I.nounCOLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a policy objective
▪ How can we best achieve our policy objectives?
aims and objectives (=the things you hope to achieve)
▪ These aims and objectives are set out in chapters two and three.
an objective assessment (=that is based on facts, not on feelings or beliefs)
▪ The test results will provide an objective assessment of how much you have improved.
an objective criterion (=that is based on fact and not opinion)
▪ The label of 'carer' was defined by the objective criterion of someone who spends more than seven hours looking after someone.
an objective measurement (=one that is not influenced by your opinions or feelings)
▪ The test provides an objective measurement of the student’s listening skills.
declared aim/objective/intention etc
▪ It is their declared intention to increase taxes.
fulfil an aim/a goal/an objective
▪ an analysis of how different countries are attempting to fulfill their political goals
meet...objectives
▪ The scheme does not meet its objectives.
primary purpose/aim/objective
▪ Their primary objective is to make money.
pursue a goal/aim/objective
▪ She was known to be ruthless in pursuing her goals.
ultimate goal/aim/objective etc
▪ Complete disarmament was the ultimate goal of the conference.
▪ Our ultimate objective is to have as many female members of parliament as there are male.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
broad
▪ Overlaying local objectives are broader, system-wise objectives, for example efficiency objectives.
▪ Restructuring must coincide with the broader Community objectives, and Community funds must be matched by national funds.
clear
▪ The teams are performing as self managed units although the manager will agree clear objectives with the team.
▪ They are more open as to style and time deadlines, but still have fairly clear purposes and objectives for their organization.
▪ Teachers and students will appreciate the clear objectives and simple layout.
▪ A clear objective was set and adhered to: recapture the islands.
▪ By providing clear goals and objectives, it minimises frustration and wasted effort. 4.
▪ Indeed, the concept of success could scarcely apply since it worked to no clear objectives.
▪ If purposeful, goal-directed activity is to take place, clear objectives need to be set for all the organisation's activities.
▪ Finally, the purpose of this section has been to help teachers write clear objectives.
different
▪ Although part of the same expedition, Gould's and Sturt's different objectives led them to work independently.
▪ Personnel managers realized that their new mission demanded different performance objectives.
▪ The time-scales over which different objectives should be achieved may vary considerably, depending on the level at which they are applied.
▪ These pressures reflect two quite different objectives.
▪ Within these initiatives, different objectives, participants, funding arrangements, and approaches have been identified.
▪ Reconciliation implies the need to achieve harmony by making different objectives compatible.
▪ Thus Stiglitz sees the control problem as a multiple-principal-single- agent problem with each principal having a somewhat different objective.
▪ The public service broadcasters and the commercial broadcasters increasingly have different objectives.
economic
▪ The regulation of money supply may be used by governments to achieve specific economic objectives, e.g. full employment or price stability.
▪ The response of most governments has been to manipulate the economy in order to secure some trade-off between the conflicting economic objectives.
▪ Second, analysis was carried out of the existing capabilities of the Management Committee with regard to what might be appropriate economic objectives for them.
▪ Particular attention was directed to the lack of accordance between bargaining outcomes and national, economic policy objectives.
▪ We believe development plans are a vital means of securing the integrated approach to environmental and economic objectives which the guidance seeks.
▪ There would be no need for a choice between economic objectives if they were all uniformly related to one controllable variable.
▪ The reader is referred to Chapter 12 for a more thorough discussion of the compatibility of these economic objectives.
environmental
▪ There was also an environmental objective - to maintain a proper balance between human needs and the natural environment.
▪ We ask how we can make environmental objectives tie in with business objectives - which means profit.
▪ Your help in achieving the environmental objectives is vital in ensuring the greening of the whole Company.
▪ We believe development plans are a vital means of securing the integrated approach to environmental and economic objectives which the guidance seeks.
▪ Admittedly the focus is changing from production support to measures designed to meet social and environmental objectives.
▪ They should be seen as complementary contributions to the wider management of our transport, environmental and social objectives.
important
▪ This illustrates the important link between objectives and assessment.
▪ Another important objective of financial statement analysis is to develop a reasonable basis for forecasting the future.
▪ They are followed by a very important affective objective.
▪ We must not allow all these important objectives to be imperiled during the hurly-burly of budget negotiations.
▪ An important objective in counselling is to help the older individual live for today rather than for an uncertain tomorrow.
▪ Describe why it is important to set objectives in the firm and comment on the problems of setting objectives.
▪ An important objective of the Centre will be to elucidate these relationships.
▪ Strategic objectives Pearl's invitation to tender set out several important objectives.
key
▪ This is still a key financial objective.
▪ What are the key objectives for your company over the next one to five years? 8.
▪ This strategy was based on a number of key objectives.
▪ Their solution was of course a key objective of the Powick project, which was still at an early operational stage in 1979.
▪ This strategic approach aims to optimise information and technology as valuable resources to achieve the key business objectives of the corporation.
▪ The county council's Social Services committee endorsed the paper's key objectives at their meeting last week.
▪ He added that it was important that key educational objectives were addressed from the start.
main
▪ It is to help us reach our organization's main objectives.
▪ The main objective is to find a solution agreeable to the company in terms of its feasibility and cost.
▪ Management critique Hates repetitiveness; focuses on the main objectives, rather than on getting details of individual tasks right.
▪ At this stage his main objective was to catch a wave all the way into the beach.
▪ If the main objective is vertical equity, the ability to pay. principle must usually take precedence.
▪ His main summer objective, as usual, was to get through to his holiday.
▪ Its main municipal objectives were efficient and accountable administration based on political and administrative decentralisation.
major
▪ The major objective of the study is therefore to investigate empirically the strategic behaviour of such firms.
▪ As a result the protection of the environment is one of our major objectives.
▪ A successful system for evaluating work-inhibited students must accomplish two major objectives.
▪ Hence security of supply continues to be a major objective of Community energy policy.
▪ Conformity with the group is still a major objective.
▪ The major objective of the counsellor, especially the counsellor who actively seeks to combat ageism, is to encourage involvement.
▪ Some of its politicians were backward-looking in that their major objectives were to remedy inter-war problems.
national
▪ All succeeded in meeting most of their local and national objectives of moving people into the community.
▪ It represents the germ of an idea which someday might explode into a national objective.
▪ Subjects depend on each other. National objectives postulate certain contents.
▪ This matter must not be singled out in a way that allows it to be used to override National Park objectives.
overall
▪ The overall objective of these measures is to facilitate trade.
▪ The overall objective of waste minimization is applied to each specific design case.
▪ Effective study implies some deeper reflection about overall educational objectives as well as the structure and content of human learning.
▪ The overall objective is to make the ski rock backwards slightly.
▪ This may also indicate preparatory drill in reading skills and the handling of information sources. 2. Overall aims and objectives.
▪ In real terms these overall objectives have been translated into a series of major development projects.
▪ They work together to achieve the overall objectives of the organization.
▪ Liphook are strongly backed this year to achieve their overall objective of bringing Southern League cricket to Ripsley Park in 1993.
political
▪ Rather, we claim, it is the political objective of removing local government's autonomy that is at issue.
▪ The first type, associational interest groups, are organized specifically to further political objectives of the groups' members.
▪ In the 1940s the official press had stated that economic goals would be subordinate to political objectives.
▪ The most direct methods to achieve political objectives involve some form of political action.
▪ To pursue political objectives seriously, they must work with the very people whose religious beliefs are most antithetical to their own.
▪ Second, political objectives can not be as clearly specified as the scientific or rational model seems to demand.
▪ At any rate, non-violence was on its way to becoming a political objective, not merely a moral one.
▪ For more than 100 years, the left saw the powerful, interventionist state as the means to deliver its political objectives.
primary
▪ The seizure of power in the capital had been the rebels' primary objective since 18 July.
▪ Take, for example, the principle of keeping performance results as the primary objective of behavior and skill change.
▪ At the Foundation of the Government's policy lies the primary objective of competition.
▪ Performance is the primary objective of design changes.
▪ But it is desirable to know, in one's own mind at least, what is the primary objective.
▪ Making all-city in track is one of the primary objectives.
▪ I mentioned the primary objective of reducing the number of road casualties.
▪ Keep performance results the primary objective of behavior and skill change.
prime
▪ This instituted a partnership between central and local government with both having as a prime objective the promotion of the education service.
▪ So more and more families moved to the suburbs, with better schools their prime objective.
▪ Ability in the techniques of good management should be a prime objective of all surveyors.
▪ Your prime objective should assist you in coming to terms with the most limiting aspect of verbal presentations.
▪ Their prime objective was to learn, and it was easy to create a fun learning environment.
▪ This was the prime objective and the closing of the card catalogue was a consequence.
▪ The prime objective was to keep plateau production going for as long as possible through increased recovery and satellites.
▪ Nevertheless, the prime objective of forest management remains that of timber production.
principal
▪ Its principal objectives include the promotion of health and safety, the protection of the environment and the establishment of quality standards.
▪ The principal objective of the scheme is to provide each of the fourteen candidates with a 12-month commitment to his appropriate squad.
▪ His principal objective was to clear his name of the suspicion attached to it.
specific
▪ The regulation of money supply may be used by governments to achieve specific economic objectives, e.g. full employment or price stability.
▪ What we have just witnessed is the importance of having a very specific objective.
▪ Chapter 2 identified the five specific objectives of the project: 1.
▪ Disobedience has to be organized, and it has to have both a specific target and a specific objective.
▪ Again, however, a specific objective needs to be established and a suitable tax instrument selected.
▪ Decisions about the effectiveness and appropriateness of different behaviours can only be made within the context of particular situations and specific objectives.
▪ The specific objective of this paper is to show that these children have the worst mortality record of any social group.
▪ A Directive binds member states to certain specific objectives, but leaves them to implement the necessary measures through national laws.
stated
▪ Every research study needs to be assessed on the criterion of whether it measures up to its own stated objectives.
▪ Well stated objectives often suggest the activity necessary to accomplish them.
▪ Occupation policy had two stated objectives: demilitarization and democratization.
▪ This is, unashamedly, a policy of relegating by expediency rather than by any stated objectives.
▪ So, for instance, Taylor and Urquhart found that the cost of relegating by expediency rather than by stated objectives.
▪ It is important to plan the evaluation process at the outset so that it relates to the stated objectives.
▪ There can hardly ever have been a piece of legislation that has so utterly failed to achieve its stated objectives.
ultimate
▪ It is this personhood which is the Monster's ultimate objective.
▪ There was one significant qualification; emancipation was the ultimate objective.
▪ My ultimate objective is complete debt cancellation.
▪ The ultimate objectives of this strategy were of course no different from those of previous post-war governments.
▪ Then they should establish sets of year-by-year targets, the achievement of which will carry them forward towards their ultimate objectives.
■ NOUN
business
▪ We ask how we can make environmental objectives tie in with business objectives - which means profit.
▪ This strategic approach aims to optimise information and technology as valuable resources to achieve the key business objectives of the corporation.
▪ Training is available in telephone skills, letter writing, handling meetings or presentations, to help you meet your business objectives.
▪ In consequence we have developed restrictive practices and engineering, at best, are only partially aware of the business objectives.
▪ We welcome visits to the College to discuss individual nominations and to identify personal development needs related to business objectives.
policy
▪ How successful will this policy objective be?
▪ Particular attention was directed to the lack of accordance between bargaining outcomes and national, economic policy objectives.
▪ Some of the ways in which bureaux have carried out this policy objective are described here.
▪ It is politicians who tend to determine and legislate for policy objectives.
▪ The other main aggregates are dealt with in the next chapter where the major macroeconomic policy objectives are discussed.
▪ The Group Occupational Hygienist has responsibility for monitoring the environment and policing systems to comply with the policy objectives.
▪ The centrality of full employment as a policy objective is electorally expedient too.
▪ Griffiths regarded central government leadership in establishing policy objectives as crucial.
■ VERB
accomplish
▪ The 1974 legislation would appear to have accomplished this objective.
▪ Would another strategy accomplish the same objective at lower costs?
▪ Perhaps her plan had accomplished its objective after all.
▪ We do not agree, however, that the trimester approach is necessary to accomplish this objective.
▪ We can see that managers do indeed use power strategies to accomplish their objectives, and they can clearly articulate them.
▪ A successful system for evaluating work-inhibited students must accomplish two major objectives.
▪ Anti-aircraft fire was intense but largely ineffectual, and we quickly accomplished our objectives.
achieve
▪ The regulation of money supply may be used by governments to achieve specific economic objectives, e.g. full employment or price stability.
▪ Expressions of power often reflect honest differences between people seeking to achieve their work-related objectives.
▪ To achieve these objectives 90 percent of the Fund's resources were allocated to vocational training.
▪ The most direct methods to achieve political objectives involve some form of political action.
▪ Your performance against your job description and progress made towards achieving your objectives will be reviewed on a regular basis.
▪ Further, the most powerful individuals or groups or functions are usually the most important in achieving the organization's objectives.
▪ Suppliers are expected to propose one or more strategies which will achieve the objectives described in this document.
▪ White could achieve the same objectives and avoid the loss of his c3 pawn by playing 37 d3.
attain
▪ The continuation of farming is not so much the objective of the Directive but the means to attain its objectives.
▪ Efficiency relates to the cost in resources of attaining objectives.
▪ The more uncertain and defensive you are, the more difficult it will be to attain your objectives.
▪ We also object to flagrant waste, particularly of resources devoted to attaining our primary objectives.
▪ When their motivations are strong and their targets clear, they are capable of going to incredible lengths to attain their objectives.
define
▪ Identify your problem area and define your objectives briefly and coherently in written form. 4.
▪ So, it is necessary to define objectives, plan for them, and monitor progress.
develop
▪ A third series is being developed with the same objective.
▪ Setting Objectives One of the most important elements in the planning and evaluation process is developing sound objectives.
establish
▪ It is therefore necessary to establish the limited objectives of the index at the outset.
▪ The use of needs assessment to establish measurable objectives and establish goals. 3.
▪ Policy maker and planner: determining values, establishing aims and objectives, prioritising and communicating them. 6.
identify
▪ Chapter 2 identified the five specific objectives of the project: 1.
▪ They also highlight the necessity to continuously identify the objectives and learning outcomes of the course.
▪ The client should identify those objectives as a matter of course in the relevant engagement documentation.
▪ The second aim of the project was to identify how training objectives are being met in practice.
▪ Finally, the formulation stage involves using the results of the assessment process to identify objectives, plans, and strategies.
▪ Planning and control 2.1 How should the organisation identify its objectives and set targets for achievement?
▪ I begin by identifying those objectives which - I hope he agrees - the hon. Gentleman and his party share.
meet
▪ The range is 1.5 percent of base salary for meeting one or two objectives to 5 percent for five or more.
▪ There is also general recognition that for many years prisons have failed to meet these objectives.
▪ How does the actual cost compare with the planned cost for meeting the objective?
▪ I hope and believe that we shall be able to meet that objective.
▪ By virtue of our respective positions in the organization, you can tell me to meet certain performance objectives.
▪ Wherever possible non-destructive approaches outlined earlier should be used to meet research objectives in preference to excavation.
▪ If you have met this objective, fine.
provide
▪ By providing clear goals and objectives, it minimises frustration and wasted effort. 4.
▪ This would ensure services are provided in line with government objectives.
▪ Face-to-face situations provide the context, objectives spell out the desirable end and behaviours are the means.
pursue
▪ Despite their growing unpopularity, the Laudian bishops continued to pursue their objectives with great vigour throughout the 1630s.
▪ We need to learn the lessons of history and pursue our goals and objectives with a single-minded purpose heretofore unknown.
▪ By contrast, recent partnerships have both parties equally active in pursuing their problematical objectives.
▪ To pursue political objectives seriously, they must work with the very people whose religious beliefs are most antithetical to their own.
▪ At no time can I remember ever being stopped from pursuing an objective which was of ultimate potential gain to the company.
▪ Obviously it is not a matter of pursuing both objectives at the same time.
▪ Furthermore, if firms pursue objectives other than profit maximisation then the picture becomes even less clear-cut.
set
▪ Obviously they need to be countered and an objective must be set.
▪ The first step in project management is to set a measurable objective.
▪ If you set unobtainable objectives you will be seen to have failed even if you do a wonderful job.
▪ The board annually will set performance objectives for the superintendent and he will receive bonuses based on how many he meets.
▪ Assessing community care needs in their localities, setting objectives and priorities and formulating community care plans. 2.
▪ First we identify our target and set a measurable objective that states from where to where by when.
▪ They do not set themselves objectives to achieve.
▪ Shaper: pushes the team towards action, sets objectives and looks for outcomes; dominant, extrovert and anxious.
state
▪ Above all, there is the same advantage in stating objectives in behavioral terms.
▪ Few are willing to take the risk of pursuing major new opportunities that are not covered by their stated objectives.
▪ Clearly stating objectives will be a great help in making methods systematic.
▪ The development of overall program goals to be achieved by clearly stated objectives which relate to teacher needs and expectations. 3.
▪ The problem should be clearly and explicitly defined, and the relationship to health should be stated. 2. State objectives.
▪ But a California appeals court found that the club had different purposes than its stated objectives and upheld the school regulations.
▪ Mildara has a stated objective of obtaining an annual return of 15 % on shareholder equity.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ State your business objectives clearly.
▪ The objective of this computer game is to design a city.
▪ The 4th Division's objective was a town 20 miles to the east.
▪ The company's main objective is to keep recyclable material out of landfills.
▪ The President believes that all military objectives have been achieved.
▪ The report focused on three of the business's objectives.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ At worst a vague objective should be couched in very precise terms.
▪ Performance objectives give people the best means to assess and improvise their way through change.
▪ Program objectives are a major focus of the evaluation model.
▪ The following is an example of some cognitive objectives for teaching the nursing care of a patient recovering from heart surgery.
▪ The problem of establishing coherent, explicit and stable objectives for state enterprises applies with particular force to the railways.
▪ The second objective was met by the introduction of a betterment levy on development value.
▪ They recognized that some of their objectives could be reached by administrative action without running the gauntlet of the legislative process.
II.adjectiveCOLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
as
▪ Any comparison between these is dependent upon the further externalization of these values as objective forms.
▪ When you fill out your diary, step outside yourself and be as objective as possible.
▪ These inner phantasies are projected into the external reality which is then re-incorporated as objective reality.
▪ At the meeting, keep your feedback as objective as possible by being specific.
▪ Throughout its search for a solution, Pearl had been determined to be as objective as possible.
▪ Is there such a thing as objective reporting?
▪ It is as objective as the object of which it is a perspectival appearance.
▪ No one who can be as objective about her own thinking processes as you are could be otherwise.
completely
▪ Nor is it a completely objective evaluation.
▪ But since none of us can be completely objective we have a responsibility to say what our biases are.
▪ It is crucial therefore that these guidelines are followed in all cases: a completely objective approach adopted.
more
▪ Opposition Members believe that there should be more objective planning criteria.
▪ Such persons will be much more objective and conscientious critics and that is exactly what you are looking for at this time.
▪ Finally, sociological accounts should be more objective, systematic and potentially verifiable.
▪ There must be more objective standards than that, if shamans as a class are not to expose themselves as downright quacks.
▪ Please write down two or more objective measurements.
▪ It will also give you a more objective idea of how an employer sees you when reading your application form or letter.
▪ Red cell volume would be a more objective indicator of placental transfusion.
▪ In the last few years a more objective method, based on the properties of the material erupted has been devised.
most
▪ Even in the most objective environments, the interpretation process may not be easy.
▪ Alvin had given her several names, Lathem told Truitte, but had suggested that he would be the most objective.
▪ Having been almost born there on skis, she is not the most objective judge.
purely
▪ Obviously, purely objective criteria such as the patient's age or the particular illness can not be justified or relied upon.
▪ Clearly, in Satnam and kindred cases, the purely objective stance which Caldwell has been interpreted to represent has been rejected.
totally
▪ Critical doubt depends on a myth, the idea that human knowledge is totally objective and neutral.
▪ A good organiser is totally objective, even downright hard-hearted in choosing venue, style, speakers and programme.
▪ The Profitboss is totally objective in making people decisions in business.
■ NOUN
analysis
▪ Even a brief moment of objective analysis reveals that this can not be so.
▪ The Congressional Research Service is an independent agency that offers members of Congress objective analysis of issues and legislation.
▪ The emphasis is on objective analysis of evidence rather than on a subjective impression of any single witness.
▪ And this is what the Davenports wanted-an objective analysis of why their son was having so much difficulty being mature and self-sufficient.
▪ It was established to promote independent, objective analysis and public discussion of open economies and relations among them.
▪ In a world filled with guilt and bitterness, there is no room for self-criticism or objective analysis.
assessment
▪ It also hampers any objective assessment of the value of treatment in these patients.
▪ The implication is that further scientific research will eliminate residual uncertainties, allowing for a more objective assessment of harm.
▪ It uses all sorts of quantitative and qualitative data, and allows all types of subjective and objective assessments.
▪ Seeking a second opinion is strongly advised to obtain an objective assessment.
▪ Listing, in theory, is an objective assessment of architectural or historical importance which does not necessarily prevent demolition.
▪ This has meant that many studies tend to concentrate on the objective assessment of a fiscally quantifiable reality.
criteria
▪ Obviously, purely objective criteria such as the patient's age or the particular illness can not be justified or relied upon.
▪ In clinical trials of Crohn's disease, objective criteria of gut inflammation are desirable, particularly if quantifiable.
▪ No two patients were quite alike and objective criteria were scanty.
▪ How far these variations affected the ability of tenants to sublet is difficult to determine in the absence of objective criteria.
description
▪ Structural features of perception, he suggests, might be accessible to objective description even though qualitative aspects are not.
▪ What if language is not a neutral system capable of objective description and analysis?
evaluation
▪ Nor is it a completely objective evaluation.
▪ It demands a kind of distance from the observer, an objective evaluation of its virtues and failings.
▪ The extent to which local advisers can undertake an objective evaluation of a school already familiar to them is one consideration.
evidence
▪ These quotations constitute the objective evidence for the existence and currency of the words, meanings, or phrases which they illustrate.
▪ Our last bit of objective evidence, such as it is, concerns those prints on the scullery window.
▪ In patients disabled by severe dysmotility syndromes, however, they sometimes provide the only objective evidence of abnormality.
▪ For the most part, objective evidence to support these claims, in the form of scientific trials, is still lacking.
▪ But the objective evidence is here on his side.
▪ There is objective evidence that something odd did happen near Roswell in 1947.
fact
▪ But it is not the objective facts that are abnormal, it is the circumstances in which they are observed.
▪ Mostly it was the objective fact that Communism is a rotten system.
▪ The police case does not contain just raw objective facts.
▪ It insists that all research is totally impartial to give readers objective facts about products and services.
▪ The owners' subjective opinions are borne out by objective facts.
▪ Supposing the physician can find no tissue damage or that there is an inappropriate relation between objective fact and subjective complaint.
▪ With the former, conformity to objective fact is the standard of reliability.
▪ There is no such thing as an objective fact.
function
▪ Class origins are less important than the objective function of serving the interests of the ruling class.
▪ We first observe that T1 is uniquely optimal for the objective function because we would have.
▪ Similarly, there is an objective function which has T2 as its optimal tableau.
▪ In general, we will examine problems having p linear objective functions,, which we wish to maximise subject to linear constraints.
▪ However, the objective function increases if we increase any variable.
▪ To accommodate multiple objectives, we will extend the simplex tableau by including an additional objective row for each objective function.
▪ This involves specifying a goal or target value for the objective function.
▪ The up-pseudo-cost is where is the objective function value of the up-problem.
information
▪ In other respects, such as outcome, we have unambiguously objective information.
▪ Lacking objective information on outcomes, they make their decisions largely on political considerations.
▪ Moreover, objective information about the world outside is sometimes obtained in this state.
knowledge
▪ To employ Popper's terminology, it is to move from the world of subjective knowledge to the world of objective knowledge.
▪ Research is an attempt to produce objective knowledge, independent of personal viewpoint.
law
▪ But what are these objective laws?
▪ This implied that it was possible to construct a rational theory based on these objective laws.
measure
▪ First the results from the judgment tasks are reported and relationships between these judgments and a variety of objective measures are explored.
▪ Personality trait ratings will be replaced with more objective measures of performance focusing on job-related outcomes and behaviors.
▪ Our objective measures of light intensity would be discarded if they universally gave answers that contradicted our subjective experiences.
▪ But demographers and social scientists also use more objective measures.
▪ The authors used a rise in faecal fat as an objective measure for toxicity.
▪ A variety of more objective measures have traditionally been used as well by teachers.
▪ Perhaps the most surprising of these five failures to find an objective measure of pain is the last.
▪ However, public perception of risk is often at odds with the objective measures used by engineers.
measurement
▪ The assessment of needs is not, therefore, a matter of objective measurement.
▪ Observations of behaviour based on objective measurement will make it possible to produce statements of cause and effect.
▪ For this reason objective measurement is not possible and the exactitude of the natural sciences can not be duplicated.
▪ Please write down two or more objective measurements.
▪ The method is particularly valuable as an objective measurement to assess the response to therapy.
method
▪ Psychology also often shuts out female subjects from objective method, and leaves them to more qualitative approaches.
▪ It is the only educational institution in the world that teaches aesthetic appreciation primarily through an objective method of investigation.
▪ In the last few years a more objective method, based on the properties of the material erupted has been devised.
▪ Their attempts to provide more objective methods do not challenge the gender bias involved in psychological notions of objectivity.
observer
▪ The slightly later and opposing tradition is that of the lexicographer as the objective observer and recorder of language.
▪ The last thing I wanted was to relapse into the role of a patronizing objective observer.
▪ More objective observers regarded the contest as too close to call.
▪ Scientists like to think of themselves as above the fray, or aside the fray, or objective observers of the fray.
▪ Now Gergen is back at U. S. News as a supposedly objective observer.
order
▪ What makes the idea of an objective order intelligible?
▪ The possibility of an objective order Both sides in the dispute see the issue of criteria as being of key importance.
▪ Yet none of this is quite sufficient to clarify the concept of an objective order.
reality
▪ These inner phantasies are projected into the external reality which is then re-incorporated as objective reality.
▪ The subjective experience of individual actors is brought together with the objective reality of public issues.
▪ Did this energy have some objective reality or was it merely a way of looking at known processes from a different viewpoint?
▪ Thus, what is called objective reality is never fully known.
▪ No objective reality means no certainties and that means agnosticism.
▪ Because they describe an objective reality, descriptive core beliefs are simply valid or invalid.
▪ Essentially, we were exploring subjective experiences of work and pointing to the fact that these experiences become objective reality.
▪ It seems clear that, long before phenomenal consciousness of any fort we can recognise existed, there was an objective reality.
risk
▪ Both are also related to the measures of objective risk.
▪ These descriptions were analysed to calculate a measure of the objective risk of accident at a junction.
▪ Instead the first measure of objective risk, total accident numbers, was chosen as the number for subjects to estimate.
standard
▪ Unfortunately, not all health professionals take the objective standards of their medical training into their public and political comment.
▪ They provided an objective standard by which we could judge ourselves.
▪ There must be more objective standards than that, if shamans as a class are not to expose themselves as downright quacks.
test
▪ If you enjoy games, why not compile a list of objective test questions to use in Trivial Pursuits?
▪ This is an objective test which does not depend upon either the skill or the resources of the particular occupier.
▪ What we need is an objective test that we can apply from the outside to distinguish whether an organism has free will.
▪ But me only objective test of whether an organism has tree will is whether its behavior can be predicted.
▪ The ultimate objective test of free will would seem to be: Can one predict the behavior of the organism?
▪ Instead, the courts will subject the clause to the objective test of reasonableness.
▪ An objective test would be determined by a court.
truth
▪ We are concerned with three main questions in this work: Do moral judgements possess objective truth or falsehood?
▪ However, it is better to distinguish the issue of objective truth from that of rationality.
▪ Still we must believe in love, just as we must believe in free will and objective truth.
view
▪ I can offer an objective view, an informed opinion.
▪ He or she will bring an objective view to team meetings.
▪ They suggest that sociological perspectives are shaped more by historical circumstances than by objective views of the reality of social life.
▪ Tess had a researcher's mind and an objective view.
▪ Antonio was a star dancer and he could not take an objective view of the whole.
▪ Draw conclusions to construct an objective view of the past.
▪ An objective view Choreographers wish to express themselves through dance because a story, theme or music has inspired them.
way
▪ In fact a number of sociologists have argued that there is no objective way of measuring the functional importance of positions.
▪ There is certainly no objective way to compute or scientifically analyze a resolution of the disagreements.
world
▪ We can not say that there is a separate, solid, objective world which different creatures perceive in different ways.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ objective reality
▪ I could use an objective opinion on this problem.
▪ It's always difficult to be objective about such a sensitive issue as abortion.
▪ Originally, I went to the counselor because I needed an objective opinion about the whole situation.
▪ Sometimes it's hard to be objective when the situation gets emotional.
▪ the objective case
▪ The selection board, which decides on promotions, should be strictly objective.
▪ There are no objective signs of injury on the body.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Both relatively objective and relatively subjective criteria present other problems.
▪ But how does this allow a study of style that is objective and exact?
▪ But it does little to show how the subjective and objective aspects of colour are related.
▪ I have decided that I should try to be objective instead, and reflect for a moment.
▪ Is there such a thing as objective reporting?
▪ The emphasis is on objective analysis of evidence rather than on a subjective impression of any single witness.
▪ The interests of the shareholders become an objective standard to govern the actions of the directors.