Sentences with phrase «less language issues»

What would happen if I had two middle schools in my suburban town and one had a lottery — and one didn't and the one with the lottery ended up with the students who are less poor, face less language issues, don't come from immigrant, have fewer special education students....

Not exact matches

So now that this issue has been brought much more to public light because of the passing of this harmful bill in Uganda, suddenly we have different language — much softer, much more compassionate; that sounds much less like an agenda was met.
Immigration and asylum: The policy remains tough on immigration but the language has changed and the issue is given much less volume.
Focusing on academic issues are the less strident but still determined critics who say many non-native English speakers are graduating from school systems with poor reading skills in both English and their native language.
As national magazines and newspapers debate what it means to be literate in a computer age in which students butcher language in text messages and open books less and less outside the classroom, Greenhow has found a virtual creative writing boom among students spending long hours writing stories and poetry to paste on their blogs for feedback from friends, or creating videos on social issues to bring awareness to a cause.
It lays out issues in clear, straightforward language and avoids specialized jargon whenever possible so that less well - versed readers don't get lost or confused.
The exhibition series The Neighbors investigates artistic concerns and visual languages dealing with identity, an issue tackled less as a personal exploration of ethnicity alone than as an examination of the ways in which social classes are constructed and their divisions purportedly manifested.
Central to The Neighbors is an investigation of the artistic concerns and visual languages dealing with identity, an issue tackled less as a personal exploration of ethnicity alone than as an examination of the ways in which social classes are constructed and their divisions purportedly manifested.
But that's I think because the public is uninformed about specifics, and even when an equally carefully worded phrase is used, where 98 % of scientists know it's not consensus, the same 50/50 split among the public will come up, and all that means is they don't know scientific language and the specifics of the issue well and otherwise it says a lot less than you might think at first glance it says.
Instead of always looking outward, we need to look more inward (in the language of Ayurveda, more sattvic soul searching and less rajasic perpetual motion) and address this meta - issues of green.
The payback of a tool that is user - friendly and informative, says Slater, has been office staff spend less time answering questions or searching for more information and can spend more time dealing with individuals who may be illiterate or have language issues.
Imagine, he invited the audience, how hard that task would be for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander carers and communities where language is an issue, who can't tap into the skills learnt through a law degree or professional networks — much less a computer — to first obtain a good diagnosis and then ensure the best support and treatment?
Several smaller studies have investigated the relationship of paternal and child mental health, and they have reported related findings among children of different ages than those in the study reported in this article.14, — , 21 One study found an association between paternal depression and excessive infant crying.45 Another study found that children aged 9 to 24 months with depressed fathers are more likely to show speech and language delays, 19,21 whereas another study reported that children aged 2 years with depressed fathers tended to be less compliant with parental guidance.17 Among children aged 4 to 6 years, paternal depression has been found to be associated with increases in problems with prosocial behaviors and peer problems.15 Only 1 other study we are aware of was population based; it was from England and investigated related issues among much younger children, 23 demonstrating that both maternal and paternal depressive symptoms predicted increased child mood and emotional problems at 6 and 24 months of age.
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