Example sentences of "[art] parents ['s] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The parents ' sacrifice was n't the only one .
2 If the parents ' reactions are inconsistent or uncertain the child will start to make more and more demands until the predictable success occurs .
3 A child 's development always takes place within a context of contemporaneous events , the most important of which result from the parents ' activities .
4 The N.C.M.A. thinks that a minimum of £17 a week per child for full-time care is reasonable , but you could charge more depending on the parents ' earnings and the number of meals provided etc .
5 All over Orkney during the time the children were away from their homes , prayers were said for them in churches of all denominations and at prayer meetings , and despite the torment they went through , none of the parents ' faiths wavered .
6 The playgroup leader may be asked if she will support the parents ' contribution to the Statement of special educational needs by describing the child 's participation at playgroup , his needs and capabilities , adaptation and behaviour .
7 The playgroup leader will usually offer her observations as part of the parents ' contribution to the Statement .
8 Part of the parents ' case had rested on the following argument : within the school which the child attended a decision had been taken to include her in a remedial class ; thus , the special educational provision that should be made for her had already been determined ; so a statement ( under section 7(1) of the Act ) should follow .
9 But the punishment was still permitted in some fee-paying schools , provided that was not against the parents ' principles .
10 He stated that , because matters relating to the issue in question were sub judice , it would be very difficult to meet with the Parents ' Committee .
11 The parents ' sense of disempowerment was at this stage complete .
12 Other forms of mental handicap may be attributed to genetic factors , where the fusion of the parents ' genes creates an irregularity in the chromosomal mix .
13 The headteacher who is in the playground in the morning to greet children and parents and also there in the afternoon to see the children safely away is in a strong position to encourage casual chatter about learning , teaching and the parents ' perceptions of the school .
14 Normally at least one parent remained in the home , or if not , close by ; and in many cases aunts of the parents ' generation were involved in caring .
15 These models from the ‘ me ’ generation are frequently set up in opposition to the ‘ they ’ models of the parents ' generation .
16 The simplifications begin with the assumption that " Creole " is the language of the parents ' generation .
17 Creole is used variably by the parents ' generation , but not usually when persons from outside are present .
18 This improvement related to the Bristol team 's efforts to make parents more aware of four main factors for cot death , which are identified from the parents ' accounts of the death of their baby .
19 The parents ' defence of their own interests was complicated by a vicious attack on Outram as the archetypal spinster .
20 The gist of the parents ' complaints is that children were allowed too much freedom and that there was too little formal instruction in the three Rs .
21 The parents ' relationship must be examined , the vulnerability of the child or children assessed , and their situation within the family .
22 Similarly , if parents are able to have their views upheld ( as might occur on an appeal against a decision not to reinstate a permanently excluded pupil ) , ‘ it may not be clear whether it is primarily the child 's right or the parents ' rights over upbringing which is being upheld ’ .
23 In the wake of the election in Haringey , an allegedly independent campaign , the Parents ' Rights Group , was set up and led largely by working-class women .
24 The main resistance to the Parents ' Rights Group campaign did not come from the council , where the Labour group effectively factionalized themselves — and their Public Relations Department — into silence .
25 None of these articles referred to the activities of the Parents ' Rights Group , to the joblessness and homelessness that had caused lesbians and gays to seek support from councils in the first place , to the findings of the Gay Teenage Group survey about the intimidation and isolation of lesbian and gay teenagers in state schools , to the menace of fundamentalism — or to any other feature of our oppression .
26 These far-reaching discussions recognise both the child 's right to autonomous parents and family privacy , but also the parents ' rights .
27 But in essence what the government say is that erm the parents ' rights as far as the , what is now called the statement — each authority must have a statement about children with special needs .
28 In captivity or in the wild , the first two clutches of barn owl chicks often die because of the parents ' inexperience .
29 Access to Relevant Material by the Parents ' Solicitors : Solicitors representing parents may experience difficulties in getting background history of the child in care when preparing their cases , whereas solicitors representing Social Services Departments are likely to be drawn from the local authority Legal Departments , and to be fully informed .
30 The Court of Appeal dismissed a mother 's appeal from an order of Judge Wroath in the Portsmouth County Court on 11 May 1989 that a girl should be adopted and that the parents ' consents to the adoption be dispensed with on the ground that they were unreasonably withheld .
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