0 the quickest route to a successful position: --
1 using a quicker than normal route to a higher position or level: --
They've introduced a fast-track system for brighter pupils which will allow thousands to take their GCSE exams two years early.
fast-track opportunities
2 the quickest, but usually most competitive, route to success or improvement --
3 a way of making progress or achieving something more quickly than usual, especially in your job: --
4 to make it easier for something to happen or for someone to achieve something more quickly than usual: --
Additional fast-track procedures and special programmes have been set up too, aimed at small projects.
Indeed, our amendments to the common position mean that a board can get fast-track approval in 14 days.
My final position, and that of my group, will surely depend on what form the fast-track procedure will take.
Finally, there has been a lot of talk recently of a fast-track procedure.
This would maintain a link between fast-tracking selection and promotion of the public health, although it would no longer maximize the contribution to public health of the fast-track system.
Both the steelwork and slab elements of the structure will be prefabricated and quickly assembled on site offering a fast-track construction period for the new building.
It looks as if speech shadowing should only need to use some sort of fast-track loop between phoneme perception and phoneme production, indeed, bypassing the conceptual systems altogether.
If licensing authorities accepted the appropriateness of using fast-track review systems to promote public health, they could vary the characteristics of the fast-track system as a signaling mechanism.