4,782 research outputs found

    EDUCATIONAL POLICY ISSUES

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    Menstrual trolls under a political bridge : a feminist criticism of Periods for Pence

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    This study uses feminist rhetorical criticism as a lens through which to analyze Periods for Pence, a social movement in which Indiana women made calls detailing their menstrual cycles to the office of former Indiana Governor Mike Pence. Periods for Pence began in March of 2016 in response to Pence’s signing of HEA 1337, severe anti-abortion legislation, into law. The rhetorical analysis reveals that the women of Periods for Pence use consciousness-raising, a second-wave feminist protest strategy, in a third-wave feminist context that highlights women’s reproductive health and physiology. Specific elements of consciousness-raising including narrative, use of humor, and symbolic reversal are detailed. Ultimately, this study suggests that rhetorical critics should view feminism and feminist theoretical approaches to research not as occurring in waves, but as occurring with fluidity and persisting over time.Department of Communication StudiesThesis (M.A.

    Supporting Youth in Transition to Adulthood: Lessons Learned from Child Welfare and Juvenile Justice

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    The Georgetown Public Policy Institute's Center for Juvenile Justice Reform and the Jim Casey Youth Opportunities Initiative collaborated to publish this paper that describes case assessment, case management, and other practices implemented in the juvenile justice and child welfare systems. The practices highlighted have shown promise in improving outcomes for the transition-age population

    Prognostic indicators of early and late death in children admitted to district hospital in Kenya: cohort study

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    OBJECTIVES: To identify clinical indicators of immediate, early, and late mortality in children at admission to a sub-Saharan district hospital and to develop prognostic scores. DESIGN: Prospective cohort study. SETTING: One district hospital in Kenya. PARTICIPANTS: Children aged over 90 days admitted to hospital from 1 July 1998 to 30 June 2001. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Prognostic indicators of mortality. RESULTS: Of 8091 children admitted up to 1 June 2000, 436 (5%) died. Sixty (14%) died within four hours after admission (immediate), 193 (44%) after 4-48 hours (early), and 183 (42%) after 48 hours (late). There were marked differences in the clinical features associated with immediate, early, and late death. Seven indicators (neurological status, respiratory distress (subcostal indrawing or deep breathing), nutritional status (wasting or kwashiorkor), severe anaemia, jaundice, axillary temperature, and length of history) were included in simplified prognostic scores. Data from 4802 children admitted from 1 July 2000 to 30 June 2001 were used to validate the scores. For simplified prognostic scores the areas under the receiver operating characteristic curves were 0.93 (95% confidence interval 0.92 to 0.94), 0.82 (0.80 to 0.83), and 0.82 (0.81 to 0.84) for immediate, early, and late death, respectively. CONCLUSION: In children admitted to a sub-Saharan hospital, the prognostic indicators of early and late deaths differ but a small number of simple clinical signs predict outcome wel

    Mediated tunable coupling of flux qubits

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    It is sketched how a monostable rf- or dc-SQUID can mediate an inductive coupling between two adjacent flux qubits. The nontrivial dependence of the SQUID's susceptibility on external flux makes it possible to continuously tune the induced coupling from antiferromagnetic (AF) to ferromagnetic (FM). In particular, for suitable parameters, the induced FM coupling can be sufficiently large to overcome any possible direct AF inductive coupling between the qubits. The main features follow from a classical analysis of the multi-qubit potential. A fully quantum treatment yields similar results, but with a modified expression for the SQUID susceptibility. Since the latter is exact, it can also be used to evaluate the susceptibility--or, equivalently, energy-level curvature--of an isolated rf-SQUID for larger shielding and at degenerate flux bias, i.e., a (bistable) qubit. The result is compared to the standard two-level (pseudospin) treatment of the anticrossing, and the ensuing conclusions are verified numerically.Comment: REVTeX 4, 16 pp., 4 EPS figures. N.B.: "Alec" is my first, and "Maassen van den Brink" my family name. v2: major expansion and rewriting, new title and co-author; to appear in New Journal of Physics special issue (R. Fazio, ed.

    Scaling of entanglement at quantum phase transition for two-dimensional array of quantum dots

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    With Hubbard model, the entanglement scaling behavior in a two-dimensional itinerant system is investigated. It has been found that, on the two sides of the critical point denoting an inherent quantum phase transition (QPT), the entanglement follows different scalings with the size just as an order parameter does. This fact reveals the subtle role played by the entanglement in QPT as a fungible physical resource
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