What is the difference between curricula and curriculum? Curricula is the plural of curriculum This question, asked in a more general way, might be, "What is a common way of forming plural vs singular for Latin-derived words?" There is a whole list of them and they come in multiple patterns: curriculum vs curricula referendum vs referenda datum vs data medium vs media focus vs foci There are certainly more, but these come to mind
single word requests - What to call the best student in a class . . . We are talking here about higher education, especially in the context of curricula that keep a given set of students over the course of several years, being ranked at the end of each year, possibly with competitive admission for the following year The ranking is a weighted average of all marks obtained over the year
Is there a full stop after Mrs. ? [closed] - English Language Usage . . . I teach the UK GCSE and AS A Level curriculum and I need to know if it is still common practice, in 2020, for British English to omit the full stop after honorifics (Mr, Mrs, Ms, etc )? I ask this because I've noticed both the omission, and usage, of the period in English and American texts, and I want to be concurrent with Cambridge curricula
What is the difference between unfeasible and infeasible? I'm not sure of the difference either, but what I am sure of is that, in "The infeasibility of the project became apparent", infeasibility is a noun, not an adjective, and that in "Completion of the project within the timeframe became unfeasible," unfeasible is an adjective following 'become' as they do following'get''BE' 'seem' etc ie, it is not an adverb as claimed
Whats the difference between rigor and rigorousness? Rigor can be talked about in terms of specific course requirements and curricula, in terms of the quality of content and instruction, and in terms of strategies to support improved student achievement Criticism: Rigor: The single-word anthem of educators everywhere
How to mention a course name in an essay? [closed] I searched this online, and I found only a single site with information regarding how to mention a course name in an essay There were two conflicting answers: If you prefer to (or need to) say its