Sentences with phrase «made by cohorts»

al. reported similar results in an analysis of gains made by cohorts, eg.

Not exact matches

Described as the «ideal EMBA student» by Brian Jennings, associate dean of the program, Smith made his mark by his «willingness to go the extra mile, put in the extra hours, and help his fellow cohort and team members to excel with him.»
By 2010, its ranks will swell to 35 million, making the cohort a larger chunk of the population than even the fabled baby boomers.
Like many of their cohort, Drinkbox's founders don't measure their success financially, but rather by their ability to survive and to continue making the games they want.
By 1970, only around 50 percent of the cohort that makes up Murray's statistical Belmont in the General Social Survey believed that «extramarital sex is always wrong.»
The cohort of women most captivated by that ideology now holds influential positions, and the organizations that promote the worst ideas of 1970s feminism continue to be handsomely bankrolled by its chief beneficiaries — the vast, profit - making abortion industry, the sex industry, and the organizations that promote aggressive population control.
So, we began our definitions at ReTrain by having the cohorts make a definition and report back.
Then, when on the ball himself, he can make diagonal runs which are so difficult to defend against, all while spaces are opening thanks to the runs made by his supremely talented attacking cohorts Marco Reus and Pierre - Emerick Aubameyang.
Analysis of Maternal and Fetal Outcomes by Birth Place — Members of the Research and Data task force are making plans for an analysis of maternal and fetal outcomes by birth place in the US, comparing existing MANAStats data on home and birth center births with a matched cohort of low risk women who planned a hospital delivery (total sample size ~ 80,000).
Using the payslips, critical study and comparative analysis clearly shows that teachers with their monthly income (net salaries) can now afford to buy or own appreciably much more than they could 7 yrs ago on the same pay level or rank CONTRARY to what we are mischievously made to believe currently by the NPP and their media cohorts as well as others who get opportunity to share their opinions on both the print and electronic media.
He makes way for Nicky Morgan, a 41 - year - old member of the 2010 cohort, whose job description is to defend the revolutionary schools policy that Gove designed while being less reviled by parents and teachers than Gove himself.
«The study was made possible by biobanking efforts in Finland as part of the Finnish Maternity Cohort (FMC).
In other words, are the cohorts changed by their evolutionary association in such a way that they can no longer make it alone?
When analyzed by gender and sport, some differences were even more pronounced: Female track and field athletes had the highest prevalence of clinically relevant depressive symptoms — 38 percent, or more than one out of three — making them two times more likely than others in the cohort to have symptoms.
While some lawyers argue that certain shapes and phrases fall under public domain, given the specific combination of shapes, colors and phrases used by these independent designers and the sheer number of allegations, it seems as though Bassen and her cohort could make a compelling case.
It's actually based on a book called «Wild Pork and Watercress,» by New Zealand comic - adventure novelist Barry Crump, but it's been freely adapted and directed by Taika Waititi, the «Flight of the Conchords» cohort who made the hilarious «What We Do in the Shadows.»
Written by Irving Wallace and Roy Huggins, based on the novel Ten Against Caesar, Gun Fury has a fairly standard revenge plot, originating from a stagecoach holdup in which Frank Slayton (Philip Carey) and his temporarily committed cohort Jess Burgess (Leo Gordon, who had appeared in Hondo) not only make off with the loot, but eventually abduct Jennifer Ballard (Donna Reed), soon to be wed to promptly resentful Ben Warren (Rock Hudson).
Second, an overwhelmingly Hispanic cohort may be helpful because it makes teachers sensitive to providing instruction that can be understood by students with limited English proficiency.
The new Level 4 Supporting PE Teachers qualification, developed by Active IQ, is partly delivered on - site in schools, making it relatable to their facilities and pupil cohort.
«The L&T cohort has been enriched and inspired by the life and career choices Sedia has made, and they have been inspired further by her enthusiasm and positive «can - do» activist attitude that celebrates education as a vehicle for the improvement of the lives those who are most in need.»
Selected as a commencement marshal by her cohort, Moritz admits she couldn't have made it without them.
The inaugural Bett Futures cohort was made up of 30 start - ups who were selected by a panel of education experts based on the relevance of their solutions to today's classroom challenges.
The FY 2011 application was released in the fall of 2011 and will be used by some states to award a third cohort of SIG schools, while others will use the funds to make continuation awards to previously funded SIG schools.
There are three leading explanations: 1) the sample of children included in the data set used by Phillips, the Children of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (CNLSY), especially in the early years, may be nonrepresentative; 2) better information on students» background characteristics is available in the Early Childhood survey; and 3) blacks born into recent cohorts have made real gains relative to blacks born a decade earlier.
However, the NAEP data show that student cohorts made gains relative to previous cohorts when tested at ages 9 and 13, but that those gains disappeared by the time they were 17.
Using new national data on all the choices made by all the parents in England for the cohort entering secondary school in 2015 - 2016, our analysis explores the number and type of choices parents make and the likelihood that their children will be admitted to their first - choice school.
«We've been impressed by how quickly leaders from the first cohort have been able to use strategies from the Fellowship to make changes that are already having a positive impact on students.»
The first is that ignoring the mean cognitive ability of school admission cohorts makes it impossible to judge the effectiveness of the educational experience provided by schools.
Fountain perfectly captures the bewilderment of Billy and his cohorts at this phenomenon, made more poignant by the knowledge that the white Hummer limousine that will transport them from Texas Stadium at game's end is the first step in their redeployment to Iraq.»
De Kooning was a fixture of New York's tight - knit Abstract Expressionist cohort, which included her husband Willem de Kooning, though she set herself apart by making portraits.
By making a donation on the occasion of Art21's 21st Anniversary, you will help to support the annual Summer Institute, a week - long retreat in NYC for the new cohort of Educators.
Lynda Benglis, Hesse's Postminimal cohort, is represented by two works cast in aluminum from originals made from expandable polyurethane foam.
I find that particularly interesting because nuclear is often promoted by the same ideological cohort that typically argues against federal financing and highly centralized policy - making.
RE: «Those who have worked most of their lives under the old paradigm likely will not make the change, but a new cohort entering the profession will rally around the new one, superseding the old paradigm as older members DIE OFF and are replaced by those who have been trained under the new paradigm.»
As with previous ventures, the initial investment made by HSF will be small; the new team will initially be staffed by around five lawyers and 20 paralegals or legal analysts, the first cohort to participate in what the firm dubs the «International Legal Learnership Programme» or ILLP.
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