Glass Lewis expects readers of its blog
possess sufficient experience and knowledge to make their own decisions entirely independent of any information contained in Glass Lewis» blog postings.
Not exact matches
Each member must
possess relevant qualifications (Instructional Designers would need to
possess experience in Instructional Design and content development, and excellent communication, visualization, analytical and conceptual skills; courseware designers would need to be
experienced in multimedia and graphics; graphic and visual designers would need to have a keen sense of designing good GUI and components), and
sufficient experience to be able to understand, make useful recommendations, and develop eLearning that takes care of your organization's eLearning needs.
It is crucial for any free school group to demonstrate they will have effective governance from the start of the process, showing that governors and trustees
possess the requisite skills and
experience to offer
sufficient challenge to school leaders.
First, it examines the managerial competence of the applicant's key personnel to determine whether they have
sufficient business and aviation
experience to operate an airline, and whether the management team, as a whole,
possesses the background and
experience necessary for the specific kind of operations proposed.
(6) A medical assistant must be a graduate of an accredited medical assisting program or
possess experience, training or education
sufficient, in the supervising physician or podiatrist's opinion, to perform assigned duties responsibly, safely and conscientiously.
While a high school diploma or a GED equivalent is
sufficient to work as a medical billing customer service representative, it is imperative for people aspiring to work at this position to
possess some knowledge of the medical billing world, and preferably have some
experience in it too.
Montana medical assistants must be graduates of an accredited medical assisting program or
possess experience, training or education
sufficient to safely perform assigned duties responsibly.
(In Gubernat the Supreme Court in 1995 ruled in a case involving children of parents who never married, that the court in ruling on a name change motion should consider: «[T] he length of time that the child has used one surname, the identification of the child as a member or part of a family unit, the potential anxiety, embarrassment, or discomfort the child might
experience if the child bears a surname different from the custodial parent, and any preferences the child might express, assuming the child
possesses sufficient maturity to express a relevant preference.»)