107,966 research outputs found

    English and mathematics: test administrators' guide 2011 (Key stage 2, Years 3–6: English and mathematics)

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    "Who is it for? This guidance is for headteachers, test administrators, key stage 2 English and mathematics subject leaders and key stage 2 assessment and special educational needs coordinators. It is also sent to local authorities. What is it about? This booklet provides guidance on the administration of the key stage 2 English and mathematics national curriculum tests. Test administrators should familiarise themselves with its content before administering the tests." - Back cover

    English, mathematics and science: test administrators' guide: key stage 2: years 3-6

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    Download It While It\u27s Hot: Open Access and Legal Scholarship

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    This article analyzes the shift of legal scholarship from the old world of law reviews to today\u27s world of peer reviews to tomorrow\u27s world of open access legal blogs. This shift is occurring in three dimensions. First, legal scholarship is moving from the long form (treatises and law review articles) to the short form (very short articles, blog posts, and online collaborations). Second, a regime of exclusive rights is giving way to a regime of open access. Third, intermediaries (law school editorial boards, peer-reviewed journals) are being supplemented by disintermediated forms (papers on the Internet, blogs). Blogs and internet conversations between academics are expanding interdisciplinary legal scholarship and increasing the avenues of communication among legal scholars, practitioners and a wide array of interested laypersons worldwide

    Turing's three philosophical lessons and the philosophy of information

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    In this article, I outline the three main philosophical lessons that we may learn from Turing's work, and how they lead to a new philosophy of information. After a brief introduction, I discuss his work on the method of levels of abstraction (LoA), and his insistence that questions could be meaningfully asked only by specifying the correct LoA. I then look at his second lesson, about the sort of philosophical questions that seem to be most pressing today. Finally, I focus on the third lesson, concerning the new philosophical anthropology that owes so much to Turing's work. I then show how the lessons are learned by the philosophy of information. In the conclusion, I draw a general synthesis of the points made, in view of the development of the philosophy of information itself as a continuation of Turing's work. This journal is © 2012 The Royal Society.Peer reviewe

    Science sampling: test administrators’ guide 2011 (Key stage 2, Levels 3–5)

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    "This guide should be read by anyone who is involved in administering the key stage 2 science sampling tests and modified key stage 2 science sampling tests. A copy of this guide should be taken into each room where the science sampling tests will be administered, as it contains important guidance on what to do if things do not go according to plan." - Page 3

    Disagreeable Privacy Policies: Mismatches between Meaning and Users’ Understanding

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    Privacy policies are verbose, difficult to understand, take too long to read, and may be the least-read items on most websites even as users express growing concerns about information collection practices. For all their faults, though, privacy policies remain the single most important source of information for users to attempt to learn how companies collect, use, and share data. Likewise, these policies form the basis for the self-regulatory notice and choice framework that is designed and promoted as a replacement for regulation. The underlying value and legitimacy of notice and choice depends, however, on the ability of users to understand privacy policies. This paper investigates the differences in interpretation among expert, knowledgeable, and typical users and explores whether those groups can understand the practices described in privacy policies at a level sufficient to support rational decision-making. The paper seeks to fill an important gap in the understanding of privacy policies through primary research on user interpretation and to inform the development of technologies combining natural language processing, machine learning and crowdsourcing for policy interpretation and summarization. For this research, we recruited a group of law and public policy graduate students at Fordham University, Carnegie Mellon University, and the University of Pittsburgh (“knowledgeable users”) and presented these law and policy researchers with a set of privacy policies from companies in the e-commerce and news & entertainment industries. We asked them nine basic questions about the policies’ statements regarding data collection, data use, and retention. We then presented the same set of policies to a group of privacy experts and to a group of non-expert users. The findings show areas of common understanding across all groups for certain data collection and deletion practices, but also demonstrate very important discrepancies in the interpretation of privacy policy language, particularly with respect to data sharing. The discordant interpretations arose both within groups and between the experts and the two other groups. The presence of these significant discrepancies has critical implications. First, the common understandings of some attributes of described data practices mean that semi-automated extraction of meaning from website privacy policies may be able to assist typical users and improve the effectiveness of notice by conveying the true meaning to users. However, the disagreements among experts and disagreement between experts and the other groups reflect that ambiguous wording in typical privacy policies undermines the ability of privacy policies to effectively convey notice of data practices to the general public. The results of this research will, consequently, have significant policy implications for the construction of the notice and choice framework and for the US reliance on this approach. The gap in interpretation indicates that privacy policies may be misleading the general public and that those policies could be considered legally unfair and deceptive. And, where websites are not effectively conveying privacy policies to consumers in a way that a “reasonable person” could, in fact, understand the policies, “notice and choice” fails as a framework. Such a failure has broad international implications since websites extend their reach beyond the United States

    Metabolic Syndrome Screening in Seriously Mentally Ill Patients: A Quality Improvement Project

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    A Project Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of MASTER OF SCIENCE in Nursing ScienceSeriously mentally ill patients who are taking second-generation antipsychotics have a high risk of metabolic complications, including obesity, diabetes mellitus type II, hypertension, and hyperlipidemia. Guidelines to screen for metabolic syndrome were established by the American Diabetes Association, American Psychiatric Association, American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists, and North American Association for the Study of Obesity (Clark, 2004). Compliance with implementing the guidelines to screen and monitor for metabolic syndrome vary from regular monitoring to little or none. This quality improvement project provided an educational intervention on screening and monitoring for metabolic syndrome in patients who were seriously mentally ill. The educational interventions were attended by 21 psychiatric-mental health nurse practitioners. After the educational intervention was completed, there was significant improvement in provider knowledge as well as motivation to screen and monitor patients taking second-generation antipsychotic medications for metabolic syndrome. Education may motivate mental health providers to increase the use of metabolic screening guidelines for patients taking second-generation antipsychotic medications potentially improving long term outcomes for this patient population.Title Page / Abstract / Table of Contents / List of Appendices / Metabolic Syndrome in Seriously Mentally Ill Patients: A Quality Improvement Project / Background Significance / Literature Review / Purpose / Educational Intervention using an Evidence Based Practice Model / Methods / Dissemination / Significance to Nursing / Limitations / Summary and Conclusions / References / Appendice

    Test administrators’ guide : science sampling

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