5,824 research outputs found
A Sense of Duty: Retiring the Special Relationship Rule and Holding Gun Manufacturers Liable for Negligently Distributing Guns
In response to recent litigation brought against the gun industry on behalf of individuals and municipalities victimized as a result of the negligent marketing, design, and distribution of guns, the gun industry has argued that they cannot be held responsible for the victims\u27 injuries because they have no special relationship with the victims. Without a special relationship, gun manufacturers claim to have no duty whatsoever to design, market, or distribute guns in a reasonable fashion. This article examines the fallacies inherent in the gun industry\u27s special relationship argument and discusses the factual, legal and policy grounds that support holding the gun industry responsible for its role in facilitating the misuse of guns
CUTTING MY EX-BOYFRIEND\u27S HAIR
Andrea Saunders Gereighty / Academy of American Poets Award 1st Honorable Mentio
A study of indigenous leadership in teen-age groups.
Thesis (M.S.)--Boston Universit
CUTTING MY EX-BOYFRIEND\u27S HAIR
Andrea Saunders Gereighty / Academy of American Poets Award 1st Honorable Mentio
Learning Styles, Critical Thinking Aptitudes, and Immersion Learning in Physician Assistant Students
The changes in healthcare delivery systems and the global burden of disease along with the overwhelming corpus of new knowledge call for a re-evaluation of the educational process of health profession programs. The focus on how best to optimize the learning process necessitates an acknowledgement of the roles of learning styles and critical thinking aptitudes. It also requires attention to the learning experiences and how these, in turn, affect development of both the styles and aptitudes. A sample of 137 Physician Assistant students was recruited to complete a learning style inventory, the Gregorc Style Delineator, and a critical thinking aptitude test, the Health Science Reasoning Test. Participants were then divided into two subgroups, identified as âpreclinical PA studentsâ and âclinical PA studentsâ and the results obtained from both instruments were compared to explore for possible associations between immersion clinical experiences and learning style preferences and critical thinking aptitudes. The PA students were preferentially concrete sequential learners with moderate to strong critical thinking aptitudes. There were no significant differences between preclinical and clinical PA students with respect to learning styles or overall critical thinking aptitudes. Significant differences (P=.002) with improvement in scores, was noted for only one parameter of critical thinking, identified by the Health Science Reasoning Test as âinferenceâ. While immersion learning did not appear to impact learning style preferences or overall critical thinking aptitudes, it is important to note the improvement in âinference; a skill critical for the medical decision making process required of PA students in their preparation for future practice
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