Example sentences of "the [num] education " in BNC.

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1 Although the 1944 Act did not provide detailed prescription for complementary relationships it was clear from the 1943 Education Bill that the LEAs were to be given the responsibility and duty to secure the development of adult education , in consultation with the universities and voluntary bodies .
2 The implications of the 1943 Education Bill were considered and accepted at a conference at Impington Village College in late January 1944 .
3 The impossibility of guaranteeing adherence to parental wishes was acknowledged by the government in the provisions of the 1980 Education Act .
4 A place was available at the school in question , and the LEA had no ground under the 1980 Education Act for denying parental choice .
5 Indeed , since the 1980 Education Act 's requirement that all schools publish their examination results , it is not unreasonable to surmise that the influence of examinations upon teaching quality ( or its lack ) is likely to grow in years to come .
6 Rule 2(a) of the authority 's Rules of Management gave the schools ' Managers ( now , since the 1980 Education Act , called ‘ governors ’ ) responsibility for the ‘ oversight of the conduct of the curriculum of the school , in consultation with the headteacher ’ .
7 Thus the 1980 Education Act made it a requirement for all schools to provide public information on the curriculum .
8 With the passing of the 1980 Education Act in England and Wales these results have to be published .
9 Pressure on LEAs to reduce provision was increased after the change of government in 1979 and the 1980 Education Act permitted LEAs to open close or substantially alter schools without central government approval .
10 The 1980 Education Act , which extended parental choice of schools , was seen as creating pressures for the raising of academic standards .
11 [ The main recommendations were implemented in the 1980 Education Act , and further extended in the 1986 Education Act ; but the 1988 Education Reform Act introduced radical changes in the relationships between parents , governors , teachers , LEAs and central government ( see Chapter 4 ) . ]
12 School meals were to be provided for all children who wanted them ( an obligation on LEAs removed by the 1980 Education Act ) .
13 This Act enabled LEAs to recover the costs of providing primary and secondary education for pupils not belonging to their area ( repealed in the 1980 Education Act ) ; and allowed LEAs to provide clothing grants .
14 This Act authorised LEAs to pay for pupils to attend independent schools , and enabled LEAs to recover the costs of providing further education for students not belonging to their area ( repealed in the 1980 Education Act ) .
15 ( The 1980 Education Act and the 1986 Social Security Act each further restricted the supply of free milk . )
16 From 1988 , the provisions of the 1980 Education Act concerning free school meals and milk were abolished .
17 The 1980 Education Act requires schools to publish information on their examination results from 1982 onwards .
18 The ways in which heads reported to governors before the 1980 Education Act , when there was less community representation , and after the 1986 Act which required governors to report to annual parent meetings ( and for which the reports were largely written by heads ) , differ from the task after the Education Reform Act .
19 The 1980 Education Act increased parental choice and the 1986 Education ( No. 2 ) Act increased parental representation on governing bodies .
20 Some aspects of open enrolment go back to the 1980 Education Act .
21 As a result of these worries , there was incorporated into the 1986 Education Act a specific prohibition against promoting ‘ partisan political views in the teaching of any subject in the school . ’
22 The 1986 Education Act ( No 2 ) sought to enhance and standardise the role of governors in this area , but nevertheless the LEA remained the ultimate authority .
23 The 1986 Education Act gave county-school governors the right to decide the use to which the school should be put outside the normal school day , subject to any directions issued by the LEA .
24 Patriarchal power in education was coming back in a big way , and was endorsed in the 1986 Education Act 's stipulation that sex education should be taught within a moral framework and with due regard to family life .
25 So sex education becomes crucially important , but while the 1986 Education Act and Section 28 remain in place , sex education in Britain will consist of little more than a hymn to family life , largely devoid of any education about sex .
26 Likewise the increased accountability of heads to governors , created by the 1986 Education Act and expanded again in the Reform Act , means not only extra work but extra tensions both for the heads themselves and for their staffs .
27 The annual report which head teachers make to the school 's governing body is now ( as a consequence of the provisions of the 1986 Education Act ) presented to parents for discussion at an open meeting ; school records are available for inspection .
28 [ The main recommendations were implemented in the 1980 Education Act , and further extended in the 1986 Education Act ; but the 1988 Education Reform Act introduced radical changes in the relationships between parents , governors , teachers , LEAs and central government ( see Chapter 4 ) . ]
29 ( Their powers and duties resemble those given to English and Welsh school governors by the 1986 Education Act rather than those given by the 1988 Education Reform Act . )
30 Otherwise , the design of the curriculum was left formally to local education authorities , and in practice largely to head teachers — in association with governors after the 1986 Education Act ( see Chapter 4 ) .
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