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200 Sentences With "pupils"

How to use pupils in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "pupils" and check conjugation/comparative form for "pupils". Mastering all the usages of "pupils" from sentence examples published by news publications.

He says state-school pupils now do better in exams than private-school pupils.
Pupils and staff described scenes of mayhem as panicked pupils tried to flee the building.
Pupils and staff described scenes of mayhem as panicked pupils tried to flee the building.
It compared test results of pupils at 62 such schools with those of similar pupils at ordinary schools.
Nationwide, 21.5% of American pupils were learning another language, compared with more than half of pupils in Europe.
Schools sometimes block UTCs from advertising to their pupils, fearful of losing pupils and the funding that follows them.
Although many of the trust's existing schools have no white British pupils, at some of the new ones nine in ten pupils are, and poor white pupils get some of the worst results in the country.
Another Bridge study suggests that its younger pupils learn 230-22014% more per year than similar pupils in public schools.
For example, the pupils of injected mice became dilated when exposed to NIR, whereas the pupils of mice without injections did not.
Not surprisingly, the vast majority of French pupils choose English as their first foreign language, with fully 5.5m pupils enrolled in classes in secondary school.
Still, the number of private-school pupils would fall, and some schools, mostly preparatory ones (which take pupils until age 13), would probably go under.
Another suggests that, if black pupils were taught by the best quarter of teachers, the gap between their achievement and that of white pupils would disappear.
As a result, 14% of its pupils have qualified for free school meals, a measure of poverty; by contrast, fewer than 3% of grammar school pupils do.
In response to the images of adults, participants' pupils followed the same pattern as the previous studies—in other words, their pupils lined up with their sexual orientation.
Nearly eight in ten schools use the extra money to support activities that benefit all pupils, which makes sense only where there are many pupils on free school meals.
"After schools shut their gates on Friday afternoon, they will remain closed for most pupils, the vast majority of pupils, until further notice," Johnson told reporters, according to Bloomberg.
Even Singapore, which does divert some pupils to a vocational track at the age of 21990, ensures that pupils in those schools keep up high standards in reading and maths.
So far, pupils taught from afar have outperformed their predicted grades, though the sample size is small and no one has yet done a good analysis comparing pupils with similar peers.
This helps explain why a third of Indian schools have fewer than 213 pupils—and why, as country people migrate to the city, more than 20133,22013 schools have no pupils at all.
Although in general reducing class sizes is not the most cost-effective response, Estonian pupils have benefited from the demographic shift, which has made it easier to give pupils, especially laggards, extra help.
First, poor pupils are less likely to apply to Oxford.
That can be a challenge for both teachers and pupils.
Their eyes (the irises, whites, and pupils) are completely black.
James Patterson published a novel with one of his pupils.
A third of pupils in Newark now attend charter schools.
Some worried that this would dissuade poor pupils from applying.
Mosques were becoming more crowded, religious schools attracting more pupils.
The future of the poorest pupils depends on government policy.
Similarly, pupils have fewer opportunities to retake exams they flop.
Pupils could be distributed throughout the school system more effectively.
When Fove is watching your pupils, there's no such option.
The primary school pupils just play and waste their time.
Pupils and college staff were among those killed, she said.
The men's eyes were bloodshot, their pupils wide as saucers.
Today, out of 35 pupils, only 10 live in Taesung.
More than half the pupils are on the honor roll.
No More Marking, a British company, shows teachers paired excerpts from pupils' essays and asks them to decide which is better; with enough such comparisons its "comparative judgment" algorithms can then rank the pupils.
Our pupils shrink or grow based on the amount of available light; absent any change in lighting, enlarged pupils mean the brain's noradrenergic system system, which is responsible for stress reactions, has kicked in.
Pupils cannot be left to pass through grades without mastering material.
He started with 60 pupils and has now more than 500.
The building housed a school with about 100 pupils, they added.
In 2015 nine bullied pupils killed themselves, according to government figures.
She shows that schools can delay selection without harming brighter pupils.
The region's pupils outperform most other Brazilian schoolchildren in international tests.
The number of pupils finishing secondary school has fallen by half.
Another, related, problem is that Chinese pupils are out of shape.
When teachers leave because they are miserable, pupils suffer the consequences.
Those pupils with foreign-born parents tend to do even worse.
Neither these pupils nor the rest of Liberia is learning much.
High-school pupils and ambulance drivers have launched their own protests.
And pupils' personal connection to the material makes the ideas stick.
This would be compulsory for all pupils in state-funded schools.
Yet a few star pupils show how much can be done.
That gap grows to 4½ grades by for ninth-grade pupils.
The pupils won, but at a further cost to their schools.
Three teachers walk around the open space, checking on pupils' progress.
The emphasis on project work means pupils collaborate with each other.
She wanted to know whether competition for pupils improved school quality.
Such recruitment efforts, they say, target pupils in poor minority neighbourhoods.
Charter schools now educate 3.1m pupils, a sevenfold increase since 2000.
This one has drawn pupils, aged 13-18, from nine cities.
In 2010 542,125 pupils in England attended a single-sex school.
Between 1991 and 2012, segregation of poor pupils rose by 40%.
Between 1991 and 2012, segregation of poor pupils increased by 40%.
Weaker accountability for teachers will lead to poorer performance by pupils.
They forcibly enter a school and distribute condoms to its pupils.
But unlike many other schools, disruptive pupils are hardly ever suspended.
But some pupils have expressed their dismay at the forum's subject.
If you shine a light in his eyes, his pupils shrink.
The school system has been haemorrhaging pupils at an alarming rate.
After he had left, pupils alerted the headmaster to his presence.
Have you ever been scouted by any pupils on social media?
Her horizontal pupils narrowed as she divined futures from the flames.
"Some pupils don't attend class at all," said Merveille Kaltouma, 17.
Simply thinking about a difficult math problem makes your pupils dilate.
Standards of literacy and numeracy among primary-school pupils have fallen.
That could be a licence to expel gay pupils, for instance.
"One in 153 students is homeless," with black pupils most affected.
Hassoun remembers when the school had 500 pupils and 30 teachers.
Pupils like Gould and Jenny Turrall gave credence to his theories.
They need to, so that their pupils can grow into themselves.
Warby Parker Pupils Project frames, starting at $95 at warbyparker.com/pupilsproject.
His pupils were different sizes, and half his body was paralyzed.
One in five pupils is the son of an Old Etonian.
He took little interest in his pupils; his methods were peculiar.
Pupils sported the flowing side-locks associated with the hilltop youth.
But one of his first lessons for pupils is vocal modulation.
In the dark of her pupils, I watch myself change shape.
With 2200% more pupils than China, India has four times more schools.
Of 350 pupils at the French school in Tehran, 150 have left.
Pupils' criticisms of their country's politics and governance may be perfectly legitimate.
It has 100,000 pupils spread across Kenya, Liberia, Nigeria, Uganda and India.
KCLMS does a better job than most grammars of recruiting poor pupils.
Nearly a quarter of foreign pupils at private boarding schools are Chinese.
Other signs include pinpoint pupils, confusion, vomiting and cold or clammy skin.
One concern the document raises is that pupils get too much homework.
Black pupils received about a fifth of the funding of white peers.
In Singapore, Japan and Estonia nearly half of the poorest pupils do.
Then they keep pupils in academic courses until the age of 21980.
This was an orchestra made up of Conservatoire professors and their pupils.
Luckily, technology could offer the adaptive education guidance pupils need to succeed.
UTCs struggle to attract female pupils: 78% of current students are boys.
Pupils may have more power but they do not have complete control.
There is a big disparity between black and white pupils' average attainment.
The researchers determined this by measuring how quickly a subject's pupils dilated.
Even with their impressive growth, charters educate only 7% of American pupils.
Most of the pupils and teachers thought it was just a drill.
He slipped out of the school by blending in with evacuating pupils.
His pupils dilate as if somewhere behind them, a brain is churning.
What's more, there is evidence that teachers are biased by pupils' ethnicity.
Sudan still has many Christian schools, most of whose pupils are Muslim.
Only then would schools consider pupils who put them second or third.
In New York City's public schools, just 2301% of pupils are white.
She saw the world distorted, through the round lens of his pupils.
Half of the pupils at his children's pre-school are non-German.
Such pupils are being judged as less capable than they really are.
"It is friendly and quiet," says the mother of a former pupils.
They also went around schools for notes and drawings made by pupils.
Nearly a third of high-school pupils fail to graduate on time.
An American government watchdog has documented non-existent schools and "ghost" pupils.
But there remain just 163 grammars in England, educating 5% of pupils.
Pupils at grammars do get better results than they would at comprehensives.
This is largely because schools neglect their most important pupils: teachers themselves.
The youngest pupils go home by noon with little or no homework.
Every day it buses 230 college pupils in from around the city.
In maths classes pupils' workbooks have no entries for the past fortnight.
"History teaches, but has no pupils," the Marxist philosopher Antonio Gramsci wrote.
You can see it in the slit pupils of their rectangular eyes.
Like my pupils, everything had shrunk into a permanent state of unconsciousness.
Vivian's yellow pupils disappeared, and her head flipped back almost ninety degrees.
An infrared camera and lighting pods tracked my face, eyelids and pupils.
School was closed for 750 million pupils in more than 100 countries.
The pupils constrict; blood oxygen levels plummet; the heart goes into arrhythmia.
He did not say how many pupils or schools would be affected.
Early symptoms can include pinprick pupils, runny nose, wheezing and muscle twitching.
Pupils and high school students took to the streets in several cities.
In the first episode, Ms. Menzel introduces the pupils to Broadway musicals.
A study published in 2013 found that pupils at low-cost private schools in the south-eastern state of Andhra Pradesh achieved the same scores in maths and Telugu (the local language) as pupils at government-run schools.
Her eyes are, by turns, staring, downcast, sideways-glancing, or closed; they are fearful, commanding, and heavy-lidded; they range from stark white with solid black pupils to shades of gray and even entirely black, sometimes with white pupils.
Thick poetry textbooks sit open before pupils who struggle to read simple sentences.
By law, pupils are automatically shoved up to the next grade each year.
The first wave of Polish pupils had a reputation for being particularly diligent.
But his pupils weren't yet ready to tolerate the light in the NICU.
Pictured: Pupils from the International Institute of Margaret Morris Movement practising in 1935.
Along with her pupils, she built herself into a resource for other teachers.
Pupils must often adhere to exact rules about their uniforms, hairstyles and grooming.
Growing numbers of her pupils, she says, no longer see themselves as girls.
Local teams of inspectors also keep tabs on whether pupils understand the material.
That was three years ago, and now the Willow School has 350 pupils.
With the help of his pupils, he's carrying drums to the rehearsal room.
She began to hold teachers at traditional public schools accountable for pupils' performance.
Inequity is stark: white pupils hugely outperform black ones in reading and maths.
A scandalous 79% of teachers scored below the level expected of the pupils.
It tries to avoid at all costs having pupils repeat years of school.
Rodenburg and her two pupils, Bloom and Essiedu, helped create the school's curriculum.
Today there are three times as many French pupils studying Chinese as Arabic.
Some also had blurred vision, highly dilated pupils, and issues with depth perception.
But to pupils who lobbied for computers at their school he counselled patience.
At Nova Pioneer, classes are smaller—32 pupils, on average—and more participatory.
The rest mentor pupils in character traits such as curiosity and self-awareness.
Several pupils say they like that they can learn at their own pace.
Instead they analyse data on pupils' portraits and tutor them on individual problems.
In 2001, 5.6% of Northern Irish post-primary pupils attended an integrated school.
Weaker pupils quickly get left behind and find it hard to catch up.
For even when teachers show up they often do not teach pupils anything.
However, nearly half of LGBT+ pupils experienced homophobic or transphobic bullying at school.
And only a minority systematically evaluate the quality of education that pupils receive.
Singaporean pupils are roughly three years ahead of their American peers in maths.
It asks pupils and schools to list each other from first to last.
The best schools get the best pupils, but may not make them better.
That includes digital costumes in which teachers dress up to amuse their pupils.
The biggest gains were registered among normally average-scoring pupils and among boys.
The respect of their pupils, deeply earned but modestly borne, outweighs any label.
Anisocoria is a condition characterized by an unequal size in a person's pupils.
"We were predicting that cognitive load from lying would dilate pupils," says Kircher.
We know that the pupils dilate under cognitive stress, even under oral questioning.
He went through the building randomly shooting at fellow pupils before killing himself.
The idea caught on, and soon expanded to cover poor pupils across Louisiana.
"What a gift!" she says hearteningly of the 120 languages spoken by pupils.
She has warned schools against grading pupils on grit in high-stakes tests.
This time some 34 lycées were shut, mostly due to blockades by pupils.
High-school pupils, who in France have their own unions, are particularly unpredictable.
Yet he remembers pupils began rebelling against him whenever he spoke against Wahhabism.
Neither had much impact on pupils' results, at least in the short term.
Striking teachers sent 35,000 pupils out of class for up to two months.
For Mohlapi, this could mean better health and education for thousands more pupils.
In 2017, the school had about 50 pupils in each class, he said.
Domgy's pupils turn to hearts to show love and happiness, and it giggles.
Warby Parker is introducing a new collaboration as part of the Pupils Project.
"How free are you to determine what you tell your pupils?" she asked.
He told his pupils to photograph each subject in 113 seconds or less.
And Mr. Storaro keeps your pupils dancing with the light and dark hues.
The system included seven schools with more than 2,000 pupils, cadres and teachers.
"I hope pupils can return to school as soon as possible," Azzolina said.
The risk is that the new measure will be implemented poorly, frustrating pupils.
As it is, only 53% of middle-school pupils continue to high school.
And his pupils often begged to use his phone to call their parents.
"What nice hats you have, lovely," she said to one table of pupils.
When our pupils dilate, it indicates desire; when they contract, it shows disinterest.
" There would be "no teachers and pupils" but, rather, "masters, journeymen, and apprentices.

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