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Parents Say What They Want Next From National Childcare Strategy
Daycare Trust launches MORI survey findings and a new report calling for children's centres in every neighbourhood
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Turnout - How Low Might It Go?
Our poll on the image of the party leaders for The Times this week reveals for the first time in four elections both the Prime Minister and the Leader of the Opposition are viewed predominantly negatively by the British public.
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MORI Schools Survey 2001 - Engineer article
Article on children's attitudes towards and knowledge of engineering
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MORI Research Backs RFU's Vision For The Game
A survey of 425 grass roots rugby clubs, exploring support for RFU's Eight Year Strategic Plan and long-term vision.
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Political Attitudes in Great Britain for April 2001
Q1 How would you vote if there were a General Election tomorrow?
[If undecided or refused at Q1]
Q2 Which party are you most inclined to support?
Base: 1,935 -
Crime Concern For Low-Income Older People
Help the Aged warns parties: ignore grey vote at your peril
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Time Spent On Assessment "Ineffective"
Nine out of ten teachers say they are spending a lot of time on assessment procedures that most claim are ineffective. The results of a survey1 carried out by MORI on behalf of Goal plc, the online assessment provider, show that the average teacher works 56 hours a week, three and a half hours of which are spent on formal assessment - writing and preparing, marking, analysing and reporting.
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Shakespeare Still Relevant, Poll Reveals
Survey exploring views on SHakespeare and his relevance to today.
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The Wrong Package
The public services in Britain follow their own agenda, not what people want them to do. This is the finding of an opinion poll commissioned from MORI by the Adam Smith Institute. The conclusions are published today as a report entitled The Wrong Package, and co-authored by Dr Madsen Pirie & Professor Robert Worcester.
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Electorate Under The Microscope
As the pace of the election build-up has temporarily slowed, let us take the chance to look over the details of the battlefield - that is, the minds of the British electorate.