Sentences with phrase «smaller number of respondents»

A smaller number of respondents felt that making faith schools twin with other schools of different faiths would give pupils exposure to other teaching, but others said that approach would be too expensive.
The modernist / traditionalist distinction was not applied to some religious traditions because of the small number of respondents (Jews) and to others because the division revealed no political differences (black Protestants).
The figures should be treated with caution because of the small numbers of respondents within each group, but they are illustrative.
To explore those feelings further, we talked to a small number of respondents.
Around two - thirds of those who met their spouse or partner online said that they met via an online dating site, although the results are based on a small number of respondents (n = 63) and are not reported here in detail.
There's obviously still room for improvement in these stats, Finnegan says, but given the very small number of respondents — just 7 % — who indicated they would «sell some or all equity exposure in response to a 20 % drop in the market,» investors are apparently starting to absorb some of the lessons advisers have been pushing since the financial crisis — namely, avoiding buying high and selling low.
2) Involvement with Knowledge Management: A second comment on the TALL Salary Survey (2010) was to my surprise — and perhaps disappointment — the seemingly small number of respondents who were actively involved in knowledge management - related activities.

Not exact matches

The President boosted the number of federal regulations affecting small businesses by 13 percent during his first term in office, leading governmental regulation and red tape to overtake sales, taxes and the cost / availability of insurance as small business's biggest problem, respondents to the National Federation of Independent Business small business survey explain.
The majority of respondents in our survey work closely with a small number of colleagues in their marketing teams or act as the sole marketer at their company:
A smaller but significant number of respondents who have self - directed retirement accounts (either an employer - sponsored defined contribution plan or a retirement account they manage on their own) reported tapping into their retirement savings.
«Numbers of respondents recording sexual activity with relatives which were against their wishes or with a person 5 or more years older, were very small: 3 \ % reported touching or fondling and the same proportion had witnessed relatives exposing themselves.
The survey is small, but it does suggest there is something rotten in the state of stem cells: a worrying number of respondents admitted knowing about fraud or unethical behaviour.
The Midwest offered the smallest numbers — less than a third of all respondents.
After screening submissions for missing data and removing the small number of homosexual participants4 to increase the homogeneity of our sample, the data for 175 respondents (63 males, 112 females) were retained for analysis.
This crowd - sourced data, parsed by state and by respondent role (teachers, higher education faculty, parents, etc.) can then inform the comparatively small number of individuals participating in the standard - setting workshop.
For the record, I only have a small number of YA respondents so far, so it's probably too soon to make any generalizations on expected earnings — sorry!
One in five respondents indicated they do not know if their plan's default is a qualified default investment alternative (QDIA), and half of the small number of plan sponsors who said an equity fund was their default mistakenly thought that fund was a QDIA.
Respondents commented that they struggled to afford unpaid work placements for a number of reasons including having adult or child dependants; a lack of contacts (family or friends) in London where many legal aid practices are based and where unpaid work placements are offered; and the small number of part - time work opportunities to top - up a legal aid income.
Fifty percent of respondents (both big and small firms) in the industry survey found administrative and practice management tasks as the number one or two activities making up the bulk of non-billable work hours.
Respondents represented a wide variety of employers, including a law firm in Washington, D.C., another in Beijing, China, as well as a number of smaller local and regional firms, legal aid clinics, non-profits, governments, courts, and law schools.
The perennially small - margin practice areas of real estate and estates law remained the most likely for respondents to cut, according to our 2016 survey, with a number also considering cutting the amount of legal aid work they do.
This was a surprising number given the number of the respondents in small offices.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z