In other words it means that in order to provide the higher quality of students' reflections, teachers must always keep `an ear to the ground' and constantly take part in discussions, which means twice as more extra reading to do. However, in my view, such a work model has a huge potential especially for the ones who only start teaching (e.g. teaching assistants, young specialists) since I strongly believe that blogs provide an immediate and the least formalized form of feedback which is crucially essential especially on the initial stages of teaching career. RESEARCH METHODS In terms of methodology this MA project falls to the category of quantitative research. It will advocate the use of quantitative methods, seek facts of causes of social phenomena without regard to the subjective states of the individuals. It will have an obtrusive and controlled measurement of data. The main focus will be on verification of data, confirmation
In Ukraine--like in Russia--incumbent managers (there is a special term in Russian for such executives/ owners Red Director) were present at the birth of private property and could harness privatization. The political atmosphere of nation building helped keep foreigners-- Russians and Westerners alike--mostly out of the game. The major exception was the financial system; several banks both from the West and the East have entered Ukrainian markets. Crucially for Ukraine's survival, between 2001 and 2008, as metals and chemicals prices boomed on the back of fast international economic growth while the price of gas imported from Russia remained low, terms of trade improved by 50 percent. Monetization also helped to drive this boom, as the ratio of credit to GDP grew extremely fast--from 7 to almost 80 percent over just several years. 7
inaccessible obviously predictably solve suitable dignitary n. a very important or famous person, usually associated with a high position in government Syn. notable Every dignitary in Washington was invited to the wedding. All of the high ranking dignitaries attended the economic summit. crucial adj. of great importance; extremely necessary adv. crucially Syn. critical Favorable weather is crucial to a good harvest. Having all the information necessary to make a good decision is crucially important. elude v. to escape in a tricky way adj. elusive Syn. evade n. elusiveness The criminal has eluded the police for months. Success has been elusive for the team. Evident adj. easy to see, usually because of some proof adv. evidently Syn
sentence, of the form "The F is G." (5) The author of Waverley was Scotch.4 (5) appears to be a simple subjectpredicate sentence, referring to an individual (Sir Walter Scott) and predicating something (Scottishness) of him. But appearances are deceiving, Russell says. Notice that the ostensible singular term, "The author of Waverley," consists of our troublesome word "the" pasted onto the front of a predicative expression, and notice too that the meaning of that expression figures crucially in our ability to recognize or pick out the expression's referent; to find the referent we have to look for someone who did write Waverley. Russell suggests that "the" abbreviates a more complex construction involving what logicians and linguists call quanti- fiers, words that quantify general terms ("all teenagers," "some bananas," "six geese a-laying," "most police officers," "no light bulbs," and the like). Indeed, he thinks that (5) as a whole abbreviates a conjunction of three quantified