Sentences with phrase «tick box approach»

Gone is the time when simply a «compliance with legislation and a tick box approach» was all that was required.

Not exact matches

«The problem is when banks do not apply the right kind of risk - based assessment and instead revert to inappropriate box - ticking approaches
«The approach ticks many of the boxes for diagnosis of emerging viruses, including the ability to rapidly redesign the test to recognise a novel virus,» she says.
The eLearning industry must continue to evolve in order to approach learning not just as a linear slide - based, tick box exercise, but rather as something that captivates an audience with interaction and storytelling if it is to provide a lasting and memorable experience.
They say having to focus on generic skills and content curriculum is confusing for teachers; that it encourages a «tick the box» approach to teaching; and, perhaps most naively, that the generic skills are simply educational «fads» that suck precious teaching time.
The consensus among cybersafety experts is that all schools should have a holistic approach to the issue and should be able to tick several crucial boxes.
Be aware, though, that the Cayman S's price can ratchet upward quickly — tick off enough option boxes on the order form, and it can approach $ 100,000.
Ending the current «tick - box» approach to Continuing Professional Development and introducing a system under which it is the individual and their organisation's obligation to tailor professional development to reflect their particular needs and circumstances;
It is designed to replace traditional «tick - box» regulation with a new risk - based approach, allowing firms to achieve the right outcomes by delivering legal services in a way which best suits their individual clients and meets the public interest.
In regulating both entities as well as individuals, the SRA has shifted its rules away from a proscriptive, «tick - the - box» approach towards «outcomes focused regulation» (OFR), described as an approach focused on the outcomes achieved rather than on the processes used to achieve them, and as a rejection as a «one size fits all» approach to regulation.
In regulating both entities as well as individuals, rules are shifting away from proscriptive, «tick - the - box» approach towards an «outcomes» approach, where the focus is on the outcomes achieved rather than on the processes used to achieve them.
Giving the Lord Slynn Memorial Lecture 2016 in London last week, Lord Neuberger said: «One of the downsides of relatively high profile regulation is that it can easily lead to an attractive culture which effectively takes high ethical standards for granted being replaced by a box - ticking approach, in which, provided she can comply with relatively inflexible rules, an advocate feels free to do whatever she likes.
A lecture about how hitting is wrong, grounding my son or taking away his screen time might tick off the boxes on a traditional approach to what happened that day.
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