how schools are organised in terms of roles and responsibilities. 2.1: Explain the strategic purpose of: a) School Governors b) Senior Management Teams c) Other Statutory Role- SENCO d) Teachers e) Support Staff 2.1 a) School Governors. The School Government is responsible for the conduct of the school and must promote high standards of educational achievement at the school. They provide a structured view of the school by having their own roles to keep an good eye on‚ e.g. : Health&Safety
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Rose Landi Professor Bach Cultures and Values Summary on "An Incident in the Shabashi Household" The story‚ "An Incident in the Shabashi Household" plays an excellent role in woman vs. the constructs of arranged marriages. This story was taken place in Egypt in the twentieth century where women’s freedom was quite limited. In the Arabic culture women were usually sold into marriages by their parents and never had any say into their decision making. However‚ this story pertains to the Egyptian
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comprehensive note on the role of a teacher in the Montessori classroom. The teacher in a Montessori classroom takes on a completely different role to a teacher in a traditional classroom. So much so‚ that directress or guide are preferred over the word teacher. The reason for this is that it is the teachers main role to guide the children and help the children in their learning. The teacher isn ’t a person who pushes the child to learn when & what she wants them to learn. The teacher doesn ’t cause the
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back-office operations * Discuss Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery and their necessity for Banks * Understand the criticality of Risk Management‚ particularly in light of Basel * Evolution and growth of Interbank Payment Systems and their role in future of banking 2.2 Objectives To generate an understanding of the critical need for Technology in Banks To inculcate among students a sound
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CITY & GUILDS 6305 LEVEL 5 DIPLOMA IN TEACHING IN THE LIFELONG SECTOR DTLLS Unit 401 Roles‚ responsibilities and relationships in lifelong learning By Leyah Knight Task A: Research report 1Professional standards and legislations in the lifelong learning sector have undergone many changes and will continue to ensure those‚ who are teaching‚ are essentially up to the job and are in a safe environment to do so
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Understanding your own role and responsibilities in Lifelong Learning. My role in lifelong learning is to ensure my knowledge‚ skills and ability to deliver the required information is as up to date and relevant to my learners as is possible to ensure I am always providing appropriate information in a professional manner. A particularly important aspect or remaining up to date is ensuring my knowledge of legislation‚ regulatory requirements and codes of practice are all up to date‚ primarily
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related to teaching; the Institute for Learning (IFL) i.e. the professional body responsible for maintaining acceptable standards and professionalism for teachers. Set out its code of professional practice in 2008‚ outlining expectable behaviour for its members. Its key points being: Integrity Respect Care Practice Disclosure Responsibility The codes’ purpose is to protect both its body and members from bringing teaching into disrepute‚ having a duty to investigate claims of misconduct in regard
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Role of Higher Educational Institutions in Corporate Social Responsibility By Ms. Susan Abraham Assistant Professor‚ SCMS School of Technology and Management‚ SCMS Campus‚ Muttom‚ Aluva ’ 683106 Email: susan2112@gmail.com Phone: 9495114276 Abstract Higher educational institutions in India have been contributing to the knowledge base of our country. They have been enrolling students at the rate of 10 percent in the year 2007. Privatisation of these institutions has brought in
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Anna Hazare From Wikipedia‚ the free encyclopedia | This article may require copy editing for grammar‚ style‚ cohesion‚ tone‚ or spelling. You can assist by editing it. (August 2011) | | This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia ’s quality standards. (Consider using more specific clean up instructions.) Please improve this article if you can. The talk page may contain suggestions. (August 2011) | Anna Hazare | Anna Hazare in Nanded‚ Maharastra | Born | Kisan Hazare 15
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Explain virtue ethics – Virtue ethics is agent-centred not act centred. The theory is that practicing virtuous behaviour will lead to become a virtuous person and contributing to a virtuous society. A virtue is habitually doing what was right – being good requires practice of a certain kind of behaviour. This is different from very other ethical theories because it looks at the characteristics of a person (agent-centred) rather than the actual act (act centred). There are a few scholars that
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