These countries have come together to form an association with some common aims.
All teaching methods will attempt to achieve a common aim (the building of knowledge, experience and understanding).
But by co-operation, we mean more than working toward a common aim.
The two roles "have a common aim," but bring forth different skills.
Groups that have common aims and objectives could work effectively together.
My aim is to see a strong and united country in which people work together with common aims.
Our common aim now is to implement all the steps we have been talking about, to put them into practice and to look for feedback.
But, although this is a common aim, there are obviously different ways of achieving it.
A team, according to Adair (1986), is more than just a group with a common aim.
Don't like the thought of countries working together in a low-key way towards common aims?