Prof Burgess said higher marks could possibly be equated to improvements in the quality of teaching.
BBC: NEWS | UK | Education | Degree grades 'in need of update'
They announced record production in their last quarter which equated to about 23% growth over the prior year.
The Conservative-controlled council said it equated to one in six staff and about a third would be senior managers.
These numbers equated to nearly one billion potential impressions being created with a reach of more than 130 million people.
He told the assembly this equated to more than 150 empty schools.
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The Department for Culture, Media and Sport said the government's allocation equated to less than 0.1% of the total tickets available for the Games.
That equated to a small rise in disposable income during those months, which may have just done enough to offset the current rise in gasoline prices.
At the time, the partnership said the cut equated to a 71% drop in its income from the council and enforcement at mobile sites would cease "with immediate effect".
Smaller formats learned a long time ago the smaller format equated to lower sales volume and that in turn required higher margins in order to generate an acceptable level of return.
According to the report, the average bed-blocking across January equated to 35 patients per day, compared with 26 a day for January 2012, and 23 daily for the year as a whole.
As part of their efforts to counteract the downturn, governments got state banks to lend more, most notably in China, where new loans in 2009 equated to about a third of GDP.
"They have themselves had a 27% cut to their own funding over three years and we just don't understand why that equated to a 42% cut to the funding for our services, " she said.
Some of these talking heads have equated holding gold to also having an arsenal of guns in their home.
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Rugby Football Union chief disciplinary officer Judge Jeff Blackett had equated the offence to abuse of a match official, a position Armitage rejected.
Republicans have equated such a move to legislative warfare.
CNN: Analyst: Post-Kennedy health care bill may be more sweeping
In tracing developments from 1500 to 2000, it equated a nation's gross national product with its military, political and economic prowess.
"She equated the proposed title with being able to tell people what to do, " recalls Susan Heathfield, a human-resources consultant in Williamston, Mich.
Love is a universal experience and in many place love is equated with marriage, so emotionally people come to understand love and marriage in that way.
After being quoted in Mr Spadaro's paper, Mr Raymond took to his own website to note that he had deliberately equated cathedrals with proprietary, closed-source software directed from above, by contrast with the more chaotic bazaar of equals which produces open-source code.
Valeo in 1976 and in more recent cases, the court essentially equated campaign money with free speech and outlawed any efforts to restrict interest groups from pouring money into "issues" advertising that helps their chosen candidates.
Ever since then, politicians have equated homeownership with the American Dream and fallen all over themselves to demonstrate their fierce dedication to it.
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Once our critter brain has equated a particular phenomenon with safety or with survival, it will continue to carry out that program.
Besides, samurai believe it is better to fight to a tragic and noble end than to surrender (which, in the corporate world, is equated with being acquired).
"The inflation data should come as a relief to existing home loan customers who have been saddled with high equated monthly instalments (EMIs) for the last few years, " reports financial website NDTV Profit.
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