8,168 research outputs found
Lifelong learning and schools as community learning centres : key aspects of a national curriculum draft policy framework for Malta
The island of Malta has been engaged in policy document formulations for curriculum renewal in the countryâs educational system (4-16 years of age) since 1988 when the first National Minimum Curriculum (henceforth NMC) was launched (Wain, 1991; Borg et al, 1995). In 1999 a revamped NMC (Ministry of Education, 1999) was developed following a long process of consultation involving various stages and stakeholders. It was a compromise document (Borg & Mayo, 2006) which emerged as a result of reactions to a more radical and coherent draft document produced in 1988.
Both curricular documents were subject to debates and critiques (Wain, 1991; Darmanin, 1993; Borg et al, 1995; Giordmaina, 2000; Borg and Mayo, 2006). More recently a series of volumes providing guidelines, key principles and aims for a national curriculum framework (henceforth NCF) have been produced (MEEF, 2011a,b,c,d) and are currently the target of debate and the focus of reactions by various stakeholders in education including teachers who were asked to read the volumes and provide reactions in the form of answers to a set questionnaire. In this paper, I will focus on one aspect of the documents, the first of its three aims: âLearners who are capable of successfully developing their full potential as lifelong learners.â It is that aspect of the framework documents that falls within the purview of the title for this special issue. The use of this notion attests to the influence of the EUâs policy communications on member states, Malta having joined the Union in 2004 (Mayo, 2007).peer-reviewe
What thermodynamic features characterize good and bad folders? Results from a simplified off-lattice protein model
The thermodynamics of the small SH3 protein domain is studied by means of a
simplified model where each bead-like amino acid interacts with the others
through a contact potential controlled by a 20x20 random matrix. Good folding
sequences, characterized by a low native energy, display three main
thermodynamical phases, namely a coil-like phase, an unfolded globule and a
folded phase (plus other two phases, namely frozen and random coil, populated
only at extremes temperatures). Interestingly, the unfolded globule has some
regions already structured. Poorly designed sequences, on the other hand,
display a wide transition from the random coil to a frozen state. The
comparison with the analytic theory of heteropolymers is discussed
On the incompatibility of strains and its application to mesoscopic studies of plasticity
Structural transitions are invariably affected by lattice distortions. If the
body is to remain crack-free, the strain field cannot be arbitrary but has to
satisfy the Saint-Venant compatibility constraint. Equivalently, an
incompatibility constraint consistent with the actual dislocation network has
to be satisfied in media with dislocations. This constraint can be incorporated
into strain-based free energy functionals to study the influence of
dislocations on phase stability. We provide a systematic analysis of this
constraint in three dimensions and show how three incompatibility equations
accommodate an arbitrary dislocation density. This approach allows the internal
stress field to be calculated for an anisotropic material with spatially
inhomogeneous microstructure and distribution of dislocations by minimizing the
free energy. This is illustrated by calculating the stress field of an edge
dislocation and comparing it with that of an edge dislocation in an infinite
isotropic medium. We outline how this procedure can be utilized to study the
interaction of plasticity with polarization and magnetization.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures; will appear in Phys. Rev.
Mechanism and dynamics of the CO-induced lifting of the Pt(100) surface reconstruction
The first atomistic simulations of the CO-induced lifting of the Pt(100)-hex reconstruction have been performed. During this phase transformation the surface changes back to bulk-terminated Pt(100)-(1Ă1), whereby the surface atom density decreases by ~20%. The simulations reveal a mechanism collective in nature, indicating that restructuring proceeds through ejection of chains of Pt atoms. These chains explain the anisotropy as seen in scanning tunneling microscopy experiments. The restructuring rate depends nonlinearly on the CO coverage, but the absence of local clustering of CO excludes an explanation in terms of elementary reaction kinetics as proposed previously
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Using engineering design tools in multidisciplinary distributed student teams
Collaborative design practice in distributed student teams is becoming more popular as technology makes it easier to communicate ideas with others that are geographically distant. However, a challenge for students is to use design tools which they are not familiar with. These design tools usually differ from each other and engineers may find it much more difficult to share their ideas. This could make the whole design process longer and less successful. Each year the University of Malta, City University London and University of Strathclyde organise a joint collaborative design project, involving engineering students with different disciplines and cultural backgrounds. In this paper, the patterns of use of design tools by students to collaborate with each other are investigated. Based on survey results of students, this paper proposes an approach which can be utilised by engineering students to enhance collaboration in multidisciplinary distributed design teams
Mathematical retroreflectors
Retroreflectors are optical devices that reverse the direction of incident
beams of light. Here we present a collection of billiard type retroreflectors
consisting of four objects; three of them are asymptotically perfect
retroreflectors, and the fourth one is a retroreflector which is very close to
perfect. Three objects of the collection have recently been discovered and
published or submitted for publication. The fourth object - notched angle - is
a new one; a proof of its retroreflectivity is given.Comment: 32 pages, 19 figure
Scale Free Cluster Distributions from Conserving Merging-Fragmentation Processes
We propose a dynamical scheme for the combined processes of fragmentation and
merging as a model system for cluster dynamics in nature and society displaying
scale invariant properties. The clusters merge and fragment with rates
proportional to their sizes, conserving the total mass. The total number of
clusters grows continuously but the full time-dependent distribution can be
rescaled over at least 15 decades onto a universal curve which we derive
analytically. This curve includes a scale free solution with a scaling exponent
of -3/2 for the cluster sizes.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Observations of magnetic flux ropes during magnetic reconnection in the Earth's magnetotail
We present an investigation of magnetic flux ropes observed by the four
Cluster spacecraft during periods of magnetic reconnection in the Earth's
magnetotail. Using a list of 21 Cluster encounters with the reconnection
process in the period 2001â2006 identified in Borg et al. (2012), we present
the distribution and characteristics of the flux ropes. We find 27 flux ropes
embedded in the reconnection outflows of only 11 of the 21 reconnection
encounters. Reconnection processes associated with no flux rope observations
were not distinguishable from those where flux ropes were observed. Only 7 of
the 27 flux ropes show evidence of enhanced energetic electron flux above
50 keV,
and there was no clear signature of the flux rope in the thermal particle
measurements. We found no clear correlation between the flux rope core field
and the prevailing IMF <I>B</I><sub>y</sub> direction
In search of phylogenetic congruence between molecular and morphological data in bryozoans with extreme adult skeletal heteromorphy
peerreview_statement: The publishing and review policy for this title is described in its Aims & Scope. aims_and_scope_url: http://www.tandfonline.com/action/journalInformation?show=aimsScope&journalCode=tsab20© Crown Copyright 2015. This document is the author's final accepted/submitted version of the journal article. You are advised to consult the publisher's version if you wish to cite from it
Macrofaunal diversity of infralittoral cobble beds in the Maltese Islands
This research work was partially funded through the
European Social Fund under a STEPS scheme grant awarded to JE.The Mediterranean âbiocoenosis of infralittoral pebbles â has been poorly studied, but is generally considered to be impoverished. Systematic sampling of cobble beds at 17 sites around the Maltese Islands yielded a total of 35,687 individuals belonging to 310 different taxa. Very shallow sites (<2 m depth) had a slightly poorer faunal assemblage than deeper ones (2 -12 m depth), but still included 152 taxa. These results suggest that infralittoral cobbles beds may not be as impoverished as previously thought, probably due to the high structural complexity of these habitats.peer-reviewe
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