Example sentences of "introduction of the national " in BNC.

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1 They are heartened by finding common ground between English and science for , if nothing else , the introduction of the national curriculum has encouraged teachers from different disciplines to talk to each other : ‘ At one time , we could conceive of ourselves as subject teachers , ’ said Mr Lenarduzzi .
2 The finding follows a study by Her Majesty 's Inspectorate of reading among children aged five to 14 made just before the introduction of the national curriculum last September .
3 We will complete the introduction of the National Curriculum offering 10 subjects at a nationally-defined standard — English , Mathematics , Science , History , Geography , Technology , Art , Music , PE and , in secondary schools , a foreign language .
4 Introduction of the National Curriculum began in September 1989 .
5 The introduction of the National Curriculum re-establishes the traditional style of written report from school to home .
6 The introduction of the National Curriculum has changed the status of this equipment .
7 It is worth considering the French model since , with the introduction of the national core curriculum , there will be far less time in the school day to devote to non-specialist teaching ; and with the new terms and conditions for teachers there may well be many who will want a strict regulation on the number of hours ' work they will put in each day .
8 A second important condition proposed by Beveridge and put into practice by the introduction of the National Insurance pension in 1948 was the ‘ retirement condition ’ .
9 The introduction of the National Curriculum , grant-maintained schools , open enrolment , and , earlier , the creation of the Manpower Services Commission ( later to become the Training Agency ) , are examples of central government seizing the initiative and significantly influencing the control and direction of education .
10 At the same time there is now a more direct intervention in the nature of a school 's educational work through the introduction of the National Curriculum , bringing with it a greater concern for monitoring .
11 The introduction of the National Curriculum from the child 's point of view is to be judged against the effect it will have on the world which children and teachers occupy .
12 The government has allocated , for the introduction of the National Curriculum into 24,000 schools , the sum of £30 million .
13 The introduction of the National Insurance and Workmen 's Compensation Acts meant that many employers were becoming reluctant to employ deaf people in case they had to pay higher premiums just to employ them .
14 After the introduction of the National Health Service in 1948 , the Mapplewell and Staincross Hospital Committee changed its title to the present one and the sing continued , providing the help that is still so important .
15 Within such a framework the duties imposed by the 1981 Act could be accommodated fairly easily , but another challenge was immediately presented by the introduction of the national curriculum with its mandatory package of core and foundation subjects .
16 The introduction of the national language and literature at Oxbridge was seen ( at least to begin with ) as a broadening and rejuvenation of the " literary " curriculum which would thereby be sustained as a foundation for more specialized study .
17 Our data were gathered , as we have emphasized elsewhere , during the period immediately before the introduction of the National Curriculum .
18 In the period leading up to and immediately following the introduction of the National Curriculum , such qualitative gains were in themselves an essential resource .
19 12 per cent were concerned with the introduction of the national curriculum ;
20 The impending introduction of the National Curriculum imposed a new demand towards the end of the four-year period , and during the final year 1,813 teacher-days were spent preparing teachers for their new responsibilities .
21 Given the time constraints to which primary teachers have felt increasingly subjected since the introduction of the National Curriculum , this set of issues deserves very careful attention .
22 Shortly before the introduction of the national curriculum , the percentages of time actually spent by the average secondary fourth and fifth year child in England on what were to become the national curriculum subjects ( see below ) of the 1988 Act , or their nearest equivalents , were as shown in Figure 10.1 .
23 After the introduction of the National Health Insurance Act in 1958 the private sector expanded sharply to cover more than 80 per cent of Japanese medical services .
24 This Board will supervise the local introduction of the national curriculum , and the local publication of test results .
25 The introduction of the national curriculum and schemes for the local management of schools will build on that framework and bring about further improvements in provision for such children , not just in primary schools but throughout the state system .
26 The effective introduction of the national curriculum will require changes in practice in many schools and the report will assist the teachers concerned in planning the necessary changes .
27 The introduction of the National Curriculum and the associated programme of attainment targets and assessments is probably the most significant innovation in education in England and Wales since the 1944 Education Act .
28 The research aims to study the responses of heads , teachers and children in infant schools and departments to the introduction of the national Curriculum and to examine its impact on the curriculum and pedagogy of the infant school and on pupils ' school experience .
29 The introduction of the national curriculum and new modes of assessment provide a context for the study .
30 Recent changes in education — particular the introduction of the national curriculum and of local management of schools — have accelerated the demand for associate posts to assist in the provision of the curriculum and to support the management and administration of increasingly complex institutions .
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