29 research outputs found
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An Interview with Ben Rafoth on Writing Center Research, Dissertations, and Job Opportunities
Ben Rafoth has directed the writing center at Indiana University of Pennsylvania for the past 20 years, and he currently directs the graduate program in Composition and TESOL there. He has edited A Tutor’s Guide: Helping Writers One to One and ESL Writers: A Guide for Writing Center Tutors, with Shanti Bruce. Rafoth served as the Treasurer of the International Writing Centers Association, and in 2002 he was awarded the Ron Maxwell Award from the National Conference of Peer Tutoring in Writing, one of the highest honors in the writing center world. Rafoth is one of the original founders of the writing center movement, and a mentor of writing center researchers, theorists and practitioners. I wanted to speak more in depth about current issues in writing center scholarship, so I interviewed him in his office adjacent to the writing center on IUP’s campusUniversity Writing Cente
Methodology to measure the benefits and costs of Rural road closure: a kansas case study
While rural roads are essential to state economies, increasing farm size and the corresponding increase in farm vehicle size coupled with declining rural population have stressed the rural road system. As county population declines the financial ability of counties to maintain and rebuild the road and bridge system isn't keeping up with the rate of deterioration. If counties can't maintain the rural road system as it currently exists, reducing the size of the system should be considered. The purpose of this paper is to present a methodology that can be used to evaluate rural road investment or disinvestment proposals. The overall objective of the paper is to estimate the economic impact on selected county road systems from reducing the size of the system. The specific objectives include (a) for a sample of three Kansas counties measure the benefits and costs of keeping the road system as it currently exists and (b) for the same sample of Kansas counties measure the benefits and costs of several scenarios of county road closure. The objectives are achieved using the transportation network model TransCAD produced by Caliper Corporation. TransCAD calculates the total minimum travel cost for all rural resident trips assuming the county road network as it currently exists. Then selected low traffic volume road segments are removed from the network and TransCAD recalculates total minimum travel costs for rural resident trips. The difference between the two travel costs simulations is the cost of the assumed closed roads. The benefit of road closure is the avoided maintenance and reconstruction costs of the closed road segments. Total benefit is calculated by multiplying the number of miles of road to be closed by the avoided maintenance cost per mile. The main conclusion is that rural counties will be able to save money by closing some relatively low traffic volume roads and redirecting the savings toward increasing the quality of other county roads. Counties with relatively extensive road systems (miles of road per square mile) and relatively high population density are less likely to realize savings from road closure. In contrast, counties with less extensive road systems and relatively low population density are more likely to realize significant savings from closure of relatively low volume roads
Oh! I never can forget thee /
Mode of access: Internet.From the Thomas A. Edison Collection of American Sheet Music