Sentences with phrase «points under observation»

Millions of lines of code are needed to translate the billions of grid points under observation.

Not exact matches

Under the larger evaluation framework, announced in Albany Thursday afternoon, teachers will be graded on a 100 - point scale, 60 percent of which will be based on evaluations of teacher performance, including classroom observations.
«Based on these observations of catalytic converter materials under real conditions, findings can be transferred much more quickly to application,» Gänzler points out.
Notably, the pattern of CSF peptides was similar at both time points and comparable to that observed in human CSF [50]; except for two observations: no Aβ37 was detected in the CSF of McGill transgenic rats at any time point and the Aβ38 signal was as strong as the Aβ40 signal, under these conditions.
Under IMPACT, all teachers receive a single score ranging from 100 to 400 points at the end of each school year based on classroom observations, measures of student learning, and commitment to the school community.
Under this system, teachers are evaluated on a four - point scale based on multiple measures that include classroom observations, content standards, and assessments of student growth.
Additionally, TCTA pointed out that, given the fact that T - TESS contemplates more observations of teachers than under PDAS, which in turn may necessitate additional personnel to conduct the observations, the rules should require that anyone conducting observations must be trained and certified prior to doing so.
Print This Post Filed Under: CRAFT Tagged With: characters, CRAFT, details, imagination, interpretation, observation, point of view, writing technique
We transported one sweet dog to the alternate evacuation point in Show Low to be kept under 24 hour observation by the Arizona Humane Society veterinarian after it was determined that she had ruptured her spleen in a fatality rollover accident.
We have many studies presenting the projections from GCMs under various forcing scenarios where unforced variability is simulated, and we have a few studies (not many I think) which have a model reproduce the * actual * forcings and unforced variability and see how well the output matches observations (a recent one by Yu Kosaka and Shang - Ping Xie being a case in point).
There are of course peer - reviewed articles that make the same general observation, but the point is obvious and reproducible for anybody who can compute areas under curves.
A telling point was his observation that under a bare trust the trustee's sole duties to the beneficiary are not only to allow him to enjoy the trust property, but also to obey any direction the beneficiary may give as to how the trust property should be disposed of by putting an end to the trust.
It is useful to quote key observations by Stadlen J [at paras 126 - 129]: «In my view, notwithstanding the absence in the FTPP proceedings of some of the statutory and non-statutory safeguards which apply to criminal proceedings... [I] n deciding whether it would be fair to admit the hearsay evidence, the requirements both of Article 6 and of the common law obliged the FTPP to take into account the absence of all those [safeguards]... [I] n my judgment, no reasonable panel in the position of the FTPP could have reasonably concluded that there were factors outweighing the powerful factors pointing against the admission of the hearsay evidence... The means by which the claimant can challenge the hearsay evidence are... not in my judgment capable of outweighing those factors... The reality would appear to be that the factor which the FTPP considered decisive in favour of admitting the hearsay evidence was the serious nature of the allegations against the claimant coupled with the public interest in investigating such allegations and the FTPP's duty to protect the public interest in protecting patients, maintaining public confidence in the profession and declaring and upholding proper standards of behaviour... However, that factor on its own does not in my view diminish the weight which must be attached to the procedural safeguards to which a person accused of such allegations is entitled both at common law and under Article 6... The more serious the allegation, the greater the importance of ensuring that the accused doctor is afforded fair and proper procedural safeguards.
59 As several of the governments which have filed observations have pointed out, the opposite interpretation would lead to unjustifiable differences in treatment between Member States, according to how their national social security systems are organised, given that the «special» nature of a benefit such as the one at issue in the main proceedings — and, as a consequence, the fact that it falls within the scope of Regulation No 883/2004 — depends, inter alia, on whether the grant of that benefit is based, under national law, on objective criteria or solely on the state of need of the person concerned.
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