standardized
(adjective)
A designed or constructed in a standard manner or according to an official standard
Examples of standardized in the following topics:
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Strict Scrutiny
- The legal standard of strict scrutiny, the most stringent standard of judicial review, must be used in all court cases involving affirmative action.
- Strict scrutiny is the most stringent standard of judicial review used in American courts .
- To meet these standards, the law or program must satisfy three tests:
- When the court uses the strict scrutiny standard to evaluate affirmative action cases, the court is employing the standard because the court must do so in every case of suspect classification.
- Describe the three tests a law faces under a strict scrutiny standard
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The No Child Left Behind Act
- The No Child Left Behind Act supports standards based education reform to set high standards and establish goals to improve education.
- NCLB supports standards-based education reform based on the premise that setting high standards and establishing measurable goals can improve individual outcomes in education.
- The standards in the act are set by each individual state.
- The yearly standardized tests are the main means of determining whether schools are living up to the standards that they are required to meet.
- The incentives for improvement also may cause states to lower their official standards.
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Journalistic Standards
- Journalism ethics and standards describe the principles of ethics and good practice journalists adopt in response to specific challenges.
- Journalism ethics and standards describe the principles of ethics and good practice journalists adopt in response to specific challenges.
- The United States and Europe have typically been considered pioneers in the formulation and adoption of these standards, though similar codes can be found in nearly any country that enjoys freedom of the press.
- While the written codes and practical standards of journalism vary somewhat from country to country and organization to organization, they tend to overlap substantially between mainstream publications and societies.
- Ethical standards should not be confused with the common standards of quality of presentation.
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Making Agencies Accountable
- The GAO also establishes standards for audits of government organizations, programs, activities, and functions, and of government assistance received by contractors, nonprofit organizations, and other nongovernmental organizations.
- These standards, often referred to as Generally Accepted Government Auditing Standards (GAGAS), must be followed by auditors and audit organizations when required by law, regulation, agreement, contract, or policy.
- These standards pertain to auditors' professional qualifications, the quality of audit effort, and the characteristics of professional and meaningful audit reports.
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Employment Policy
- Employment policy determines living and working standards that need to be met by the state and the federal government.
- Federal law not only sets the standards that govern workers' rights to organize in the private sector, but also overrides most state and local laws that attempt to regulate this area.
- Federal law provides minimum workplace safety standards, but allows the states to take over those responsibilities and to provide more stringent standards.
- The Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (FLSA) establishes minimum wage and overtime rights for most private sector workers, with a number of exemptions and exceptions.
- This graph of the minimum wage in the United States shows the fluctuation in government guarantees for minimum standards of labor.
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Red States vs. Blue States
- The terms "red state" (Republican-voting) and "blue state" (Democratic-voting) were standardized during the 2000 US presidential election.
- The 2000 presidential election, however, was the first time that red became the standardized color for the Republican Party and blue became the standardized color for the Democratic Party.
- The 2000 presidential election proved significant in standardizing red and blue states with the Republican and Democratic Parties, respectively, because of the confusion surrounding the results of the election.
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Business and Labor in the Economy
- The Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 set the maximum standard work week to 44 hours and in 1950, this was reduced to 40 hours.
- Despite the 40-hour standard maximum work week, some lines of work require more than 40 hours to complete the tasks of the job.
- The Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 set the maximum standard work week to 44 hours and in 1950, this was reduced to 40 hours.
- Despite the 40-hour standard maximum work week, some lines of work require more than 40 hours to complete the tasks of the job.
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Diplomacy
- Standard diplomacy involves government-to-government communication; modern diplomacy has begun to emphasize public diplomacy as well.
- Standard diplomacy can be described as the way in which government leaders communicate with each other at the highest levels; it is the elite diplomacy we are all familiar with.
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State Initiatives Against Affirmative Action
- States sought to limit the reach of federal policies regulating employment standards.
- Peña, which established strict scrutiny standards of review for race and ethnicity-based federal affirmative action programs.
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Policy Evaluation
- Policies may be evaluated according to a number of standards.
- In general, public policies become entrenched over time and are difficult to terminate even if they are evaluated by various standards.