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词汇 example_english_pupil
释义

Examples of pupil


These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.
Assisted by his pupils from the local school, he continued his efforts until 1933.
Indeed, he had further success, because some of his pupils were allowed to go on to further study after all.
Little information is available on how much time was spent on labour activities once pupils had left school.
They contain a wealth of detail about teaching techniques and relationships between pupils and between pupils and staff.
Clearly, this was not always the case in the pupils' experiences.
Taken together they would give the pupils a unique connection with their locality.
Affective responses seem to occur when pupils have almost finished their work.
Detailed preparation was necessary in the early stages of teaching a group in order to involve all pupils at all times.
In the school situation, pupils were interested in the learning experiences of other groups and wanted to do the same musical activities.
The research indicated that it is helpful for the teachers to focus on pupils' learning processes rather than only on their learning outcomes.
Everyone knows who are his personal teacher and pupils, what is his scholarly pedigree.
Disciplinary measures were used including fines for pupils caught speaking the dialect on school campus.
To make the full and best use of all the features that a computer offers, pupils need to learn to touch-type at an early age.
There is also the question of marking pupils' or students' work.
Our pupils came from a range of local, national, and international backgrounds.
In 2005, 89.5 per cent of pupils chose it as their first foreign language.
Linguists do regret the lack of training that pupils have in such basic grammatical terminology and analysis.
With bilingual pupils, the results of this quasimedical use of intelligence tests are exceedingly harmful.
After 12 years, registration and attendance drops so that those pupils who were measured may be less representative of their age group in the community.
The teachers, as working women who were active in civic affairs, served as role models to the pupils.
In the 1920s, the school was eager to distinguish itself from the government schools as a means of attracting more pupils.
The "successful" governess, it seems, manages her pupils into "successful" betrothals - just like the marriage plot novel.
The stimulus was viewed with natural pupils to optimize patient comfort.
They got more oral practice than in other foreign language classrooms, where pupils are often called on to respond individually and therefore not very often.
Teachers of 45 classrooms (approximately 1,100 pupils altogether) selected and nominated from their groups the poorest readers.
Many pupils related feelings of being far more motivated to practice now that they knew the examination was approaching.
The music teacher knew very little about gospel initially, but was content for the pupils to rehearse themselves in the music room at lunchtime.
The effect on pupils is a more engaging listening experience, which helps to focus attention and increase motivation.
I was particularly interested to see how two groups of trainees listened and appraised one pupil's composition.
Left to their own devices, most pupils will play through their music from beginning to end without isolating areas for improvement.
Among the consequences for the pupils were that they felt valued and acknowledged, and that a sense of pr ide and self-worth began to develop.
On the side of the disadvantages, orderly behaviour proved to be a major problem in piano groups of four pupils.
Although a large number of pupils left school early to marry, a number of pupils were encouraged to continue their education and acquire careers.
Whilst 4 teachers mentioned that pupils enjoyed jazz, the overriding bene®t was seen to be the opportunities it gives for improvisation.
Even so, out of a possible 77 instrumentalists and 93 pupils who enjoyed singing, the subject had only attracted 22 potential candidates.
In the end ' of more than 100 pupils, only 33 attended'.
The strong creative participatory work and continuous exchange with the pupils made the refurbishment an extraordinary assignment.
Like the beit midrash pupils, adolescents often hold these extreme and puritanical positions.
Teachers walk through the rows of students, delivering forceful whacks across the back, neck or head of disruptive pupils.
The pupils were the same age (8 - 9) and showed the same characteristics (one disruptive, one timid, and three developing normally).
Chapter 5 deals with teachers evaluating the performance of their pupils and reacting to the assessment of examiners, adjudicators, critics and agents.
Without this tuition in independent learning, pupils could easily lose interest and motivation to carr y on with their lessons.
Teachers were actively involved in listening to their pupils in lessons, moving them on where appropriate.
Teacher intervention should most often arise through effective and direct questioning about the fortuitous discoveries in the pupils' previous performances.
She indicated that it was important to focus on one aspect at a time, set the priorities for the pupils and have realistic goals.
Talk reinforces pupils' affective engagement with their musical compositions giving them more confidence in their own work.
Teachers should understand that the work that takes place in groups must be predicated upon sound ideas already well understood by the pupils.
The rate of infection increased with age, with the highest infection rate of 26.8% in the 5-year-old pupils.
In total 186 pupils had some absence from school with gastrointestinal symptoms.
Meanwhile, they talked of the high ability pupils having 'an obsession with what each part of [a] phrase might mean' (p.15).
The data demonstrated that in all age g roups, the bilingual pupils clearly outperfor med the non bilinguals.
All of the pupils were found to be still at the novice level, with none showing clear inter mediate-level features.
Long-term effects of the interventions or the effects for pupils are unknown.
Both groups of teachers were working, at least for a portion of their timetables, with pupils who had low incidence disabilities.
A total of 80 pupils took part in the final stage, consisting of 14 focus group interviews.
Here the discovery of the self, the finding of the pupil's own personality, stands in the centre.
The headmaster smiled at the pupils of the teacher who were standing in the hall.
At the other end of the scale, we then look at a group of pupils out in the street doing a survey.
Only nationally amalgamated results were published. 9.6% of grade three pupils failed the minimum competency in reading comprehension and 4.7% failed in math.
Of the 2920 pupils approached at the six participating primary and three secondary schools, 1379 (47.2 %) blood samples were collected.
The 741 dream reports (one from each child) were written down by schoolteachers or directly reported by the pupils themselves.
A group of pupils composing together involves individual competencies being 'pooled' for the purposes of the task.
First, it is clear that religious education can bene®t from close association with the aesthetic development of pupils.
The earlier text brought to summation a decade of teachers' action research in the classroom concerned with making music relevant to all secondary aged pupils.
There is also a chapter on holiday courses and a look to the future of maturing pupils through further education and employment.
A lot + because it appeals to most pupils and from that interest you can develop into other areas.
Interestingly, it also utilises the skills of senior pupils taught in this way to initiate and bring into the system additional numbers of junior learners.
We have also to motivate pupils, making points of contact to evoke responses and cause learning to take place across the whole ability range.
According to the questionnaire administered before writing the reports, a considerable part of the pupils' activities were related to music.
The aims from national curriculum level to lesson plans of individual teachers typically include introducing pupils to music from various cultures.
I would want to teach privately and select my pupils.
My overall summary would be: teacher's book - you must have this; pupils' books - handle with care!
Structuring of these sounds came later, although on a number of occasions pupils were keen to move onto these considerations at too early a stage.
The danger is that teachers might distribute these books directly to pupils and expect them to 'get on with it'.
The relationship with older pupils is hard to define because it almost feels like we're mates.
I have reservations, however, about the project books and their suggested use with pupils.
Firstly, the repositioning of sounds from familiar environments to within the classroom (and the computer) was engaging and amusing for the pupils.
Effective teachers help to develop problem-solving skills, enhance pupils' independence, stimulate their motivation and provide positive learning experiences.
At this stage some pupils also became interested in solo singing.
The materials do not hedge their bets and never patronise pupils.
I was, therefore, very interested to meet him and his pupils.
Involving participants in the training process is desirable - students, pupils, and colleagues.
Immediately after inspection call the pupils fell into line, were inspected and marched to the parade ground.
Such reduction would have to be necessary because of a reduction in the school's capacity to accommodate pupils.
The exception to this is that only a parent may receive the results of the pupil's assessment.
There will, for the first time, be a national standard against which a pupil's performance may be measured.
Instead, teachers have authority to discipline pupils by virtue of their position as teacher.
The teacher has general authority over discipline for the purposes of securing the education and well-being of all pupils at the school.
As such, pupils often felt themselves" put down" and" picked on".
In our case too, pupils and teachers share the theory that the pupils are" written off".
The grammar school pupils had a mean reading score of 11.2 when they were aged ten and the comprehensive pupils 10.7.
The move towards a comprehensive system was one in which it was hoped artificial organisational barriers to the development of all pupils would be removed.
Frequently he admits pupils without declaring them and very large classes result.
The differences were also evident in the age range of primary school pupils.
In the white sector, 94 per cent of primary school pupils were aged twelve or below.
These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.
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