What's the difference between invigilance and invigilancy?
Invigilance
Definition:
(n.) Alt. of Invigilancy
Example Sentences:
(1) On some courses, students can take an exam costing about £120 – set by the university that runs the course – in a test centre which requires ID and supplies invigilators.
(2) "Facilitated by organised criminals, this typically involved invigilators supplying, even reading out, answers to whole exam rooms or gangs of imposters being allowed to step into the exam candidates' places to sit the test.
(3) Something the students take as seriously as the invigilators and the headteacher.
(4) "There were two invigilators but no attempt was made to stop people cheating.
(5) I really thought: ‘I am going to have to vote Labour because it’s the lesser of two evils in order to keep the Tories out’ – but now, after watching the debate, my feeling is ‘Damn it, I’ll just go with my heart and vote Green’,” said Becca, 58, an exam invigilator.
(6) The art gallery is now a bigger place, it will require more energy, more staff to invigilate it and run it, so we have to bridge that gap,” she said.
(7) The University were brilliant though, and allowed me to sit them in a separate room with only myself and an invigilator, so I was able to talk to them very quietly, things like: "I know you're affected by how scared I feel, but please can you not talk to each other, it's really distracting."
(8) They begin with extended close-ups of rotating fans, or disrupted exam invigilations shown for so long they become unsettling.
(9) Waqar-Ullah Khattack, one of four invigilators at an exam for 61 students aged 14-16 in the school, told the Guardian he and his colleagues told the students to get down on the floor as soon as they heard firing from an AK-47 and blasts from grenades at around 11am.
(10) The rise of penalties – for a range of failures, including opening question papers early, lack of invigilation, allowing pupils to sit papers at the wrong time or giving inappropriate help to candidates – comes as instances of cheating by pupils continue to drop.
(11) One night, as she sits an exam for her master’s in business administration in the hotel lobby, being invigilated via Skype from the US, he waits patiently, holding her bag.
(12) Psycho was itself the film that so emphatically answered that question in 1960 and the story of its creation – based on Stephen Rebello's enthralling 1990 account, Alfred Hitchcock and the Making of Psycho , and scripted by John McLaughlin – is at heart the story of a marriage, between a fat, ugly genius and the "tiny, birdlike woman" who was invigilator, confidante and touchstone to his talent.
(13) 2--Main parameters and epidemiological signs which can be took on and invigilated thanks to this system.
(14) In response to the Tory attacks on their record in office, Labour reminds us that throughout the same period Mr Osborne and other Conservatives were complaining not that there was too little invigilation of the City, but that there was too much of it.
(15) They have got to take steps to invigilate it and to take it down where they can.
Invigilancy
Definition:
(n.) Want of vigilance; neglect of watching; carelessness.
Example Sentences:
(1) On some courses, students can take an exam costing about £120 – set by the university that runs the course – in a test centre which requires ID and supplies invigilators.
(2) "Facilitated by organised criminals, this typically involved invigilators supplying, even reading out, answers to whole exam rooms or gangs of imposters being allowed to step into the exam candidates' places to sit the test.
(3) Something the students take as seriously as the invigilators and the headteacher.
(4) "There were two invigilators but no attempt was made to stop people cheating.
(5) I really thought: ‘I am going to have to vote Labour because it’s the lesser of two evils in order to keep the Tories out’ – but now, after watching the debate, my feeling is ‘Damn it, I’ll just go with my heart and vote Green’,” said Becca, 58, an exam invigilator.
(6) The art gallery is now a bigger place, it will require more energy, more staff to invigilate it and run it, so we have to bridge that gap,” she said.
(7) The University were brilliant though, and allowed me to sit them in a separate room with only myself and an invigilator, so I was able to talk to them very quietly, things like: "I know you're affected by how scared I feel, but please can you not talk to each other, it's really distracting."
(8) They begin with extended close-ups of rotating fans, or disrupted exam invigilations shown for so long they become unsettling.
(9) Waqar-Ullah Khattack, one of four invigilators at an exam for 61 students aged 14-16 in the school, told the Guardian he and his colleagues told the students to get down on the floor as soon as they heard firing from an AK-47 and blasts from grenades at around 11am.
(10) The rise of penalties – for a range of failures, including opening question papers early, lack of invigilation, allowing pupils to sit papers at the wrong time or giving inappropriate help to candidates – comes as instances of cheating by pupils continue to drop.
(11) One night, as she sits an exam for her master’s in business administration in the hotel lobby, being invigilated via Skype from the US, he waits patiently, holding her bag.
(12) Psycho was itself the film that so emphatically answered that question in 1960 and the story of its creation – based on Stephen Rebello's enthralling 1990 account, Alfred Hitchcock and the Making of Psycho , and scripted by John McLaughlin – is at heart the story of a marriage, between a fat, ugly genius and the "tiny, birdlike woman" who was invigilator, confidante and touchstone to his talent.
(13) 2--Main parameters and epidemiological signs which can be took on and invigilated thanks to this system.
(14) In response to the Tory attacks on their record in office, Labour reminds us that throughout the same period Mr Osborne and other Conservatives were complaining not that there was too little invigilation of the City, but that there was too much of it.
(15) They have got to take steps to invigilate it and to take it down where they can.