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A case study of the evolution of a community of learners in an elementary school setting.
This study focused on a descriptive analysis and evaluation of a community of learners in an elementary school setting. The literature cited seems to indicate that if education reform is to be effective, it is essential that it involve the educators within the schools in the process. The premise is that students will learn, grow, develop, and achieve more meaningfully if they are educated in a community in which the adults are also learning. The current literature, however, tends to contain suggestions rather than concrete examples of a learning community in action. For this reason, the focus of this study has been on a particular school\u27s evolution in living out this concept from its reopening in 1987 through 1993. The process of living out this concept seems to support what the literature indicates as being crucial factors in its development. These factors are leadership, vision, change, and culture. Although these factors are important individually, it is their interrelatedness, which has significantly affected the growth and development of the community of learners. A case study approach that utilized qualitative data from interviews, participant observation, and supporting documents has provided the basis for the description and evaluation of the evolution of this concept. It is evident that the reopening of the Jefferson School in 1987 provided a unique opportunity for its members to build together a community of learners. The data from the study indicate that although the vision of a community of learners originated with the principal, it has been enlarged by a participative process involving all members of the school community. What began as a very fuzzy vision has become the framework from which the goals, objectives, and activities of the school originate. Learning is the school\u27s main concern and all the members, adults and children alike, are learners. The data also indicate that enhancing and inhibiting factors have affected this community\u27s development. A collaborative culture of openness has greatly influenced the collegiality of members and allowed for honest confrontations once trusting relationships have been established. Although much progress has been made, opportunities for continued growth need to be explored
A radio jet drives a molecular and atomic gas outflow in multiple regions within one square kiloparsec of the nucleus of the nearby galaxy IC5063
We analyzed near-infrared data of the nearby galaxy IC5063 taken with the
Very Large Telescope SINFONI instrument. IC5063 is an elliptical galaxy that
has a radio jet nearly aligned with the major axis of a gas disk in its center.
The data reveal multiple signatures of molecular and atomic gas that has been
kinematically distorted by the passage of the jet plasma or cocoon within an
area of ~1 kpc^2. Concrete evidence that the interaction of the jet with the
gas causes the gas to accelerate comes from the detection of outflows in four
different regions along the jet trail: near the two radio lobes, between the
radio emission tip and the optical narrow-line-region cone, and at a region
with diffuse 17.8 GHz emission midway between the nucleus and the north radio
lobe. The outflow in the latter region is biconical, centered 240 pc away from
the nucleus, and oriented perpendicularly to the jet trail. The diffuse
emission that is observed as a result of the gas entrainment or scattering
unfolds around the trail and away from the nucleus with increasing velocity. It
overall extends for >700 pc parallel and perpendicular to the trail. Near the
outflow starting points, the gas has a velocity excess of 600 km/s to 1200 km/s
with respect to ordered motions, as seen in [FeII], Pa alpha, or H2 lines. High
H2 (1-0) S(3)/S(1) flux ratios indicate non-thermal excitation of gas in the
diffuse outflow.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Solar Protons and Magnetic Storms in July 1961
Injun i satellite observations of solar protons and magnetic storm
Prediction and explanation in the multiverse
Probabilities in the multiverse can be calculated by assuming that we are
typical representatives in a given reference class. But is this class well
defined? What should be included in the ensemble in which we are supposed to be
typical? There is a widespread belief that this question is inherently vague,
and that there are various possible choices for the types of reference objects
which should be counted in. Here we argue that the ``ideal'' reference class
(for the purpose of making predictions) can be defined unambiguously in a
rather precise way, as the set of all observers with identical information
content. When the observers in a given class perform an experiment, the class
branches into subclasses who learn different information from the outcome of
that experiment. The probabilities for the different outcomes are defined as
the relative numbers of observers in each subclass. For practical purposes,
wider reference classes can be used, where we trace over all information which
is uncorrelated to the outcome of the experiment, or whose correlation with it
is beyond our current understanding. We argue that, once we have gathered all
practically available evidence, the optimal strategy for making predictions is
to consider ourselves typical in any reference class we belong to, unless we
have evidence to the contrary. In the latter case, the class must be
correspondingly narrowed.Comment: Minor clarifications adde
Characterization of iodine particles with Volatilization-Humidification Tandem Differential Mobility Analyser (VH-TDMA), Raman and SEM techniques
Particles formed upon photo-oxidation of CH2I2 and particles of I2O5 and HIO3 have been studied using a Volatilisation and Humidification Tandem Differential Mobility Analyser (VH-TDMA) system. Volatilization and hygroscopic behaviour have been investigated as function of temperature (from 25 to 400 degrees Celsius), humidity (RH from 80 to 98%), initial aerosol sizes (from 27 to 100 nm mobility diameter) and in nitrogen or air as the sheath gasses. The volatility behaviour of particles formed upon photo-oxidation of CH2I2 is more similar to that of HIO3 particles in a filtered sheath air than in nitrogen, with the particle shrinkage occurring at 190 degrees Celsius and accompanied by hygroscopic growth. Despite its high solubility, HIO3 was found not to be hygroscopic at room temperature with no significant growth displayed until the thermodenuder temperature reached 200 degrees Celsius or above when the particles have transformed into I2O5. Diiodopentaoxide (I2O5) particles exhibit relatively low hygroscopic growth factors of 1.2-2 in the humidity range investigated. Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) of particles formed upon photo-oxidation of CH2I2 shows that their primary elemental components were iodine and oxygen in a stoichiometric ratio of approximately 1:2 with 10% error. Both Raman spectra and SEM show poor crystallinity for all the aerosols produced
Relativistic Disk Reflection in the Neutron Star X-ray Binary XTE J1709-267 with NuSTAR
We perform the first reflection study of the soft X-ray transient and Type 1
burst source XTE J1709-267 using NuSTAR observations during its 2016 June
outburst. There was an increase in flux near the end of the observations, which
corresponds to an increase from 0.04 L to 0.06
L assuming a distance of 8.5 kpc. We have separately examined
spectra from the low and high flux intervals, which were soft and show evidence
of a broad Fe K line. Fits to these intervals with relativistic disk reflection
models have revealed an inner disk radius of (where
) for the low flux spectrum and
for the high flux spectrum at the 90\% confidence level. The disk is likely
truncated by a boundary layer surrounding the neutron star or the
magnetosphere. Based on the measured luminosity and using the accretion
efficiency for a disk around a neutron star, we estimate that the theoretically
expected size for the boundary layer would be from the
neutron star's surface, which can be increased by spin or viscosity effects.
Another plausible scenario is that the disk could be truncated by the
magnetosphere. We place a conservative upper limit on the strength of the
magnetic field at the poles, assuming and , of
G, though X-ray pulsations have not been detected
from this source.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ, 5 pages, 4 figures, 1 table. arXiv
admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1701.0177
The Rights and Wrongs of Wrongful Birth and Wrongful Life: A Jurisprudential Analysis of Birth Related Torts
The advent and increasing sophistication of medical technology, which allows the detection of birth defects in utero, has resulted in recognition of two tort claims unknown at common law: wrongful birth and wrongful life. There is an emerging trend in state legislatures and courts toward rejection of wrongful birth and wrongful life causes of action. This article provides a critical analysis of the legal, medical and ethical issues raised by wrongful birth/life causes of action. The authors utilize Hohfeldian analysis to determine the exact nature of the legal rights essential to a wrongful birth/life cause of action. The authors then turn to a utilitarian analysis to weigh the various interests involved in wrongful birth/life claims. The authors argue that a jurisprudential analysis of birth related torts demonstrates that wrongful birth and wrongful life causes of action are a radical departure from existing law, and require the recognition of new legal theories not recognized in common law or constitutional law
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