Yet, the everyday decisions demanded when working with cognitively impaired seniors are every bit as much an ethical challenge. |
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Increasingly, however, topics are also focused on developing more cognitively demanding academic language in the content areas. |
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This mode of questioning, Socratic dialogue, is a cognitively powerful facet of the teacher's role as mentor. |
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Consequently he was incompetent, cognitively incapable of envisioning change and probably dangerous. |
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For instance, could language of presentation help bilinguals keep remembered events cognitively distinct? |
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Both count as cognitive values because they make theories cognitively accessible, comprehensible to our finite minds. |
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Information must be provided at a level that is developmentally and cognitively appropriate. |
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In fact, the poet depends on the irreducibility of such cognitively significant meanings in order for him to be creative. |
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It is an interesting question whether any cognitively sophisticated, rational, self-conscious agent must experience situations of choice in this way. |
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The issue of storage, with respect to bilinguals who have two languages to cognitively contend with, has been a strongly debated topic among researchers. |
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Participants were asked to rate how frequently they engaged in cognitively stimulating activities. |
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Such violence is a particular danger to a woman's reproductive health and can scar a survivor psychologically, cognitively, and interpersonally. |
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To what extent are we enabling all students to engage cognitively and to invest their identities in learning? |
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This man had neither cognitively nor experientially encountered any instruction or moral view contrary to his experience. |
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It is important to know how children are developing emotionally and cognitively as well as physically. |
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The best teaching in the world won't eliminate the attention and learning deficits of children who are hungry, sick or cognitively impaired. |
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A variety of instruments have been developed to screen for depression in the cognitively intact population. |
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But I just would like to caution you to consider that most of them, whether they're adults by age, cognitively they're not. |
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Extra time and repeated explanations may be needed for cognitively impaired patients to arrive at these treatment decisions. |
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The use of the verb quantify draws attention to the socially and cognitively creative dimension of the activity. |
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That is why we are all so excited about this unit which specializes in serving the needs of cognitively impaired veterans. |
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But most products right now are still not cognitively ergonomic: they're not made with an understanding of how the brain works. |
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Individuals have FMS solely because they can engage in certain cognitively sophisticated acts or responses on their own. |
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This is the part of the soul where we find emotions, more complex and cognitively responsive than desires but falling short of the reflective abilities of reason. |
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This area has been influenced by cognitive science and recent developments include an interest in cognitively tacit or unaware decision-making of various sorts. |
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When the dorsolateral PFC goes tilt, things go downhill fast, cognitively speaking. |
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You'll also learn how to produce cognitively addictive plots and how to design credible antagonists. |
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Even if children are able to comprehend traffic situations cognitively to some degree, this does not mean that they will act accordingly in concrete situations. |
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A capacity is cognitively penetrable in this sense if that capacity is affected by the subject's knowledge or ignorance of the domain. |
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I'm of course romanticizing lab culture way beyond belief, but I still think that the total sterility of the labs cognitively disconnected that online experience from the rest of the chaotic human experience. |
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Each of these disorders have been found in otherwise cognitively normal individuals, suggesting that the lost capacities are subserved by functionally dissociable mechanisms. |
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Thus in its combinatoric structure and in its performance as a cognitively produced experience, a work of poetry is probabilistic. |
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Through an examination of how victims change cognitively, emotionally, behaviourally and socially, researchers and clinicians will gain insight into how to develop more effective programming. |
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That's right, society doesn't have enough unmotivated and cognitively dysfunctional potheads. |
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Children have varying degrees of maturity, metabolically, immunologically and cognitively, which presents important challenges for research design and consent, depending on the nature and complexity of the research. |
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Cognitive processes are said to be cognitively penetrable if their workings can be affected by the beliefs and goals of the person, and cognitively impenetrable if they cannot be. |
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The hard subject was more cognitively demanding than the preceding material. |
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The last example would be restraining a cognitively impaired student. |
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Children perform best in school when they have had opportunities to develop socially, emotionally, physically and cognitively in their early years. |
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Across the crisis-to-stability continuum, well-designed education programmes can protect children cognitively, psychologically, socially and physically. |
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Unless the patient is a minor, or seriously cognitively impaired, it is preferable to let the person decide who will share in the information process. |
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Children are still in the process of maturing physically, emotionally, cognitively, socially, and spiritually, and this can be seen in how they express themselves and understand illness and death. |
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The insurance benefits are triggered when the insured can no longer perform any two of the six activities of daily living, or becomes cognitively impaired. |
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For a cognitively impaired resident, a routine toileting schedule is usually successful. |
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New York has programs for the sensory-deprived and cognitively challenged, for disruptive inmates with mental health problems, for the victim-prone and the nonresilient. |
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It is generally agreed among most advocates of the Verifiability Principle that analytic and empirical statements exhaust the class of cognitively meaningful statements. |
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Chimpanzee babies are cognitively more developed than human babies until the age of six months, when the rapid development of human brains surpasses chimpanzees. |
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