since they give a child a sense of budding competence in language, math, and thinking skills which are essential to subsequent school success and to adequate adult functioning.
We can pay our full respect to the tested structures of authority in our common life, but all conventional human authorities easily assume a finality beyond their competence, and this is nowhere more dangerously true than in the high forms of spiritual authority which belong to religion and its institutions.
Unwisely, he assumed such competence when he endorsed socialism — a program for alleviating misery on which every conceivable category of experts has failed to reach agreement and concerning which the training of a bishop hardly bestows expertise.
This finding does not imply that the theology or conviction of the leader or congregation is of no consequence; «rather, it is to say that the conviction, enthusiasm, warmth and competence with which the Christian faith and life are shared communicate more effectively» One of the report's conclusions is that, the dangers of «clericalism» notwithstanding, it is absolutely necessary to upgrade the quality of professional leadership if the churches are to grow and if the expectations of the laity are to be met.
It is not within my competence to elaborate this argument in the way in which Whitehead has pursued it.
Each new stage of our growth requires leaving the security of the past stage, within which we have learned to cope with some comfort and competence.
The test of admission to a Christian hospital is not church membership but the prospective patient's need for certain healing for which the hospital possesses special competence.
While the evidence for such a proposition remains tentative, its tentativeness calls into question the certainty with which paid - time religious broadcasters assert that their efforts in competing on the basis recognized by the television industry (i.e., financial competence) have been responsible for increasing the amount of religious programming on television.
Similarly, the test of admission to a Christian university ought not be church membership, but the prospective student's need for the kind of healing — wholeness — for which the university possesses special competence.
In other words, Banerjea wants to attest to the Divine mission of Jesus by pointing to the miracles that «the unblemished character» performed, which in turn are «proved facts» because they have been «attested by strongest possible testimony» by «witnesses whose competence has been proved by peculiar ordeal.»
The knowledge and capacities in which this competence is based are not necessarily rooted in technical reason but are nonetheless rational.
Since this is a sphere in which I have no competence I shall confine myself to the following remarks, all from a biological standpoint:
The research and development activities of the Competence Center Film, established in 2015, in Weiden has already produced CompresSeal, which was recognized at the 2017 German Packaging Awards in the Sustainability category.
Carola K. Herbst from the DLG's (German Agricultural Society) Food Competence Center, speaking at Anuga FoodTec 2018, which took place in Germany last month, said the lifestyle of consumers dictated what and how people want to eat.
They are multi-faceted in each role (all can control and distribute a simple pass) but have only two areas in which to build competence.
From that perspective, which far outweighs any discussion around competence, Wenger either has to accept some additional senior management coming in, or he must go, there's no other sustainable option.
Eustress, which might be experienced when a student is learning a new skill or being challenged to move outside of her comfort zone, can support development of confidence and competence.
She and her redesign team had been heavily influenced by the motivation research of Deci and Ryan, which, you'll recall, emphasized three crucial intrinsic motivators: autonomy, competence, and relatedness.
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