Sentences with phrase «find substantive evidence»

But evaluation could find no substantive evidence that the projects had an impact on classroom practice and the use of academic research.
Without being able to find substantive evidence of the threats, Florida looks for wiggle room out of the buyout.
But results released earlier this year found no substantive evidence that the projects had an impact on classroom practice and the use of academic research.

Not exact matches

However, we did find evidence that basic news agenda - building strategies, especially when localized, do generate substantive reporting.
Ask the following: (1) Are the substantive findings the result of the methods used in the evidence - construction process?
Although there are numerous bilateral and multilateral agreements on which EPA might rely, the strongest evidence may be found in the procedural rights provided and the substantive commitments made through the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and the international efforts to address climate change which recently coalesced in Paris in December 2015.
In a strongly worded dissent, Justice Michael Moldaver, also writing for Justice Suzanne Côté, found that «the majority has departed from the functional approach of threshold reliability by unduly restricting the extrinsic evidence that a jury could can consider when assessing a statement's substantive reliability and by adopting a narrow view of the procedural safeguards available at trial than can equip the jury with the tools it needs to assess the ultimate reliability of a statement.»
But the committee is not otherwise required to consider the registrant's evidence as to whether or not the substantive allegation against him or her is or is not well founded; that is not the issue on the s. 35 application.»
A committee is not, however (and this may be the most important aspect of the decision), «otherwise required to hear his evidence as to whether or not the substantive allegation against him is or is not well - founded; that is not the issue on the application for an interim order.»
To illustrate the problem with accusing judges of bias, given the term's various meanings, the article focuses on recent federal litigation over NYC police stop - and - frisk policy in which (1) the district judge found «implicit bias» in police practices based on accumulated evidence and expert analysis, (2) the Second Circuit found that the district judge engaged in disqualifying judicial bias because of her comments in a prior related lawsuit and in the media, and (3) critics accused the Second Circuit of bias in making decisions that were hard to justify on either procedural or substantive grounds.
[68] The substantive elements of the termination that the Board found unreasonable included: the principal ordering Mr. Dorval to use codes given the evidence that policy (of RSCHS and Edmonton Public School Board) supported involvement of teachers» professional judgment and consultation; the order being simply announced with little or no consultation; questions or concerns being ignored; little or no communication to students and parents about the codes or their enactment; the failure of the principal and the appellant to respect the professional rights and duties of the teacher regarding assessment of his students; and the discriminatory singling out of Mr. Dorval for discipline when other teachers who also challenged and refused to follow the principal's order were not disciplined.
The Court of Appeal was careful not to conclusively weigh in on any substantive outcome — «A proper understanding of Precision's conduct is not possible until the trier of fact has made findings of fact on the relevant issues» (see para. 46) and that, with respect to the effect of the exclusion clause, a «trial judge would be in the best position to assess whether the evidence with respect to the allegations of fraud would warrant the intervention of public policy in this matter».
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