「pupils」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)9ページ目

pupils

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  • isted over 1,996 Armenian schools with 173,022 pupils; of these 1,251 schools with over 76,548 pupil
  • s, Berlin and Freiburg, he was one of the last pupils of Edmund Husserl, who is considered the found
  • It currently has around 700 pupils on roll with 120 in the sixth form.
  • The school has over 1500 pupils on roll, ranging from 11-18, including 390 Six
  • al authority, the school stopped accepting new pupils on October 5, 2009 and will close in 2011
  • ess was Miss Margaret Whyte, and there were 80 pupils on the opening day, 17 January 1884.
  • As of 2006, the school had 606 pupils on roll.
  • ddlethorpe has its own primary school, with 66 pupils on roll.
  • As of September 2009 it has approximately 800 pupils on roll.
  • TV while at Primary school with fellow Mellor pupils on the children's show Umbrella, filmed at BBC
  • There are currently approximately 1521 pupils on roll.
  • The school currently has 1,466 pupils on the roll, aged 11 (Year 7) to 18 (Year 13).
  • There are currently about 530 pupils on roll aged 9-13.
  • ollege for boys and girls aged 11-19 with 1272 pupils on roll.
  • As of January 2010, the school has 1,241 pupils on roll.
  • enlarged and by January 1973 there were 1,373 pupils on the school roll.
  • uilsborough Secondary School which takes local pupils on to Key Stage 3, (Year 7 to Year 9), followe
  • It currently has approximately c.280 pupils on roll, aged from six months to 18 years.
  • There are now just over one hundred pupils on roll.
  • There are 865 pupils on roll and the school does have a sixth form.
  • The school has about 820 pupils on roll.
  • an 11 - 18 comprehensive school of about 1100 pupils on role of whom 150 are in the Sixth Form.
  • Van Mander based his list of Frans Floris pupils on Menton's information.
  • There are currently 997 pupils on the school roll.
  • ing Technology College currently has over 1800 pupils on roll, split between the two sites.
  • ) is an 11-18 yr comprehensive school with 860 pupils on roll in Llanidloes, Powys, Mid Wales.
  • es of the 1800s, and by 1900 it had over 4,000 pupils on its register.
  • There are currently 593 pupils on roll in the 9-13 age range.
  • It is a mixed comprehensive with currently 764 pupils on roll.
  • buildings, and a new PFI school was opened to pupils on 2 November 2006.
  • ll Primary School is a primary school with 814 pupils on roll.
  • ckney Church of England Primary School has 140 pupils on its role.
  • (as at 2010), the school has approximately 330 pupils on roll; the figure given in the 2009 Ofsted R
  • There are currently 300 pupils on roll, with 24 of them currently boarding.
  • It has around 70 pupils on roll and the Headteacher is Mrs Eirian Owai
  • There were typically around 1,100 pupils on the roll, as well as 100 full-time teachers
  • ecided to build a new school in Loddon for 180 pupils on the site of the old guildhall on Church Pla
  • With a maximum of 65 pupils on roll, each is treated very much as an indiv
  • The prison has 1167 pupils on its roll as of June 2010, of whom 200 atten
  • It currently (2008) has around 360 pupils on roll from ages 9-13.
  • There are around 750 pupils on roll.
  • There are currently just over 1000 pupils on roll.
  • s the only building available for officers and pupils on campus.
  • It is a comprehensive school and has 1,847 pupils on roll, aged between 11 and 18.
  • As of 2001, there were 418 pupils on the roll.
  • some pupils on that list were later on radio, television e
  • There are 1402 pupils on the roll.
  • ege, which means it can select a percentage of pupils on ability.
  • It has 780 pupils on its roll.
  • e County Council maintained, and there are 810 pupils on roll as of September 2007.
  • There are nearly 700 pupils on the roll at the current time.
  • The school had approximately 820 pupils on roll before its was replaced by the Co-oper
  • The school currently has 843 pupils on roll.
  • Waverley school has 835 pupils on roll at this time.
  • There are 1400 pupils on the roll.
  • Number of pupils on roll: 1428
  • ion of September 2004, the schools had a 1,004 pupils on roll.
  • Today, Crofton has roughly 1,020 pupils on roll, many coming from Crofton, and neighbo
  • There are 401 pupils on roll.
  • onstructed in 1963 and has approximately 1,650 pupils on role.
  • There are approximately 1000 pupils on roll.
  • n the academic year 2009-2010, there were 1396 pupils on roll.
  • The College has around 800 pupils on its roll, including 190 in the sixth form w
  • It is extremely small, with currently 197 pupils on its rolls, in a school space that is only s
  • The school currently has 194 pupils on its roll, with a capacity of 210 pupils.
  • There are currently 470 pupils on roll, in the age range 9-13.
  • In 2007 there were 1915 pupils on the school roll, including 633 in the sixth
  • completely taken over by a school for younger pupils once again, which would for many years be know
  • There is a School Council consisting of eight pupils, one from each class in years 3-6, that meets
  • It only had three pupils, one of whom was David Garrick, and it was onl
  • st of the schools were residential schools and pupils only went home during the holidays and later o
  • Until completion of Key Stage 3, pupils only share classes with other pupils from the
  • Mr Summerfield decided to take a number of pupils onto a flat roof on the second floor of the sc
  • Walter Scott wanted to offer his pupils opportunities which had not been available to
  • ty for the alumni of Clifton College - whether pupils or staff.
  • Science GCSE Course (for current year 10 pupils or younger): The academy teaches two different
  • o play pranks on Mister Rectitude and/or other pupils or members of staff, or come up with ways to c
  • ini and Passerotti were three of his principal pupils or colleagues.
  • the district administration reported that 466 pupils or 17% of the district's pupils received Speci
  • anical Gardens themselves are out of bounds to pupils outside of curricular activity.
  • pread far and wide benefiting countless school pupils over many, many generations.
  • Nearly all pupils over the age of 7 learn an instrument, the vas
  • n School in the Grampian area of Scotland, and pupils over the age of 16 may train to become firefig
  • He would drag pupils over desks and hang them from a hook by their
  • The school can accommodate around 1200 pupils overall, aged from 4 to 18.
  • the school a free one in 1349; before this the pupils paid half the cost of their education.
  • In the 1480s Albertus Pictor or his pupils painted more than forty biblical church wall p
  • ty rankings, so they are targeted by ambitious pupils, parents and schools.
  • t with three specialist teachers who work with pupils, parents, subject teachers and external agenci
  • Pupils participate in games and PE from Year 7 to Upp
  • d for on Monday November 26 and yet again many pupils participated.
  • apitalising on experiences gleaned from former pupils, particularly from those from poor and vulnera
  • uccessful GCSE pass grades in 2005 with 90% of pupils passing maths with a C grade or above.
  • esus Christ Superstar, which involved a mix of pupils past and present.
  • In the soaring finale, pupils past and present raise their voices to cheer S
  • values, which develop a mutual respect between pupils, peers and teachers alike.
  • Attracted to the wealthy mother of one of his pupils, Pennyfeather becomes private tutor to her boy
  • Years 7-11 have about 150 pupils per year.
  • boys, and by the 1960s was admitting about 90 pupils per year.
  • MPW is the small group sizes (maximum of eight pupils per class), which means that students get a lo
  • Some year-11 pupils perform their GCSE Drama pieces in the theatre
  • In 2008, the school pupils performed the famous The Wizard of Oz.
  • All students wear black shoes, with female pupils permitted to wear them with a sensible heel.
  • Its many outstanding aspects include pupils' personal development particularly their cultu
  • phia where he taught music, counting among his pupils pianist Ray Bryant, his brother, bassist Tommy
  • Oakmeeds used to have pupils placed into four different houses, based on ar
  • Christ's College pupils play a form of rugby football, the first to do
  • A large number of pupils play musical instruments and there is an impre
  • However, in 1957, it was damaged after pupils played with matches.
  • A five class room extension for 11-16 pupils plus a new two storey dining room, costing £1.
  • Following closure, pupils primarily transferred to Knights Templar Schoo
  • the author's private use, and published by his pupils probably not until after his death.
  • In 2001, a group of pupils produced a glossy calendar as part of a Young
  • ormance, questioning the involvement of Muslim pupils professing to Christian theology in the festiv
  • singled out for change "Improve assessment of pupils' progress in the non-core subjects by streamli
  • A fall in the number of pupils prompted the school to propose a federation wi
  • nding): Outcomes for individuals and groups of pupils; Pupil's attainment, quality, progress and lea
  • ecial needs school for around 150 mixed gender pupils pupils aged 2 to 19 of whom approximately 35 a
  • -Warner Competition for History and had twelve pupils qualify for the UK Junior Mathematics Olympiad
  • and certainly a contemporary and friend of his pupils R. Josiah and R. Jonathan.
  • One of his pupils, Raba, became his son-in-law .
  • es various events throughout the year in which pupils raise money for a variety of charities.
  • In May 2006, the pupils raised more than £3,300 for the British Heart
  • Pupils range from 4 years old (In Reception) right th
  • It teaches pupils ranged from 5 to 11.
  • ay provides the educational facilities for 150 pupils, ranging from the ages of 4 to 11 in seven edu
  • The school currently has over 1,000 pupils ranging from year 7 (aged 11) up to 6th form (
  • of 2006, Portsmouth High School has around 630 pupils, ranging from three-year-olds in the nursery a
  • In September of 1943, 17 pupils ranging from grades one to four began their ed
  • It has about 300 pupils ranging from the grade 0 to grade 12.
  • It currently caters for 109 pupils ranging from 4 to 11 years.
  • the way that traditional research had isolated pupils rather than seeing that as part of a broader s
  • school's results on the standard measure (% of pupils reaching 5 GCSEs at grades A*-C) jumped from 2
  • 'the outstanding support and guidance that the pupils receive is rooted in the excellent relationshi
  • In 2007, 97% of Hockerill pupils received the IB Diploma.
  • in hall were paid for by the money each of the pupils received to mark the Coronation.
  • hment area is deprived and in 2005, 51% of the pupils received free school dinners as compared with
  • e shaped by these character traits; one of his pupils recorded in his diary that Horace was 'a dipso
  • Malone College believes that all pupils, regardless of ability, are entitled to the be
  • so 2 floors tall, and is where the Key Stage 4 pupils register.
  • As of January 2003 there were 333 pupils registered in primary and secondary school.
  • rganised in the performing arts and sport with pupils regularly organising fund-raising projects for
  • dum in 1999 but residents and secondary school pupils rejected town status.
  • hool was transferred to its campus and its 129 pupils relocated in a remodeled two-storey building,
  • With all pupils remaining on site at lunchtimes and with so ma
  • (Of the latter, most past pupils remember with glee the prescriptions of vitami
  • school closed within twenty-four hours and the pupils removed from the city.
  • at the school has gradually improved and many pupils represent the district or county, while a dist
  • e school holds an annual music festival, where pupils represent their houses in a competition, culmi
  • Fort, enrollment at Cole is open only to those pupils residing on the installation or nearby Camp Bu
  • The curriculum includes having pupils ride with police officers on patrols.
  • , has a length of 4.5 cm and have partly white pupils, ridges on their skin and several stripes on t
  • The method consisted of letting pupils roam freely from clay to drums to paint to ink
  • From the lecture notes taken by Vatable's pupils, Robert Estienne drew the material for the sch
  • to teach theology in Rome, reckoning among his pupils Robert Bellarmine, afterwards cardinal; then p
  • The Chosen Hill Former Pupils rugby club first team plays in the South West
  • Pupils run a debating society, staff a Combined Cadet
  • During the mass, pupils sang and the bidding prayers were read in the
  • sts by the local newspapers and parents of the pupils saved the school from being shut down.
  • hat he received letters from two of his former pupils saying that their wives had died.
  • Every year many pupils secure places on the university courses of the
  • Pupils select courses appropriate to their interests
  • She was one of two pupils selected to be assistant stage managers at the
  • rn school was situated on the North Site, with pupils selected for each school according to their El
  • he strong family atmosphere contributes to the pupils' sense of belonging and the good level of care
  • There are over 650 pupils, separated into four houses: Covesea, Kinnedar
  • In July 2009, three pupils- Shaun Gallard, Ben Parsons and Charles Lowe-R
  • llen educated their only son, whom, with other pupils, she fitted for Harvard University.
  • The intention is that pupils should consider contemporary social, religious
  • redvi Sura is the divinity to whom priests and pupils should pray for insight and knowledge (5.86).
  • e suggested an alternative approach: that such pupils should be allowed to express their opinions, n
  • curriculum for science clearly sets down that pupils should be taught that the fossil record is evi
  • ontroversy by claiming that all Northern Irish pupils should be given the opportunity to study Irish
  • ning that from relatively low prior attainment pupils show good levels of progress.
  • eration American practitioner, one of his star pupils, Sifu Curtis Fujita has a studio in Simi Valle
  • her sunglasses down below her eyes, revealing pupils similar to Jack's when he first showed signs o
  • to 1614, and evidently was one of his favorite pupils, since Sweelinck dedicated a canon to him, pri
  • l's Principal, Maria Caraher with the Bunscoil pupils singing at Christmas time, in the Newry Credit
  • In Rudiments, pupils sit the Common Entrance or Scholarship examina
  • rk School is a secondary school of around 1150 pupils situated in Holton, about 8 miles (13 km) sout
  • It offers pupils small classes and claims to teach traditional
  • The primary school only had around 30 pupils so it was decided to close the school in 2009
  • reatises on natural science for the use of his pupils; some of these were lithographed and others we
  • h the Laxton Junior School, for primary school pupils, some of whom continue their secondary educati
  • Very few (less than 1 percent) pupils speak Welsh as a first language or to an equiv
  • The same report also says that all pupils speak Welsh as a first language or to an equiv
  • Pupils' spiritual, moral and social development is go
  • Despite widespread opposition by pupils, staff, parents and members of the local commu
  • ndependent school for boys and girls aged 2.8 ( pupils start at the beginning of the term in which th
  • age and English Literature is now used for all pupils starting GCSE study from September 2010.
  • Pupils state this does not increase the quality of ed
  • Consequently, year 12 pupils still visit Abbots Hall but do not attend a re
  • The school had twenty five pupils stranded in the USA in April 2010 after being
  • In year 7, pupils study French for the entire year and German, I
  • In the primary school, pupils study their native language, mathematics, hist
  • Pupils studying for their GCSEs must generally take 9
  • There are more than 1500 pupils studying in these schools.
  • e lower school and 200 in the sixth form, with pupils studying for GCSE and GCE A-level examinations
  • ion introduced by Corelli and preserved by his pupils, such as Francesco Geminiani, Pietro Locatelli
  • s a co-educational school offering teaching to pupils suffering from dyslexia or other similar learn
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