Sentences with phrase «often uncoordinated»

Because the charter sector is decentralized, the response is often uncoordinated and tepid at best.

Not exact matches

This means that core elements of presentation planning, design and delivery often fall through the cracks, resulting in a mishmash of uncoordinated - and sometimes competing - objectives, repeated or missing information, wildly different styles in graphics, and the likelihood that the presentation will run significantly under - or over-time.
Fifth is the issue of fragmented and uncoordinated health information systems — health metrics data in India are gathered by multiple agencies and surveillance systems but are often incomplete and inadequate; for example, private sector data are rarely captured.
Pestronk, who most recently served as director of special initiatives in the Office of Innovation and Improvement (OII) at the U.S. Department of Education (ED), has observed that in education, the R&D cycle too often is slow and uncoordinated, leaving the sector starved for critical innovation.
The biggest cost is probably reprogramming existing systems, but regular banks have these same costs, and often are working with legacy systems that are brittle and uncoordinated.
Puppies with steroid responsive meningitis usually have a fever, they have a stiff or uncoordinated gait, they often resist having their head and neck touched or manipulated and may show signs of severe pain.
In so doing, they should be aware that the current approach is ineffective and wasteful, being characterised by poorly or inappropriately resourced, uncoordinated, piecemeal and often ill - conceived interventions.
In the post below, public health physician Patricia Fagan outlines the gaps in effective action in the past and says governments and communities need to be aware that the current approach to STIs in remote areas is «ineffective and wasteful, being characterised by poorly or inappropriately resourced, uncoordinated, piecemeal and often ill - conceived interventions.»
The services and supports that families with young children need in New Jersey are often administered by multiple agencies and operate in an uncoordinated fashion.
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