78 research outputs found
Is there a shared social work signature pedagogy cross-nationally? : Using a case study methodology to explore signature pedagogy in England, Israel, Finland, Spain and Sweden
While there is an international definition of social work as a profession, little is known about whether there is also a shared pedagogy in social work cross-nationally. To our knowledge, this paper is the first empirical study which aims to fill this gap by applying the concept of signature pedagogy in social work education to explore the commonality of social work pedagogy across countries. The study uses a multi-site case study (six universities in five European countries) through applying a 'critical teacher-researcher' approach in generating the data, followed by a two-phased thematic analysis. The study evidenced a shared principle of social work pedagogy which nurtures social work student to think and perform like a social worker and develop the professional self through developing relationships and dialogue, professional practice, group work, self-reflection and critical thinking. It is argued from, this exploratory study, that even between countries which have different welfare ideology as well as social work history and education systems, there is some common ground in social work pedagogy where one can learn from another through the use of 'teacher as researcher' methodologically.Peer reviewe
Current Exchanges for Reducible Higher Spin Multiplets and Gauge Fixing
We compute the current exchanges between triplets of higher spin fields which
describe reducible representations of the Poincare group. Through this
computation we can extract the propagator of the reducible higher spin fields
which compose the triplet. We show how to decompose the triplet fields into
irreducible HS fields which obey Fronsdal equations, and how to compute the
current-current interaction for the cubic couplings which appear in
ArXiv:0708.1399 [hep-th] using the decomposition into irreducible modes. We
compare this result with the same computation using a gauge fixed (Feynman)
version of the triplet Lagrangian which allows us to write very simple HS
propagators for the triplet fields.Comment: 26 pages, 1 table; v3 some clarifications and references added, typos
corrected. Published versio
New features of quantum discord uncovered by q-entropies
The notion of quantum discord introduced by Ollivier and Zurek [Phys. Rev.
Lett 88, 017901 (2001)] (see also Henderson and Vedral [J. Phys. A 34, 6899
(2001)]) has attracted increasing attention, in recent years, as an entropic
quantifier of non-classical features pertaining to the correlations exhibited
by bipartite quantum systems. Here we generalize the notion so as to encompass
power-law q-entropies (that reduce to the standard Shannon entropy in the limit
) and study the concomitant consequences. The ensuing, new
discord-like measures we advance describe aspects of non-classicality that are
different from those associated with the standard quantum discord. A particular
manifestation of this difference concerns a feature related to order. Let
stand for the standard, Shannon-based discord measure and for the one. If two quantum states , are such that , this
order-relation does not remain invariant under a change from to .Comment: 11 pages, 8 figure
O adsorption and incipient oxidation of the Mg(0001) surface
First principles density functional calculations are used to study the early
oxidation stages of the Mg(0001) surface for oxygen coverages 1/16 <= Theta <=
3 monolayers. It is found that at very low coverages O is incorporated below
the topmost Mg layer in tetrahedral sites. At higher oxygen-load the binding in
on-surface sites is increased but at one monolayer coverage the on-surface
binding is still about 60 meV weaker than for subsurface sites. The subsurface
octahedral sites are found to be unfavorable compared to subsurface tetrahedral
sites and to on-surface sites. At higher coverages oxygen adsorbs both under
the surface and up. Our calculations predict island formation and clustering of
incorporated and adsorbed oxygen in agreement with previous calculations. The
calculated configurations are compared with the angle-scanned x-ray
photoelectron diffraction experiment to determine the geometrical structure of
the oxidized Mg(0001) surface.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
A Survey of Finite Algebraic Geometrical Structures Underlying Mutually Unbiased Quantum Measurements
The basic methods of constructing the sets of mutually unbiased bases in the
Hilbert space of an arbitrary finite dimension are discussed and an emerging
link between them is outlined. It is shown that these methods employ a wide
range of important mathematical concepts like, e.g., Fourier transforms, Galois
fields and rings, finite and related projective geometries, and entanglement,
to mention a few. Some applications of the theory to quantum information tasks
are also mentioned.Comment: 20 pages, 1 figure to appear in Foundations of Physics, Nov. 2006 two
more references adde
Many body physics from a quantum information perspective
The quantum information approach to many body physics has been very
successful in giving new insight and novel numerical methods. In these lecture
notes we take a vertical view of the subject, starting from general concepts
and at each step delving into applications or consequences of a particular
topic. We first review some general quantum information concepts like
entanglement and entanglement measures, which leads us to entanglement area
laws. We then continue with one of the most famous examples of area-law abiding
states: matrix product states, and tensor product states in general. Of these,
we choose one example (classical superposition states) to introduce recent
developments on a novel quantum many body approach: quantum kinetic Ising
models. We conclude with a brief outlook of the field.Comment: Lectures from the Les Houches School on "Modern theories of
correlated electron systems". Improved version new references adde
Hard Single Diffraction in pbarp Collisions at root-s = 630 and 1800 GeV
Using the D0 detector, we have studied events produced in proton-antiproton
collisions that contain large forward regions with very little energy
deposition (``rapidity gaps'') and concurrent jet production at center-of-mass
energies of root-s = 630 and 1800 Gev. The fractions of forward and central jet
events associated with such rapidity gaps are measured and compared to
predictions from Monte Carlo models. For hard diffractive candidate events, we
use the calorimeter to extract the fractional momentum loss of the scattered
protons.Comment: 11 pages 4 figures. submitted to PR
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