I'm really not proud of what we did to this kid, but peer pressure makes you do weird things. |
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The Tory peer fully backed up his comments, thus risking being summoned by the Tory whips' office. |
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Our guest of honour is that biological rarity, a hereditary peer who has attained high distinction. |
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So, if peer at my PC tower in the dark under my desk, it now glows red, green and blue from the chinks in its case. |
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Haley tried to peer around him but his tall built frame was blocking the window overlooking the porch beside the door. |
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I've always been fascinated by sheepdog trials, though I watch it on TV rather than go to the real thing and have to peer into the distance. |
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In the 5th grade, we will have peer mediators promoting conflict resolution, primarily on the playground, during lunchtime recesses. |
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However, in peer relations, social interaction likewise needs to be reciprocal to allow cognitive elaboration. |
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He was made a life peer in 1997 after retiring as Chief of the Defence Staff with the rank of Field Marshal. |
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Yet, as female students move into mainstream classes, their peer groups often change. |
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Heart still knocking against her ribs, she strode anxiously to the front door, rising up slightly on her feet to peer through the hole. |
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Golfing slacks and sloppy polo shirts might be fine for the links, but they won't cut it among his new playboy peer group. |
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Yet here are thirteen hundred named images of babies, toddlers and pre-schoolers for the world and his wife to peer at. |
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The potency of peer influence has been demonstrated for non-Latino white, American Indian and Mexican American youth. |
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The professor argues that tweenagers are influenced by peer pressure and that branding helps them to become part of groups. |
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Only emotionally labile noncompliance was a significant predictor of peer rejection. |
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Academic freedom rests on a solid base of peer review and as such is the responsibility of the entire profession. |
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These examples typify the difficulties that psychologists may experience with peer review and commentary. |
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This informal presentation enhanced the sense that one was being invited to uncover personal secrets, or to peer inside a reliquary. |
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A tiny multicoloured parrot flew from shoulder to shoulder to peer at us inquisitively, while a small tame monkey searched for fleas in our hair. |
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As well-meshed teams and peer groups become easier to form, we might see a general amplification of human satisfaction. |
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So the cameras would gingerly peer through the steam and mist to reveal eleven fit, young men romping around in the soapy waters of a huge bath. |
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She was the first female director of the Royal Institute, and was made a life peer earlier this year. |
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He was made a life peer in 1992 but in 2000 was expelled by the party after claims emerged that he had invented an alibi in the 1987 libel case. |
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This structure enables hierarchies of management and also peer to peer management functions. |
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One peer at least tied a capon in his handkerchief and tossed it up to his famished family. |
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To guard against corruption, those countries will use a system of peer review to monitor deployment of funds and progress toward good governance. |
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But most of our discussions centre on peer review of the doctor and her clinical ability. |
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In that case, such a hypothesis would then have to withstand the rigors of both scientific method and peer review. |
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The walls are walkable, a good place to peer down at the city streets or over at the distant Welsh mountains. |
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The play explores children's honest if naive attempts to reconcile conflicts between rules of peer friendship and the expectations of parents. |
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Landing a part-time job on campus as a peer counselor eased her money woes. |
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From its three viewing decks, tourists peer through coin-operated telescopes at tiny hikers negotiating jagged trails down the multihued valley. |
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They pay special attention to the way social responsibilities are fostered by informal communal processes of persuasion and peer pressure. |
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He made him a life peer in 1998 along with a whole load of other buddies once he'd shipped out some of the old duffers with legislative reform. |
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A number of researchers offer insights on supportive classroom environments and the use of technology in peer learning. |
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Although it is still too early to draw any final conclusions, we do have incipient evidence that the peer groups are making a difference. |
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Encourage peer conferencing about spelling on written work as well as during writing workshops. |
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With peer intercession, colleagues of the same status level in the organization are chosen from that nurse's department or another unit. |
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The council consequently decided to carry out a peer review on the whole project, he said. |
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How many of his peer group would admit to an interest in equestrianism before they got into football? |
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Having a good, constant friend is important, and being in a prosocial peer group where one is accepted is even better. |
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Why have ethical codes not figured prominently in discussions of the peer review process? |
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Others give in to some influences, such as friends and peer pressure, but aren't so malleable that they can be forced to do doltish things. |
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This is peer pressure, societal pressure and all the other social norms exerting their influence on you. |
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Subsequently, it invites peer review and involves exploration of student learning. |
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I used to have soft, downy hair on my legs when I was 13, but my peer group persuaded me to shave it off. |
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Both are also role models with enormous power to influence their peer group. |
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Is it a copycat robbery, peer pressure, a particularly easy mark, or something else? |
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Some of this is part of an adolescent revolt against authority dictated by peer pressure. |
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Theorists should acknowledge the role and importance of the peer group in explanations of crime and delinquency. |
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He can make a haunting face peer from the gnarled old trunk of a great oak or fashion an oversized stag beetle from a lime tree. |
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Overall, the present study has important advantages over previous research on the peer relations of aggressive versus depressed children. |
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If you want to peer into the past, you could dig up a time capsule buried in some building foundation. |
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This is a serious disappointment for those who wish to peer beyond the film's own intentionally sickly-sweet facade. |
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Earlier the peer educators had used a lecture-cum-discussion technique and but later switched over to informal talks in groups. |
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Headlights flickered in through my open window and I sat up eagerly to peer outside. |
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A Tory life peer died recently, full of years, and there was a four-column piece about his achievements which, however, noted that. |
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She thought she caught a flicker of movement out of the corner of her eye and turned to peer intently that way. |
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With the windscreen wipers going at full speed, I peer through the blinding rain at a kaleidoscope of neon lights. |
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The telltale signs will always peer through at the experts who will be examining the handwriting. |
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In the high schools, peer mentors are juniors and seniors who teach freshmen the Take Ten skills, among other duties. |
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This book presents fundamentals of conflict resolution and peer mediation in schools. |
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The route to publication was long and occasionally tortuous, with considerable argument with editors and peer reviewers. |
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The prophetesses peer into the future, and see nothing untoward, but they, too, dream and awake screaming. |
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It stands without peer in the public arena as the most authoritative record of one of the nation's most trying experiences. |
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There is also a new mentor program linking young people to adults to develop positive relationships outside their peer group. |
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He and two volunteers settle into the carpeted rear of the vehicle, walkie-talkies in hand, and peer out the windows. |
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Instead, the correlates and outcomes of peer rejection were assessed without controlling for aggression. |
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Anti-bullying charity Kidscape has trained 24 students to become peer mentors for new students. |
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He wrote prolifically with over 30 books and publications in peer reviewed journals. |
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In Grade 4, all children will participate in an assembly dedicated to creative conflict resolution and peer mediation. |
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Potential mediators and moderators of the relation between childhood peer rejection and negative outcomes have not been thoroughly tested. |
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The termination of a work contract severs links with friends, without gaining automatic acceptance by an alternative peer group. |
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In the academic world, we don't get to publish our books at academic presses without peer review. |
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Recently, in a presentation to a large audience of mostly young researchers at a prestigious university, I outlined the crisis in peer review. |
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Kids might start smoking because of peer pressure, to relieve stress, or to rebel against their parents. |
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They want to be hip and happening, but the peer pressure of a myopic public usually stifles a sense of invention and experimentation. |
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Jime has pioneered a dialogic peer review process, in which authors and reviewers are introduced to each other, and conduct a review debate. |
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Subsequently peer pressure and blackmail of friendship are often major contributing pull factors. |
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Once I was able to peer beyond the blinding sheen the songs presented themselves. |
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Keep the trailer door and barn door open so the animal can peer inside the trailer and get used to it before loading. |
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This peer to peer, infinite disk space, share and share alike world keeps getting more interesting. |
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The men accepted me as a peer without question and did not tell dirty jokes or make any inappropriate suggestions around me. |
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The peer review system is being gamed by ballot stuffers and griefers, of course, but the staff is there, showing the flag and fighting back. |
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The secularists have their island and peer out mistrustfully at everyone else. |
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We got the chance to peer into the minds and hearts of today's teens, both the materialists and the non-materialists. |
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The remaining programs may not have sought approval or some may have been disapproved by the peer review committee. |
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Shallus could never have imagined that two centuries later conservators would peer through a binocular microscope to examine his pen strokes. |
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They also offer some important thoughts about how an article this slipshod managed to get past peer review. |
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The latest addition to Glasgow's burgeoning noodle bar scene, Soba is without peer when it comes to slick decor and extremely snappy service. |
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And they mean to heavily slant the peer review process towards industry-funded scientists. |
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Nudibranchs are found everywhere, and just in front of the jetty, jawfish peer out of their holes, with mouthfuls of eggs. |
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The result was an unholy mess, with party nabobs muttering darkly about throwing the 71-year-old peer out of the Tories altogether. |
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His eyes peer angrily out from a dirt-smeared face, his hair needs a good wash and the clothes he's wearing are definitely getting stinky. |
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I'm happy to accept this wager as a measure of the quality of my predictions about the long term sustainability of commons-based peer production. |
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Battling acrophobia and nausea as you scale the mast of this 104-foot-tall ship to the crow's nest and peer down into the roiling water below. |
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Science journal Nature chose 50 science articles from both Encyclopedia Britanica and gave peer reviewers a blind test to find mistakes. |
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With its Chinese shophouses, colonial bungalows and Anglo-Indian mansions, the city has no peer among the region's ports. |
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Get two of your best customers to help conduct peer 2 peer webinars to discuss best practices and issues with peers you invite. |
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A long dashboard reaches deep into the sloping windscreen with almost none of the bonnet visible as you peer over the dash. |
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The desire for peer approval and acceptance can motivate young women to act in healthy or hurtful ways, either individually or in groups. |
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It can be triggered by peer pressure, media pressure or sudden traumas such as divorce or death. |
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But please, please do not again fall for the blandishments of peer pressure without asking why. |
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In recent years, peer relations researchers have moved beyond examination of the correlates and consequences of rejection. |
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I peer over one shoulder to see a bank of dark cloud menacingly close, and I can feel the temperature beginning to drop. |
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Asked about the motivation for the vandalism, he said it was simply a case of very juvenile, immature peer pressure. |
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Teenagers also have a sense of invincibility and are highly susceptible to peer pressure. |
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Thus retaining a modicum of respect from you, my peer group. |
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The child could also be outgoing, a risktaker, prepared to do things outside the peer group. |
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It is also possible that science continues to produce technology despite the fact that results are often faked, data is invented and peer review is merely a rubber stamp. |
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It may mean an end of the relationship or a movement toward a peer or collegial relationship. |
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You'll need to make that argument by drawing upon your current assessment of the work, your original self-assessments, your peer responses, and my responses. |
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I am delighted that the peer group has understood the needs of competition policy so clearly. |
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Power: children who intimidate gain their power from their size and physical strength, their status in their peer group or peer support. |
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The use of peer group support and a strong involvement of parents are recommended. |
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The company has usually retained consultants who study, measure, craft and support the compensation plan in relation to their peer group. |
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I challenge my pupils to look for an alternative word when doing peer marking or teacher marking. |
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Time spent with friends is a good indicator of youth involvement with their peer group. |
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All the members of the peer group juries are there, as are the grants given, and so on and so forth. |
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It is difficult in our society to be both an adolescent, with all the peer group pressure and activities that this entails, and a mother. |
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The relative performance based on the peer group ranking continued to be in the first quartile. |
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It also observed successful recent issues from its peer group and thus decided to take advantage of the improved appetite for cyclical credits. |
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She has no peer group that would put the right kind of pressure on her not to do that. |
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About 55 young people with literacy and behavioural problems also meet one-on-one with peer group tutors. |
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Year after year we have led our peer group in this regard, not just in North America but around the world. |
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The remaining effort may include peer review, typing and photocopying the report, and compilation of documentation. |
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Etta was a very austere widow who wore a little glass lens on a chain around her neck and held it up to peer at Norm and I whenever she visited us. |
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We peer through pinprick peepholes in the night sky, at stars that don't exist anymore. |
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They have been covered by emergency funds raised by the peer circle members. |
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In terms of the peer review, which I welcome, will it involve going in without notifying institutions of visits? |
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The method's effectiveness therefore relies on a form of peer pressure and naming and shaming. |
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Margaret, having been raised as her brother's peer by an unshrinking mother, was unschooled in the conventions of little-girl society. |
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Constable Kim Houle is helping junior high school students get involved in conflict resolution through a peer mediation program. |
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Now, a psychologist has devised a new method that may reduce the effect of peer pressure. |
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In addition, working in a peer group helps to draw out the specific requirements and initiatives for each set of problems. |
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For the peer assessments some of my troopmates got a rude awakening, or in the cases of a few, the comments were just plain rude. |
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Our goal is to ensure all young Canadians have the chance to peer through the lens of a microscope and be mesmerized by what they see. |
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Watch sharks being fed, peer at slithering sea snakes and get up close to baby sea turtles. |
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To have at an early age the courage to peer directly into the pitiless eyes of life. |
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Her peer group of other young mothers who were equally disaffected kept her outside mainstream society, even in terms of vocabulary development. |
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All in all, as we peer through the smoke and the flak, we perceive rather less misunderstanding, confusion and emotion than in earlier years. |
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Other beings have independent desires that are shaped and influenced by all manner of things from peer pressure to economics to physics to biology. |
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On the surface, crimes motivated by profit are different from those driven by passion, peer pressure or simple perversity of human nature. |
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Neufeld contends that peer orientation undermines family cohesion, poisons the school atmosphere and fosters an aggressively hostile and sexualized youth culture. |
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We also found that compliance checklists are used inconsistently by staff and are not reviewed by a peer or supervisor. |
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Later in life young people form peer groups and gain strength through this new group identity. |
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Strolling up to the glacier edge, Victorian visitors could peer in amazement into deep-blue caves, or paddle in the freezing meltwater which surged from under the ice. |
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Patients getting help from community peer support groups reported improved social skills and feelings of well-being. |
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Primary outputs are defined as publications in the serial peer reviewed literature, while the secondary outputs are taken to be evidence based clinical guidelines. |
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Mr. Andy Thomson: I'm also an author on two primary publications, peer reviewed as well, that summarize results of my annual reports. |
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Both schools have developed a peer support programme with the county council's behavioural support unit, where senior students are trained as mentors for younger students. |
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There are several groups providing mentorship and peer support for women. |
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Inside, mascaraed teenagers of both and indeterminate sexes peer out from various pages. |
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Our science is always subject to a public peer review and a consultation process with fishers. |
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This year, as is always the case, data from the trawl survey along with the analysis were subject to a science peer review. |
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Projects will be selected through peer review on the sole basis of scientific excellence. |
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We need to just peer out toward Europe and we will find that 17 of the 20 best health care systems in the world are there. |
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The peer review system shall be encouraged as part of professional publishing practice. |
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Some respondents recommended the use of a peer review approach for the study. |
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The peer review marks the end of the preparatory phase of the recommendations and the beginning of their implementation. |
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While peer review mechanisms may be costly, they provide civil society with an important means to push a government to implement a convention. |
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It groaned and stretched as if just being awakened, then slowly took a step out of the once again inanimate pile to peer through the cracks in the boarded window. |
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Some argue peer review is too time-consuming and that mistakes pass through the process. |
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It was agreed that the peer review procedure would be modified accordingly. |
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The internal data per unit confirmed the ranking of the qualitative peer review remarkably well. |
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In all scholarly publications, the hidden cost of quality control through peer review is a contribution of scholars and scientists. |
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The evaluation of individual directors involves a self-evaluation and peer review. |
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It is France's understanding that peer review should function as an incentive rather than as a penalty mechanism. |
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The commission also aims to select reviewers who will bring a broad range of backgrounds, expertise and perspectives to the peer review process. |
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There will be the opportunity to ask questions and exchange experiences with peer users. |
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Now we also have peer counsellors that greet and meet the soldiers on the way back. |
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We have some concerns about the school, particularly as regards the absence of a head teacher until August and concrete programmes for integration with a wider peer group. |
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Provided peer tutoring for courses that are particularly troublesome for females. |
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Furthermore, you should also be able to see his waistline if you peer down at him from above. |
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The peer later denied that he had commercial interests in any domestic energy firms or in the big six energy companies. |
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But Socialite Rank folded, and Park Avenue Peerage stands now as peer of the realm. |
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Even in Dhaka, managers and supervisors work with more than 50 paid peer outreach workers. |
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The Earl of March uses it in a letter describing a French peer of the realm. |
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Mental illness can affect many aspects of a student's life, including family and peer relationships and school performance. |
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So was Longford, in which the potent blonde, Myra Hindley, ran rings around the peer of the realm. |
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It focuses on professional advocacy, education, networking and peer support. |
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The peer of the realm paid £3 to enter Berlin, a Bournemouth nightclub, where he ordered a vodka and tonic. |
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Training was provided to more than 1,000 youth peer educators, who subsequently reached out to over 30,000 young people and community members. |
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Thus, consideration of the importance of peer groups is a key success factor of a national youth policy. |
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Broadening the definition of a peer to include practitioners, for example, is one option. |
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I peer into a stand of smoking hot woks, thinking I still have room for more, then suddenly I make out the crystallised wings and shells of dragonflies and beetles. |
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The peer group is expanded and the basis of authority of those who speak on behalf of science is reduced. |
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The viewer was to peer through the hole from the backside of the panel into a mirror, which reversed the image again, reflecting the view in the correct direction. |
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Marketing to teenagers must not unduly exploit teenagers' impressionability, or susceptibility to peer or social pressures. |
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Here, he used the intimacy of video to infiltrate the intense, distancing formalism of modernist dwellings and let us peer into some fanciful dramas unfolding within them. |
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Cool your heels in glistening ice fields, boulder-hop across pristine streams, peer into deep crevasses and climb secret ridges with only mountain goats for company. |
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Allays irrantional fears and phobias, and can help with peer group difficulties, connecting one to the confidence of one's inner self. |
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The following is a testimony of someone helped through bereavement peer support. |
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Evaluation and peer review should serve to improve standards. |
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It is also possible to assess quality without quantitative measures, by using approaches such as peer review, videoing consultations, and patient interviews. |
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Instead of using technology to improve our lives and as a means to disseminate public information, it will be used to restrict our freedoms, and peer into our private lives. |
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The cross-bench peer had tabled a written question before Parliament was dissolved for the election after one of his constituents raised concerns. |
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His explanation only diminishes the irresistible excitement we feel while watching Tony Perkins peer at Janet Leigh in her shower. |
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We peer down at the tiny worm wriggling under the lens of our microscope. |
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She would lean over shoulders in supermarkets, bend over wrinkled, hunched backs and peer underneath registers to look at traces of sentences being scribbled in cursive. |
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I took the curves white-knuckled, leaning forward to peer ahead as far as possible. |
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The denialist side was actively subverting the peer review process. |
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To that end we will, within our own journals, audit the quality of peer review on a continuous basis and where possible provide training to enhance the quality of peer review. |
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Another method used to assist with rehabilitation in the therapeutic community is the peer encounter group. |
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It seems my ever over-optimistic supervisor, John Bartlett, thinks it is time I published a review paper on sludge dewatering for a peer reviewed journal. |
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Sironi's peer in sculpture was Arturo Martini, who also used archaic forms to enliven the classical tradition in search of a non-rhetorical Fascist style. |
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However, young employees may be reluctant to make complaints against a peer or a superior for fear of repercussion or being labeled a complainer. |
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She has chaired various government committees of enquiry, is a life peer and has recently voted on an Order legalising therapeutic cloning of human embryos. |
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Winners will have their name and company listed on the PMAC web site, providing peer and public recognition. |
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But when they open the back door of each van, and peer into the sardine-packed interior, they are met by decades of accumulated mistrust, suspicion, diffidence and fear. |
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Perquisite values vary by level of executive, and are comparable to peer companies. |
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As I waited to speak to Manning, a cleaning woman poked her head out from one of the adjacent rooms to peer at me. |
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In the academic world, peer review involves subjecting a researcher's scholarly work to the scrutiny of experts in the field. |
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Important issues emerged regarding the influence of peer pressure and acceptable standards of behaviour among young people in relation to risk-taking behaviours. |
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Students learn from their peer teachers, enjoy the contact with peers from the class ahead of them and find the peer teachers accessible and easy to ask questions. |
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High schools are remaking yearbooks to more accurately reflect student populations amid larger societal concerns about bullying, peer pressure, and self-esteem. |
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Annie's head ached, her ribs hurt from coughing, and the simple act of craning her neck to peer through a clear spot on the windshield made her dizzy. |
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She can peer in beneath the layers of people, and instead of using it compassionately, she uses it as a weapon. |
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There are really no rules of thumb, but older couples are less likely to adopt infants and many younger couples prefer babies in order to fit in with peer groups. |
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The 71-year-old, who was made a life peer in 2001 after a career as an MP, had previously held roles as an opposition spokeswoman across a range of portfolios. |
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The exhibition of reason's power in these scenes has no peer in theatre. |
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Because of the relative recency of Internet forums for intellectual interchanges, a number of precedents may be set that will determine the future course of peer commentary. |
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However, it was probably his religious credentials that led to him becoming the only Tory MP to have been both knighted and created a life peer by Labour. |
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One Lib Dem peer was pounding the pavements all day, knocking up voters. |
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From our seats we can even peer out the window from time to time and see the mountain ski resorts near Sante Fe New Mexico and Salt Lake City Utah, wow! |
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A couple more peer through spy holes in the sandbag barricades that line the perimeter. |
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To develop injection drug user peer support workshops that provide life skills training to improve health and adherence outcomes. |
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All are equipped with complex camera systems that can peer into mountain ravines or terrorist compounds, instantly relaying images back to safely situated ground stations. |
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It's a great place for a languid weekend breakfast and an even better spot to peer over the top of a nicely constructed Martini at a nicely constructed companion. |
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The common reaction to peer pressure is the parental guilt trip. |
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We peer into the expanse above us and the sight swamps our minds and overwhelms our spirit. |
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More formally too there is evidence of how factors such as peer pressure or a discordant home can have long-term consequences that affect learning. |
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The timepiece's transparent case back allows fans of exquisite engineering to peer into the workings of its movement and oscillating mass. |
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Along with enabling scientists to peer into the nature of matter, it's drawing these scientists to Canada in the first place. |
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As technology advances, the ability to peer into babies' brains and detect injury in both structure and function will continue to improve. |
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Explore this Tarzan landscape with traditional Aboriginal owners the Wagait people or peer into a pastoral past in the ruins of Blyth Homestead. |
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This is a peer reviewed journal devoted to the Euclidean geometry. |
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Once it became easy to download, so that any dummy could do it and you're only paying a buck a song, it sort of took it away from the old peer to peer basis thing. |
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This was echoed by a peer reviewer informant who said that there is never enough money and changing the mix would not make much of a difference. |
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The unionists who were trained as peer educators carried out their tasks halfheartedly, for fear of losing elections. |
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Students whose work was being critiqued had to listen quietly to peer comments, without defending their painting or their interpretation. |
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Specifically, the model appears to be inadequate in explaining or predicting the influence that results when peer dyads are composed of aggressive and nonaggressive children. |
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As an actress, singer, comedienne and all-around warming presence, Bernadette Peters has no peer in the musical theatre right now. |
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Family pressure had been joined by peer pressure as a critical shaper of youth. |
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The scientific method and peer review may be distinctly anti-feminist. |
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They have confirmed trends on durable goods consumption and on peer to peer. |
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It tells a tale of suffering, of inhumanity, of nihilism, of self-disgust, of deep, dark holes in the soul that most folks would rather not peer into, to be honest. |
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Hereditary peer Viscount Simon, who sits on the Labour benches, will also speak in support of the law. |
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He is a peer assessor for the College of Physicians and Surgeon of Ontario. |
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At the same time, special attention should be given to the peer support system. |
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Beside roaring factories and in sequestered nooks on which deer and bear peer shyly from nearby leafy coverts, there have sprung up innumerable gardens. |
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I fail to see how the knowledge a peer of the realm is a serial child abuser is not. |
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A peer submits a question in advance, which then appears on the Order Paper for the day's proceedings. |
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The process of peer review involves evaluation of the experiment by experts, who typically give their opinions anonymously. |
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Some journals request that the experimenter provide lists of possible peer reviewers, especially if the field is highly specialized. |
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Each element of the scientific method is subject to peer review for possible mistakes. |
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In June 1970 he became the first actor to be created a peer for services to the theatre. |
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Another criticism is that the use of proctors may encourage cheating due to the peer relationship between the grader and the gradee. |
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Desmond had previously made the UKIP peer David Stevens his deputy chairman. |
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The final trial of a peer in the House of Lords was in 1935, and in 1948, the use of special courts for trials of peers was abolished. |
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The last trial of a peer in the House of Lords was in 1935, when Lord de Clifford was tried for motor manslaughter. |
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Another officer of the body is the Leader of the House of Lords, a peer selected by the Prime Minister. |
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The BMJ has an open peer review system, wherein authors are told who reviewed their manuscript. |
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William FitzGerald, 2nd Duke of Leinster was the premier peer in the Irish House of Lords and a founder member of the Order of Saint Patrick. |
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Three drafts of his report were peer reviewed before it was accepted for publication. |
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It wasn't until the middle of the 20th century that peer review became the standard. |
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Morgan is a member of the Labour Party, and on 12 June 2000 he was made a life peer as Baron Morgan, of Aberdyfi in the County of Gwynedd. |
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To win the election, a peer must receive a majority of first preference votes. |
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The first hereditary peer to gain a seat in the Commons under this provision was John Thurso. |
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Under the 1999 House of Lords Act, a new form of representative peer was introduced to allow some hereditary peers to stay in the House of Lords. |
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The block voting system was used, with each peer casting as many votes as there were seats to be filled. |
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In 1711, The 4th Duke of Hamilton, a peer of Scotland, was made Duke of Brandon in the Peerage of Great Britain. |
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In 2001, John Sinclair, 3rd Viscount Thurso became the first British hereditary peer to be elected to the Commons and take his seat. |
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He resigned in 1954 and was created a peer as Baron Cooper of Culross, of Dunnet in the County of Caithness. |
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Don't hold them back because of the latest trendy theory about ability grouping or political correctness or fairness or peer pressure. |
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Finally for the mutual support and peer pressure. |
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Helping others help oneself: Response shift effects in peer support. |
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This applies primarily to papers that were not subject to the rigour of peer review, but even some journal articles that were presumably vetted by colleagues show bias, usually in favour of shared custody. |
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Now let's peer through the pettifog and strategize. |
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We seem to be travelling dangerously fast, so I peer at the speedometer. |
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It's hard to swim upstream, to resist peer pressure. |
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In the ensuring years, they ran peer support meetings, training sessions in literacy, crafts, health maintenance, cooking, computer skills, and container gardening. |
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While they called for specific action, they also offered themselves as a resource, emphasizing that peer education and nonformal education in general are essential to achieve development goals. |
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This 'gap and superfluities' assessment is a recognized approach in strategy evaluation, and applying this, with the participation of the peer review group, the previous Draft Plan for IHP-VII has been refined. |
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I crouch down and peer into the dark caverns under the couch. |
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While the full peer review is not complete, Azrael said, the current results have gone through an initial round of comments and revisions from a group of leading firearms researchers. |
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The salon owner in the Jamaican capital, Kingston, was trained as a peer educator and actively sensitizes most of the 50 clients she sees each week. |
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This autumn season is something more akin to late springtide in the brilliant career of Edna O'Brien, described by her American peer Philip Roth as the greatest living woman writing in English. |
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What emerges is that decision-making is an everyday process and one must constantly be on guard so that external factors such as unemployment, environment and peer pressure do not lead to regrettable decisions. |
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Examples of social alienation: Spreading rumors, publicly humiliating, gossiping, social rejection, threat of exclusion from peer group, isolation, setting up to look foolish, ethnic slurs. |
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During the workshop, participants got a taste of a peer assist, where they sought what was common in their experiences originated in different contexts. |
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Its elegant double-height parlor is lined in dark wood and accessorized with cashmere sweaters and large-game trophies that peer down superciliously from their mountings. |
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Second, the two-step committee process allows more researchers to become engaged with SSHRC's peer review process, as a means of building its own organizational capacity for Aboriginal research. |
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Hollow-eyed skulls peer out from shadowy corners. |
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Her often wary brown eyes peer out beneath dark, girlish curls. |
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In a revealing diptych, several children peer out from an open doorway. |
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Though unmentioned, the C. I. A. seemed to peer out from his statement. |
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The government should be ashamed for turning its back on the young people whose innocent faces peer out from the images that document their suffering. |
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Its streets twist in cow-path fashion between centuries-old houses, its hills catapult down the steep incline of the Rock where its Citadel guns peer out toward the sea. |
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