Examples of The Headmistress in a sentence
The Headmistress shall act with procedural fairness in all such cases.
The Headmistress needs to be aware of any matters that are relevant to the Pupil's safety and security.
The Headmistress must therefore be notified in writing immediately of any court orders or situations of risk in relation to the Pupil for whom any special safety precautions may be needed.
The Headmistress is entitled to exercise a wide discretion in relation to the School's policies, rules and regime and will exercise those discretions in a reasonable and lawful manner, and with procedural fairness when the status of the Pupil is at issue.
The Headmistress has arranged for the teachers and other staff in the School to be briefed about your son/daughter’s condition and about other arrangements contained in this document.
The Headmistress is entitled to exercise a wide discretion in relation to the School’s policies, rules and regime and will exercise those discretions in a reasonable and lawful manner, and with procedural fairness when the status of the Pupil is at issue.
The Headmistress may exclude the Parents from School premises if, acting in a proper manner, she considers such exclusion to be in the best interests of the Pupil or any other member of the School community.
The Headmistress will advise the Parents of the Governors' Review procedure current at that time when she informs the Parents of her decision.
The Headmistress may, after consultation with the Parents and the Pupil, decline to enter the Pupil's name for a public examination if, in the exercise of her professional judgement, the Headmistress considers that by doing so the Pupil's prospects in other examinations would be impaired and/or if the Pupil has not prepared for the examination with sufficient diligence, for example, because the Pupil has not worked or revised in accordance with advice or instruction from her tutors.
However, this last measure would not affect to any significant extent the prevailing distribution of power in the governance system of the BWIs. They pointed to the proposal of a double-majority voting system (“one country, one-vote” and a weighted vote) for decision-making as one issue that deserved serious consideration.