Discipline
discipline (noun) - the practice of making people obey rules and standards of behaviour and punishing them if they do not
disciplinary hearings
academic discipline
market discipline
strong discipline
firm discipline
personal discipline
mental discipline
a lack of discipline
a breakdown of discipline
lack of discipline
submit to discipline
maintain discipline
requires discipline
disciplinary authority
limiting their disciplinary authority to a significant extent.
few legal challenges to the disciplinary action
his disciplinary record
no nationally agreed procedure for disciplinary matters
a disciplinary panel
a disciplimnary commission
a disciplinary hearing
taking disciplinary action against him
disciplinary deterrents
have at their disposal a range of disciplinary deterrents
disciplinary powers
disciplinary hearings
the bourgeoisie's insistence on loyalty, discipline and modest contentment
it is a disciplinary offence to defy an order from a senior officer
the police authority announced that it was bringing further disciplinary charges against her, following allegations that she made abusive late-night telephone calls to Mr Sharples
you might be subjected to a disciplinary inquiry when you believe that you have done nothing wrong
an employee is entitled to a written statement containing particulars of the terms of the employment, which must include details of disciplinary and grievance procedures available to the employee
the familiar action, a mixture of habit and discipline and grace, made him realize where his heart belonged
threatened with disciplinary action.
disciplinary rules and procedures
a disciplinary hearing
administer disciplinary action
take disciplinary action
the students posed a disciplinary problem to their teachers
deal with a disciplinary matter
disciplinary proceedings against Y
disciplinary procedures where necessary
the disciplinary committee
the reform of the authoritarian disciplinary system
disciplinary procedures instigated properly and fairly
you can police students with disciplinary measures when it's absolutely clear that when they know what the inappropriate behaviour is they nevertheless make a choice that they're going to move beyond those boundaries of appropriateness
Example sentences:
* Perhaps even worse, you might be subjected to a disciplinary inquiry when you believe that you have done nothing wrong.
* It became clear she was on holiday, and when she returned to work a disciplinary hearing was held and she was sacked.
* It's lack of discipline at school and in the home.
* The bourgeoisie's insistence on loyalty, discipline and modest contentment could not really conceal that its real views about what made workers labour were quite different.
* Discipline entirely without tears might be something of a pious hope; but the right approach to discipline can minimize the griefs experienced by children (and adults) in the course of developing into mature members of society (or mature and confident parents).
* Alert yourself to the most likely trouble spots in your life (when it comes to discipline) by filling in the questionnaire or a photocopy of it (see figure 2).
* It is surely high time that the anomaly is ended whereby managers, alone among health service professionals, lack the discipline of defined ethical standards against which their actions can be judged.
* Howard continually pointed out the arbitrariness of prison discipline, and the fact that such an evil was made possible primarily by the absence of formal, written, and published rules.
* Although overt proclamations of the need to maintain English as a" manly" educational pursuit by no means disappeared during the inter-war period, the pages of the Review reveal few of the defensive and often hysterical avowals of the discipline's" manliness" that had been characteristic of the earlier period.
* For the next seventy-five minutes he will be the most important man on the floor-maintaining discipline and relaying all the instructions given him by the team assembled up in the gallery.
* But questions have also been raised about it in non-social areas of linguistics, and these are often attached to reservations about the theoretical nature of sociolinguistics as a discipline.
* In this sense an academic discipline has been built up with an explicitly political stance.
* By the time she was thirteen the routine of agony and rebellion on one side and vengeful discipline on the other had worn everyone out and she was taken to a barber.
* Members may call for a report on policing matters from the chief constable; and can appoint, discipline and fire senior officers.
* Discipline was very very strict in those days but of course with the war coming on and lots of those men going to the forces, things changed drastically during that time and discipline was somewhat more lax after the war.
* It is a disciplinary offence to defy an order from a senior officer, so he can only carry on if he is prepared to take on his immediate boss.
* A week after Miss Halford was re-suspended the police authority announced that it was bringing further disciplinary charges against her, following allegations that she made abusive late-night telephone calls to Mr Sharples, another senior officer and two members of the authority.
* Such legal action in the United States is reported to be seen by teachers there as limiting their disciplinary authority to a significant extent.
* So far there have been very few legal challenges to disciplinary action falling short of exclusion, apart from those concerning the use of corporal punishment which is now banned in the state sector.
* JULIAN DICKS was hero and villan as West Ham's poor disciplinary record suffered again.
* As part of this review I hope that very soon the reports of our disciplinary and appeal committees will be more informative in terms of details of particular cases.
* Breach of these principles is relevant for disciplinary purposes.
* The authorities have at their disposal a range of criminal, civil, and disciplinary deterrents.
* The first is the requirement that not later than 13 weeks after the beginning of the employment, an employee is entitled to a written statement containing particulars of the terms of the employment, which must include details of disciplinary and grievance procedures available to the employee, unless the employer employs fewer than 20 people.
* All the disciplinary powers of The Law Society have been delegated to the Adjudication Committee.
* Rejecting the plaintiff's argument that the section 49 statements had lost their confidentiality following two disciplinary hearings which she herself had attended, Bingham L.J.
* If badly managed companies are no more at risk than efficient ones, however, it seems fair to assume that the disciplinary effect of the market for control is significantly diminished.
* The ordinary disciplinary rules and procedures which the Board applies in relation to its employees will apply in relation to you.
* Calculated stuff, yeah and er, talking of fracas, a lucky escape for Ayrton Senna, in his disciplinary hearing in Paris.
* The Articles of Association of the Association provide for the Council to conduct an enquiry to administer disciplinary action and in the case of an appeal to nominate an arbitrator.
* The thirteen children who developed schizophrenia could be characterised by the following factors: their birth had been relatively difficult (longer and more complicated than average); most of them had been separated from both parents and many placed in children's homes at a young age; they posed a disciplinary problem to their teachers; and some years earlier they had had a rapid autonomic nervous system (ANS) recovery rate.
* If the Panel proposes to take disciplinary action, a right of appeal lies, in certain circumstances, to an Appeal Committee; and
* In cases where the person in breach agrees the facts and the disciplinary action suggested by the executive, the executive itself may deal with a disciplinary matter without referring it to the full Panel.
* Cuervas, who started disciplinary proceedings against both players yesterday, added that Maradona could play for Sevilla `;as long as he behaves in a dignified manner';.
* The survey covered 300 organisations with a combined workforce of 1,220,000 showed that 94 per cent of those questioned have notification procedures; 83 per cent disciplinary procedures where necessary; 82 per cent operate recruitment checks to eliminate the work-shy and 76 per cent circulate absence statistics to managers, to enable departmental comparisons to be made.
* The woman student and King's College wanted the matter dealt with by the University's disciplinary committee.
* Areas where the workforce extended their influence were in the procedures for promotion, where the power of managerial prerogative was weakened and increasing weight was given to seniority and skill tests; in joint determination of rosters tor footplate and train staff; in the ending of split shifts; and in the reform of the authoritarian disciplinary system.
* When all else fails, disciplinary procedures instigated properly and fairly are one of the few protections the public has.
* Well for my own part I think that one can educate students as far as possible in terms of what appropriate behaviour is, and I think that you can police students with disciplinary measures when it's absolutely clear that when they know what the inappropriate behaviour is they nevertheless make a choice that they're going to move beyond those boundaries of appropriateness.
* He went back to the ballet, he said, after a period of doubt, because he walked into a studio and saw a young woman putting her feet into the rosin box to stop her shoes from slipping: the familiar action, a mixture of habit and discipline and grace, made him realize where his heart belonged.






