Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Standardized. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Standardized Quotes And Sayings by 95 Authors including Harvey Cushing,Mike Krzyzewski,Winston Churchill,Steven Pressfield,Siobhan Vivian for you to enjoy and share.
Standardization of our educational systems is apt to stamp out individualism and defeat the very ends of education by leveling the product down rather than up.
In putting together your standards, remember that it is essential to involve your entire team. Standards are not rules issued by the boss; they are a collective identity. Remember, standards are the things that you do all the time and the things for which you hold one another accountable.
Let us set up a standard around which the brave and the loyal can rally.
performing the commonplace under uncommonplace conditions.
Survival of the generic.
Standards wars involve lots of variables, and understanding them often seems more an art than a science. They generally involve just two big players, and end in a winner-take-all situation.
Ordinary raised to extraordinary.
I believe in the single standard
for men and women.
Standards are always out of date. That's what makes them standards.
Everything is relative but there is a standard which must not be deviated from, especially with reference to the basic culinary preparations. A. Escoffier The Complete Guide to the Art of Modern Cookery
Set realistic terms for its implementation
Have you ever thought, headmaster, that your standards might perhaps be a little out of date? Of course they're out of date. Standards are always out of date. That is what makes them standards.
Uniformity in the currency, weights, and measures of the United States is an object of great importance, and will, I am persuaded, be duly attended to.
Shaken and not stirred.
I would say that I'm pretty mainstream.
Standardized state tests are a scam! The educational system is rigged. It is set up to where the wealthy schools, get all of the state funding. The poverty-stricken schools, don't get enough funding due to standardized tests scores. See my point?
Custom determines what is agreeable.
The school system is the homogenizing hopper into which we toss our integral tots for processing.
But there is one thing most companies struggle to standardize, and ironically, it's the most important part of our efforts to gain and sustain results. It is leadership.
other tendency emerges because we rarely like the idea of standards that are inconsistent and uneven from place to place. It seems neater and fairer to provide a consistent standard for everything, whether it's education, the road network or the coffee at
As has been said, standards are always out of date - that is why we call them standards.
Without standards, there can be no improvement.
Get excellence or live average.
LINEAR IS FOR OTHER PEOPLE.
Your members are looking for variety, not uniformity.
Bound by custom or unique by choice.
when confined to technical use. In like
In our state - no kidding - they are called Standards of Learning, or "SOLs." (I don't think anyone intended the joke.)
Average. It was the worst, most disgusting word in the English language. Nothing meaningful or worthwhile ever came from that word.
Simplified spelling is all right, but, like chastity, you can carry it too far.
Hurray for standardized valve systems!
I'd rather drink strychnine than be called 'normal.
Radio and television speech becomes standardized, perhaps better English than we have ever used. Just as our bread, mixed and baked, packaged and sold without benefit of accident of human frailty, is uniformly good and uniformly tasteless, so will our speech become one speech.
To conform is to be average.
Mainstream is the melting pot of everybody sometimes for much of its faults and triumphs it's the world out there that reveals so much more about you than the man-made boundaries that are created.
Derivatives trading should be standardized and as much as possible moved to clearinghouses.
Standardized sizes made inexpensive, off-the-rack garments economically feasible. They gave shoppers a reliable guide to finding clothes in self-service shops.
An uniformity of weights and measures, arranged upon mathematical principles, would be a benefit to the whole commercial world, if it were wise enough to adopt such an expedient.
I will not be labelled as average.
We are creating a one size fits all system that needlessly brands many young people as failures, when they might thrive if offered a different education whose progress was measured differently. Paradoxically we're embracing standardized tests just when the economy is eliminating standardized jobs.
Everything is rated.maintain high rating in life
Dear Mr. Gibbon. Sorry I was absent. Here is some salted food. Please grade it the way you would a jenti piece of beef jerky.
Spec = asking the world to have sex with you and promising dinner date to one lucky winner.
Our goal should be minimum standardization of human behavior.
With the commissioning of new schools undertaken by a local director of school standards, decisions will be fair and transparent, rooted in the needs of the local community. The admissions code and the role of the adjudicator will also be strengthened to provide fairness for all children.
. . .standards are for: They establish what children should know, not how they are taught or measured.
Custom is sanctified absurdity.
What gets measured gets managed.
A curious observation is the uniform way that committees review curriculum for each field of study. Too often, authorities have a knee-jerk impulse to declare that 'all curriculum areas will be the same.' In fact, real and significant differences exist between fields of study.
I realized if I didn't have a standard for something I would fall for anything.
I won't be labeled as average.
variety is life; uniformity is death
Neither I nor anyone else knows what a standard is. We all recognize a dishonorable act, but have no idea what honor is.
Once I tried to make a standardization of staircases. Probably that is one of the oldest of the standardizations. Of course, we design new staircase steps every day in connection with all our houses, but a standardized step depends on the height of the buildings and on all kinds of things.
I stray away from formulaic, the formatted.
If it's accessible by hundreds of millions of people, then it's as mainstream as it gets.
Ubik ... Safe when taken as directed.
proportioned. While
I don't like playing standards. I like to do my own cutting edge work.
We've become so used to the concept as a measuring and sorting tool, that it and its correlates - below-average, above-average - are everyday speech. We don't even question the language, although the challenges we face require a different mindset.
Common standards ensure that every child across the country is getting the best possible education, no matter where a child lives or what their background is. The common standards will provide an accessible roadmap for schools, teachers, parents and students, with clear and realistic goals.
Conventional might not always be the right thing.
A_t_sm.... only can be treated with U & I
NEVER settle for 'normal.
How can a man live without a standard?
Whatever the measurement system is, it needs to be consistent, repeatable and as unbiased as possible.
considerable discussion, the Draft Committee's submission received
all systems are go.
I began to fear that Mos Def was being treated as a product, not a person, so I've been going by Yasiin since '99. At first it was just for friends and family, but now I'm declaring it openly.
ultra-professional, a fair but firm
What gets measured gets improved.
The extraordinary's the norm.
rang with proficiency
I'm an unpure purist, something like that.
Portray your product as average and that's all that it will ever be.
Normal is fading away. Governments and industries and schools like normal, because it's easier, it scales and it's profitable. But people don't like it - we want to be who we are, not who some marketer tells us to be.
There are no variations except for those who know a norm, and no subtleties for those who have not grasped the obvious.
Style isn't an excuse to cook without a standard. Style just determines the set of rules you choose.
The unusual wins out over the usual.
I'm incredibly enthusiastic about the normalization, I think it's very promising. But I do think there are some worrisome aspects.
Let's not have a double standard. One standard will do just fine.
Elementary, my dear fucksticks
Quite or be exceptional. Average is for losers.
Ordinary, said Aunt Lydia, is what you are used to. This may not seem ordinary to you now, but after a time it will. It will become ordinary.
The idea is to have global standards. There is so much travel that if you just had a regional standard, it would probably ultimately have to be changed.
appliancization.
The precision provided (or enforced) by programming languages and their execution can identify lacunas, ambiguities, and other areas of potential confusion in conventional [mathematical] notation.
Just because something is a standard doesn't mean it is the right choice for every application. Like XML, for example.
I tell you, sir, the only safeguard of order and discipline in the modern world is a standardized worker with interchangeable parts. That would solve the entire problem of management.
The one size fits all approach of standardized testing is convenient but lazy.
People are so codified - it's sad.
Sproul. These were discussed in a number of ways by groups of delegates from the Advisory Board and in various partial and plenary sessions at the summit. Furthermore, written comments were solicited and received in considerable numbers. A Draft Committee composed of Drs. Clowney,
Quality is what is popular a hundred years later.
The singular secret of khaddar lies in its saleability in the place of its production and use by the manufacturers themselves.
We cannot do better than to accept the standards of other times, and to adapt them to our uses.
Control, edit and distill.
uncomplicated things
Just as modern mass production requires the standardization of commodities, so the social process requires standardization of man, and this standardization is called equality.
Introducing 'Lite': the new way to spell 'Light'; but with twenty per cent fewer letters.
CEOs hate variance. It's the enemy. Variance in customer service is bad. Variance in quality is bad. CEOs love processes that are standardized, routinized, predictable. Stamping out variance makes a complex job a bit less complex.