Sentences with phrase «equal outcomes at»

«This is the first demonstration that women compared to men have a preferred therapeutic response for a smoking cessation medication when considering short - term treatment outcomes and equal outcomes at one year.

Not exact matches

After both groups were re-examined at intervals of six months, one year and two years, the patient outcomes appeared to be equal.
To find out, the team looked at the 35 - year period between 1970 and 2004, and asked how the outcomes of elections, including the 2004 presidential contest, might have been different if the mortality rate of black and white people had been equal.
Her doctoral thesis, «Investigating genetic and biochemical differences in nutrient metabolism,» underscores the inter-individual differences in vitamin metabolism that occur at recommended intakes, and highlights the need for personalized nutrient recommendations to achieve optimal and equal outcomes for everyone.
This practice, diametrically opposed to that in Singapore, which outperforms the United States in reading in English in spite of the fact that nearly everyone in that city - state speaks a different language at home, has no chance of narrowing the gap in academic literacy with native English speakers; instead it will exacerbate it, to be followed by more civil rights pressure on our universities to lower their academic standards still further in an attempt to achieve equal outcomes, in a vicious cycle that will continue the degradation of America's civil and academic life.
Karen Mapp, a Harvard lecturer whose research specialty is partnerships that support better educational outcomes for kids, told guests at the Children's Institute's annual luncheon on Friday that building successful schools means engaging families as equal partners — not as clients, not as supplements to the educational process and not as people who need saving.
The way the media often covered education, the way politicians discussed education, and therefore the way the general public experienced education was to lump student outcomes as equals in a bucket with how adults working in the system are feeling at the moment about policies.
We know, for example, that charter teachers tend to exit schools at higher rates than other public teachers, which, all else being equal, could be detrimental to student outcomes.
Additionally, education leaders should be concerned about the troubling widening of the rich / poor achievement gap — an outcome at odds with stated policy goals and the fundamental principle of equal opportunity.
Where assumptions are implicit in the outcome; where there is an assumption of equilibrium where there is no equilibrium; where experiments are run «all other things being equal» where we know that all things do not remain constant while we look at one piece of the puzzle and trying to make sense of the whole.
At the Federal level, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) and the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) combine for a one - two punch that targets the outcomes of hiring as well as the hiring process itself.
Moreover, the studies that meet or come close to meeting even Professor Nock's tendentious standards find at least equal parenting skills and child development outcomes in all of the areas of mental health and social and cognitive development with which the courts might reasonably be concerned.
Dave Liniger, at this year's Re / Max International conference, sharing his remarkable recovery from a devastating health crisis, reminded delegates that E + R = O. Event plus Response equals Outcome.
The lawyers involved need to consider the actual, real - life likely outcomes of «all» of the potential scenarios that «can» be produced by a tribunal's decision, and decide which «one» would realistically provide the best outcome for the consuming real estate public, and not just for a particular dissaffected former Realtor claiming to be acting as a reasonable facsimile of a modern day Robin Hood (my interpretation of Dale's apparent claim to have spent years studying ways and means to provide real estate services equal to or superior to current standards via CREA's operations at much less cost to consumers), all the while projecting profits of hundreds of millions of dollars (it's 50/50 that «Robin Hood» is a myth).
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