proctor
ಪ್ರಾಕ್ಟರ್
definition
verb
The students are taking the exam in two different rooms, so I did not want to proctor .
serve as a proctor.
noun
In reality, the examiners help the proctors in all the counting and recounting, both to save time and because it's also their necks on the line if anything goes missing.
a person who monitors students during an examination.
The kilt ban was sparked after university proctors - officials responsible for student discipline - complained about the variety of flamboyant clothing being worn to graduations.
an officer (usually one of two) at certain universities, appointed annually and having mainly disciplinary functions.
translation of 'proctor'
ವಿಶ್ವವಿದ್ಯಾಲಯದ ಶಿಸ್ತುಪಾಲನಾಧಿಕಾರಿ,
ವಕೀಲ
example
Because the participants were told that they had to answer every question, even if they had to guess, the 'proctor' informed them when half the allotted time had elapsed so that they could pace their remaining responses as required.
I took a deep breath, when the 'proctor' asked me if I wanted to do my solo, scales or sight reading first.
The Vice Chancellor, 'proctor' and many faculty members, scholars of AMU were present at the funeral.
Chief 'proctor' and Head of the Department of Urdu of Government Raza PT College, Khan had devoted his life to the service of Urdu.
A Calvinist 'proctor' in the nineteenth century had noticed its contributors were all insubordinates and shut it down: by fines or flogging where possible, arson where not.
Any students enrolled in the program will require a 'proctor' at their plant or office location.
He held various university posts during this time including 'proctor' and he received a number of degrees such as M.A. in 1323 and B.Th. some time before 1333.
This resolves many issues, mainly the increasing issue of false fire-alarms, 'proctor' issues and abnormal waiting periods between exams.
A 'proctor' read the scales out loud to the students with learning disabilities, since their reading levels were generally low and they tended to have difficulty with the instructions.
On the morning of the seventh day - as my exhausted hand added the last feeble marks of punctuation - the 'proctor' (to whom the local constabulary had given permission to re-enter the building) returned.
The proctor mailed the completed student exams and assignments to the instructor in a postage paid envelope that the 'proctor' received with the exam.
Assuming everything checks out, the 'proctor' records the fingerprints (some number of them) of the person and he is issued a V-ID card.
When a 'proctor' admitted us into the exam room, single file, he checked my ID and directed me to table number 14.
He was known for his mysterious changes in status, for at one time he might be a lackey, the next a noble, then a musketeer to an abbe or all the way to being a 'proctor' .
Mr. Landon had called out sick, and the 'proctor' assigned to our 8th period Literature class dismissed us early for the weekend.
Whether he's using his digital kung-fu skills to single-handedly stomp an army of simulacra or engaging in sweaty coitus with Carrie-Anne Moss, he looks about as concerned as your average high school exam 'proctor' .
I suspect that she, or her 'proctor' , used this phrasing because it was just vague enough to make its defamatory value uncertain, even under the emerging rules in the London consistory.
Tristyn cautiously pulled out her small box of colored pencils, taking precautions not to disturb the 'proctor' .
I don't stay in the room the whole time like a regular 'proctor' .
The 'proctor' will administer tests and act as liaison with Purdue University.
The students are taking the exam in two different rooms, so I did not want to 'proctor' .
The exam was scheduled to begin at 9 AM, but the 'proctors' in the ‘special’ room did not hand out the test papers until closer to 10.
The ritual started more than eight months earlier at Keesler Air Force Base, Miss., when combat control 'proctors' realized he wasn't being physically challenged.
She is said to be considering taking 'proctorial' or police action against the girls, who admitted receiving the e-mails.
The pair feel they have been treated harshly but are co-operating with college authorities, confessing their actions to university 'proctors' .
The memoirs note the nightly patrols by 'proctors' searching for students, an offence liable to bring hefty fines and other impositions.
Do you have an argument here, I mean, if it is a decision under an enactment, universities have their own internal structures, appeal mechanisms to professorial boards, 'proctorial' boards and ultimately to university governing bodies.
Anyone found to have breached university regulations on computer use would be referred to the 'proctors' , and would be subject to investigation.
The police and 'proctors' have been informed, and College has been liaising with both on the appropriate measures to be followed.
The kilt ban was sparked after university 'proctors' - officials responsible for student discipline - complained about the variety of flamboyant clothing being worn to graduations.
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