Sentences with phrase «encourage poor practice»

They encourage poor practice, waste instructional time, and materially damage reading achievement, especially for our most vulnerable children.

Not exact matches

By using our various services, companies and organizations can give employees with poor health practices and high risk factors the knowledge and support they need to adopt a healthier lifestyle, while encouraging those with good health habits to continue these practices.
The bottom line: reading comprehension is a slow - growing plant, and the demand for rapid results on annual tests may be encouraging poor classroom practice — giving kids a sugar rush of test preparation, skills, and strategies when a well - rounded diet of knowledge and vocabulary is what's really needed to grow good readers.
These conclusions aren't hard to grasp and when you introduce the notion that such practices can be seen to encourage poor capital allocation, people really start paying attention.
This is done irrespective of the other qualities that should be bred for, and it encourages very poor breeding practices.
So along with encouraging pet relinquishment, feel - good laws guarantee that good breeding and placement practices will be replaced with poorer practices, and in the long term they assure an increase in shelter animals — one of the original target problems that the new restrictions were supposed to solve.
The Clinic seeks to instill in students a sense of professionalism and encourages them to pursue public interest law careers or to devote substantial portions of their legal practices to providing pro bono legal assistance to the poor.
While in poor economic system jobless workers facing financial destroy are more encouraged to practice litigation.
Professor Dudgeon paid tribute to the role of a non-Indigenous psychiatrist, Professor Alan Rosen, in encouraging mental health bodies to acknowledge past poor practice, and an article by Professor Rosen will also feature as part of the Acknowledgement series.
Within this highly variable and multidimensional context, the AAP and others have encouraged pediatric providers to develop a screening schedule that uses age - appropriate, standardized tools to identify risk factors that are highly prevalent or relevant to their particular practice setting.29, 66,67 In addition to the currently recommended screenings at 9, 18, and 24/36 months to assess children for developmental delays, pediatric practices have been asked to consider implementing standardized measures to identify other family - or community - level factors that put children at risk for toxic stress (eg, maternal depression, parental substance abuse, domestic or community violence, food scarcity, poor social connectedness).
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