Dictionary
To pupil
noun
An orphan who is a minor and under the protection of the state.
Exact(57)
Some of these children go to pupil referral units, specialist establishments designed for excluded students.
The versatility of the writer's trade – poems, reportage, translation – was passed from master to pupil.
Rather it should be as parent to child, teacher to pupil, physician to his patient, prophet to his people.
The secondary school serves two of the most disadvantaged wards in the country, with 65% of students entitled to pupil premium.
I repeatedly watched parents hypnotised by the dubious dream of some sort of intellectual osmosis, passing accomplishment like a cold, from tutor to pupil.
Schoolchildren interviewed by the education researcher Diane Reay noted how such forms of snobbery are passed down, from teacher trainer to teacher, from teacher to pupil.
London has disproportionately more good academies than would be expected if they were spread evenly across the country relative to pupil numbers.
These disciplines the Sophists founded by distilling from experience their general principles and logical structures, thus making possible their transmission on a theoretical basis from master to pupil.
Similar(3)
The teacher-to-pupil transfer can be much, very little or often nothing.
Poland is ahead of the UK when it comes to teacher-to-pupil ratio and levels of tertiary enrolment.
Student mental health is also an extremely serious concern – and it will not be helped by poorer teacher-to-pupil ratios.
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