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According to BYU, in 2008, 10% of female students and 78% of male students were returned LDS missionaries. This is 46% of the total university student population.
Mary C. Hodgkin has written: 'Australian training and Asian living' -- subject(s): Malaysian students, Returned students
Western ideas, such as democracy
No. The sentence is ambigious in it's meaning. Although the reader might assume that the teacher returned exams that did not have grades marked upon them, the teacher could have been returning exams to students who were themselves not marked with grades.
Well you can but you have to be careful with other students
Diether Hopf has written: 'Schulische Eingliederung von Remigrantenkindern in Griechenland' -- subject(s): Returned students 'Mathematikunterricht'
The Ministry of Magic refuses to accept that Voldemort has returned, so Harry trains his fellow students how to defend themselves.
Option B, "Students returned to their dormitories," is not an example of discriminatory or biased language. The other two options use stereotypical and negative language towards specific groups based on their race or ethnicity.
There are no set temperatures for schools to have to close in the United States. Individual school districts make that decision based on whether going to school at a given temperature would be unsafe for students.
Y. C. Wang has written: 'Chinese intellectuals and the West, 1872-1949' -- subject(s): Western influences, Returned students, Civilization, Multicultural education
No. 100 C is the highest, then is 100 F, and 100 K is the lowest.
When schools block certain Internet sites from use by students (and everyone else at the school), the school administrators have good reasons for these decisions. First, they want students to focus on schoolwork, rather than on social networking sites or game sites. Second, schools act to protect students. Many websites are not appropriate. Third, many websites are risky because all websites can be or become infected with viruses or malware. IF these are accessed from school computers, the entire network could become infected. If school computers and the network become infected, the whole system could crash. Then, no one would be able to use the computers for any purpose! Fourth, school networks contain more than access to the Internet. Networks contain important information about your educational process. It wouldn't be good if a computer virus wiped out student grades--- else, all the students would have to repeat all those subjects! That wouldn't be cool at all. So, even though it may seem unfair, students should understand that blocks on Internet sites protect all students. Also, be aware that students who attempt to bypass the blocks that schools set up risk getting into a lot of trouble. It's just not worth it.