9 research outputs found
Economically Disadvantaged Minority Girls\u27 Knowledge and Perceptions of Science and Engineering and Related Careers
This article addresses economically disadvantaged minority girls\u27 knowledge and perceptions of science and engineering and the influence of their experiences with science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) on their choices for future careers. We interviewed three girls who participated in a 4-Hâled gender-inclusive STEM program. Our findings suggest that the girls lacked opportunities to learn STEM in out-of-school settings and that they had very limited knowledge about STEM professions. They did not associate their job aspirations as being related to STEM, even though they were. To better prepare such girls to engage in STEM, educators need to provide long-term interventions that are supported by both out-of-school programs and families
The argument of the broken pane: Suffragette consumerism and newspapers
Within the cut-throat world of newspaper advertising the newspapers of Britain's Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) Votes for Women and the Suffragette managed to achieve a balance that has often proved to be an impossible challenge for social movement pressânamely the maintenance of a highly political stance whilst simultaneously exploiting the market system with advertising and merchandising. When the militant papers advocated window smashing of West End stores in 1912â1913, the companies who were the target still took advertisements. Why? What was the relationship between news values, militant violence and advertising income? âDo-it-yourselfâ journalism operated within a context of ethical consumerism and promotionally orientated militancy. This resulted in newspaper connections between politics, commerce and a distinct market profile, evident in the customisation of advertising, retailer dialogue with militants and longer-term loyaltyâsymptomatic of a wider trend towards newspaper commercialism during this period
Matrisome and Immune Pathways Contribute to Extreme Vascular Outcomes in WilliamsâBeuren Syndrome
Background Supravalvar aortic stenosis (SVAS) is a characteristic feature of WilliamsâBeuren syndrome (WBS). Its severity varies: ~20% of people with WilliamsâBeuren syndrome have SVAS requiring surgical intervention, whereas ~35% have no appreciable SVAS. The remaining individuals have SVAS of intermediate severity. Little is known about genetic modifiers that contribute to this variability. Methods and Results We performed genome sequencing on 473 individuals with WilliamsâBeuren syndrome and developed strategies for modifier discovery in this rare disease population. Approaches include extreme phenotyping and nonsynonymous variant prioritization, followed by gene set enrichment and pathwayâlevel association tests. We next used GTEx v8 and proteomic data sets to verify expression of candidate modifiers in relevant tissues. Finally, we evaluated overlap between the genes/pathways identified here and those ascertained through larger aortic disease/trait genomeâwide association studies. We show that SVAS severity in WilliamsâBeuren syndrome is associated with increased frequency of common and rarer variants in matrisome and immune pathways. Two implicated matrisome genes (ACAN and LTBP4) were uniquely expressed in the aorta. Many genes in the identified pathways were previously reported in genomeâwide association studies for aneurysm, bicuspid aortic valve, or aortic size. Conclusions Smaller sample sizes in rare disease studies necessitate new approaches to detect modifiers. Our strategies identified variation in matrisome and immune pathways that are associated with SVAS severity. These findings suggest that, like other aortopathies, SVAS may be influenced by the balance of synthesis and degradation of matrisome proteins. Leveraging multiomic data and results from larger aortaâfocused genomeâwide association studies may accelerate modifier discovery for rare aortopathies like SVAS