Example sentences of "[noun pl] ' view of " in BNC.

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1 The decision was also influenced by the fact that when the museum was founded in 1987 , it was clearly specified that it would include other nations ' views of Germany and its history .
2 It is important , therefore , that all the circumstances are considered during a Procedure Audit , including peoples ' views of problems and potential solutions .
3 Regulationists ' view of a coherent national economy with international links is , in my opinion , consistent with the 1830s/1840s crossroads .
4 The Chief Executive also shall report on clients ' views of the service provided , drawing on an independent annual national survey and results of local office monitoring of customer service .
5 The financial projections contained in the future prospects section of the Memorandum are the sole responsibility of the directors of [ Company name ] Limited and , fairly describe , in that context , the directors ' view of the future prospects of the Group .
6 Resources and facilities ranked tenth and eleventh in the survey by Hughes , Wikeley and Nash ( 1990 ) of parents ' views of the attributes of a good primary school .
7 Parents ' views of assessments
8 Parents ' views of professionals
9 Research concerns such issues as implementation and take-up , educational home visiting , home- school communication , effects on reading test performance , and teachers ' and parents ' views of involvement .
10 In other cases the parents ' view of what their child should be able to do is appropriate but the child is showing a delay in his or her development and needs more detailed assessment of the level of progress .
11 For example , it did little to improve parents ' view of teachers when schools in one local authority were told to implement a policy aiming to lead young children to an understanding of such things as lesbianism and homosexuality .
12 This depends on the judges ' views of the merits of the case before them or ( I would add ) the direction their political inclinations lead them — what I call below their ‘ view of the public interest ’ .
13 Perhaps more important for our purposes is the economists ' view of law which is something quite different from that of the lawyers ' traditional idea of a command backed up by a sanction .
14 Or , to turn these questions around , what relevance do these intra-collegial debates over the ‘ proper place of general practice ’ have for everyday medical work and the participants ' views of it ?
15 As Lord Porter recognised , it is inevitable that the courts ' view of what is non-natural should change in response to changing social conditions and needs .
16 It is nevertheless likely that more middle class women accepted than resisted the experts ' view of their physiology and psychology , though they may also have passed those views through their own filter .
17 Next there is these theologians ' view of salvation .
18 The reopening of this northern hinterland , however , could well change the Greeks ' view of what it means to be a member of the Community .
19 It will complement a major study of adoption court records and practitioners ' views of the adoption process which the research team has recently completed for the Department of Health .
20 Do remember that , contrary to the cynics ' view of built-in obsolescence , most major appliances — refrigerators , stoves , dishwashers and so on — are built to last for years , so , as far as possible , you should keep future changes of circumstances in mind as well as your present needs .
21 Of especial interest is students ' perception of science and scientists : is their view of science , like the scientists ' view of humanities , limited and partial ?
22 An examination of the documentation shows that there is , in fact , no real change in the bishops ' view of the relationship between their perception of the good of the state and public morality , and what was to be de facto permissible in the state .
23 Services should also affirm their policies on equal opportunities by ensuring that they monitor the use of their services by specific ethnic groups , test that the information they make available for the public is comprehensible and accessible , canvass users ' views of the current services , recruit staff of different ethnic backgrounds , at all levels in the organization ( although , in the case of Afro-Caribbeans in particular , this can be difficult due to the lower educational opportunities of this group and , in consequence , a paucity of suitable candidates for posts ) , and institute a programme of training for staff of all grades and backgrounds to understand their own conscious and unconscious prejudices about race and culture .
24 One GRIST coordinator , whilst pointing to the need to develop a more sophisticated understanding in teachers ' responses to their INSET needs , exemplified the difficulties of arts education by quoting a survey carried out by one LEA into teachers ' views of their own INSET needs .
25 The evaluation will consist of : — baseline criteria for the effectiveness of a computer based course — a description of critical aspects of course implementation — an analysis of the reciprocal interactions between teachers ' views of mathematics , mathematics teaching and computers and their progress on the course .
26 those who have accepted the teachers ' view of them that they are thick and who see no point in pursuing any further academic work because of their acknowledged inability , and
27 The next section looks at respondents ' views of the care given to people in residential and nursing homes and the conditions there .
28 In this study relatives and friends generally thought conditions in the home were ‘ good ’ rather than ‘ not so good ’ , although a number of their comments and descriptions indicate that circumstances were sometimes far from ideal and analysis of respondents ' views of the quality of life suggest that the initial period after admission may be particularly stressful for residents .
29 Beethoven ( Sonata Op12 No3 ) , Schumann ( Romances Op94 , Sonata Op105 No1 ) , Stravinsky ( Suite Italienne ) 4pm Barbican £5-£12.50 Bach Vespers Cantata 38 ( Aus tiefer Not ) , plus Vivaldi ( Double Violin Concerto ) in context of Lutheran service 7pm St Anne 's , Gresham St , The City NORWICH FESTIVAL Dorothy Tutin joins the Endymion Ensemble for Saint- Saens 's Carnival of the Animals and Poulenc 's Babar the Elephant , plus Ibert , Milhaud 3pm St Andrew 's Hall £2-£8. l TUESDAY Verdi Requiem ECO and Tallis Chamber Choir with soloists Jo Ann Pickens , Sarah Walker , Jeffrey Talbot , Gwynne Howell 7.30pm Royal Naval College Chapel , King William Walk , Greenwich SE10 £5.50-£9 ( 317 8687 ) Olli Mustonen The brilliant young Finnish pianist-composer joins fellow Finn Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Philharmonia for a Grand Gala in aid of the Council for the Protection of Rural England : Ravel 's breezy G major Piano Concerto is framed by aptly Green pieces by Vaughan Williams ( Greensleeves Fantasia ) and Stravinsky ( Le Sacre du Printemps ) 7.30pm RFH £18 incl donation ; £35-£125 incl reception and private view of Legacy exhibition ( 12 photographers ' views of Britain 's countryside ) NORWICH FESTIVAL The Field of Cloth of Gold : A musical celebration of the 1520 meeting between Henry VIII and Francois I of France , played on period instruments by Musica Antiqua of London 7.30pm Cathedral £2.50-£7.50 ( 0603-618499 ) LES PARISIENNES Pianist Diana Ambache and her Ambache Chamber Orchestra offer musical portraits of four femmes de Paris — two of them composers , two of them inspirations for the compositions of others .
30 But the Formalists did not share the New Critics ' view of poetry as paradox or resolution of contradictions , since they were not interested in poetry 's meaning .
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