1,007 research outputs found

    A Study of the Career Education Needs of Freshman and Senior Students in the Midland Independent School District

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    This study examined the career education needs of students and obtained information that will be beneficial to those involved in implementing career education into the existing curriculum at the local level. The major problem which this study addressed was the need to gather and evaluate information about learners in terms of their career education needs. Specifically developed for this purpose, the survey test of the Texas Career Education Measurement Series was used to identify student strengths and weaknesses in each of the 9 Basic Learner Outcome Categories for Career Education (Appendix E) and 26 sub-categories. The test was administered to a random sample of 240 students, 120 freshmen and 120 Seniors representing the school district at large. The results demonstrated first, that in three categories of the survey test 50 percent or more of the freshmen tested showed weakness while in no categories did 50 percent or more of the seniors tested show weakness. Second, results showed that in nine of the 26 sub-categories 50 percent or more of the freshmen tested showed weakness while 50 percent of the seniors tested showed weakness in only two sub-categories. Third, results showed that a lower percentage of seniors displayed weakness on every sub-category than did freshmen. Results indicate that the learner outcomes for career education are to some degree presented in the present curriculum between the ninth and twelfth grades

    Reentry static stability characteristics of a (Model 471) .005479-scale 146-inch solid rocket booster tested in the NASA/MSFC 14 by 14 inch TWT (SA8F)

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    A force test of a scale model of the Space Shuttle Solid Rocket Booster was conducted in a trisonic wind tunnel. The model was tested with such protuberances as a camera capsule, electrical tunnel, attach rings, aft separation rockets, ET attachment structure, and hold-down struts. The model was also tested with the nozzle at gimbal angles of 0, 2.5, and 5 degrees. The influence of a unique heat shield configuration was also determined. Some photographs of model installations in the tunnel were taken and are included. Schlieren photography was utilized for several angles of attack

    Pluralistic ignorance concerning alcohol usage among recent high school graduates

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    Recent high school graduates in a midwestern community estimated their classmates\u27 attitudes toward alcohol use in contrast to their own positions. Attitudes were assessed on three levels: subjective comfort with others\u27 drinking, approval of peer drinking and actual drinking practices. Pluralistic ignorance was found to be a significant factor at all three levels, p \u3c .0005. Respondents reported that they were less comfortable, less approving, and drank less than close friends, lesser still than friends, and far less than peers. These findings provide support for normative education prevention programs that attempt to correct erroneous perceptions about alcohol use and abuse

    Fit for purpose? Pattern cutting and seams in wearables development

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    This paper describes how a group of practitioners and researchers are working across disciplines at Nottingham Trent University in the area of Technical Textiles. It introduces strands of ongoing enquiry centred around the development and application of stretch sensors on the body, focusing on how textile and fashion knowledge are being reflexively revealed in the collaborative development of seamful wearable concepts, and on the tensions between design philosophies as revealed by definitions of purpose. We discuss the current research direction of the Aeolia project, which seeks to exploit the literal gaps found in pattern cutting for fitted stretch garments towards experiential forms and potential interactions. Normative goals of fitness for purpose and seamlessness are interrogated and the potential for more integrated design processes, which may at first appear ‘upside down’, is discussed

    Evaluating Sedimentary Geochemical Lake-Level Tracers in Walker Lake, Nevada, Over the Last 200 Years

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    Walker Lake, a hydrologically closed, saline, alkaline lake located along the western margin of the Great Basin of western United States, has experienced a 77% reduction in volume and commitment drop in lake level as a result of anthropogenic perturbations and climatic fluctuations over the last century. The history of lake-level change in Walker Lake has been recorded instrumentally since 1860. A high-resolution multi-proxy sediment core record from Walker Lake has been generated through analysis of total inorganic carbon (TIC), total organic carbon (TOC), and oxygen and carbon isotope ratios (δ18O and δ13 C) of both downcore bulk TIC and ostracods over the last 200 yr. This allows us to examine how these sediment indices respond to actual changes in this lake’s hydrologic balance at interannual to decadal timescales. In Walker Lake sediments, changes in %TIC, %TOC, and δ13C and δ18O of TIC and ostracods are all associated to varying degrees with changes in the lake’s hydrologic balance, with δ18O of the TIC fraction (δ18OTIC) being the most highly correlated and the most effective hydrologic indicator in this closed-basin lake. The δ18OTIC record from Walker Lake nearly parallels the instrumental lake-level record back to 1860. However, comparison with sporadic lake-water δ18O and dissolved inorganic carbon δ13C (δ13CDIC) results spanning the last several decades suggests that the isotopic values of downcore carbonate sediments may not be readily translated into absolute or even relative values of corresponding lake-water δ18O and δ13CDIC. Changes in the lake’s hydrologic balance usually lead to changes in isotopic composition of lake waters and downcore sediments, but not all the variations in downcore isotopic composition are necessarily caused by hydrologic changes

    The Moderating Effects of “Dark” Personality Traits and Message Vividness on the Persuasiveness of Terrorist Narrative Propaganda

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    Terrorism researchers have long discussed the role of psychology in the radicalization process. This work has included research on the respective roles of individual psychological traits and responses to terrorist propaganda. Unfortunately, much of this work has looked at psychological traits and responses to propaganda individually and has not considered how these factors may interact. This study redresses this gap in the literature. In this experiment (N = 268), participants were measured in terms of their narcissism, Machiavellianism, subclinical psychopathy, and everyday sadism—collectively called the Dark Tetrad. Participants were then exposed to a vivid or nonvivid terrorist narrative (or a control message). Results indicate that Machiavellianism interacts with both narrative exposure and narrative vividness to amplify the persuasive effect of terrorist narratives. Neither narcissism, subclinical psychopathy, nor everyday sadism had such an effect. These results highlight the importance of considering the psychological traits of audiences when evaluating proclivity for radicalization via persuasion by terrorist narratives

    Terrorist Propaganda after IS: Learning, Emulation, and Imitation

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    Mechanistic studies on the copper-catalyzed N-arylation of alkylamines promoted by organic soluble ionic bases

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    Experimental studies on the mechanism of copper-catalyzed amination of aryl halides have been undertaken for the coupling of piperidine with iodobenzene using a Cu­(I) catalyst and the organic base tetrabutylphosphonium malonate (TBPM). The use of TBPM led to high reactivity and high conversion rates in the coupling reaction, as well as obviating any mass transfer effects. The often commonly employed O,O-chelating ligand 2-acetylcyclohexanone was surprisingly found to have a negligible effect on the reaction rate, and on the basis of NMR, calorimetric, and kinetic modeling studies, the malonate dianion in TBPM is instead postulated to act as an ancillary ligand in this system. Kinetic profiling using reaction progress kinetic analysis (RPKA) methods show the reaction rate to have a dependence on all of the reaction components in the concentration range studied, with first-order kinetics with respect to [amine], [aryl halide], and [Cu]<sub>total</sub>. Unexpectedly, negative first-order kinetics in [TBPM] was observed. This negative rate dependence in [TBPM] can be explained by the formation of an off-cycle copper­(I) dimalonate species, which is also argued to undergo disproportionation and is thus responsible for catalyst deactivation. The key role of the amine in minimizing catalyst deactivation is also highlighted by the kinetic studies. An examination of the aryl halide activation mechanism using radical probes was undertaken, which is consistent with an oxidative addition pathway. On the basis of these findings, a more detailed mechanistic cycle for the C–N coupling is proposed, including catalyst deactivation pathways

    Late Holocene Lake-Level Fluctuations in Walker Lake, Nevada, USA

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    alker Lake, a hydrologically closed, saline, and alkaline lake, is situated along the western margin of the Great Basin in Nevada of the western United States. Analyses of the magnetic susceptibility (χ), total inorganic carbon (TIC), and oxygen isotopic composition (δ18O) of carbonate sediments including ostracode shells (Limnocythere ceriotuberosa) from Walker Lake allow us to extend the sediment record of lake-level fluctuations back to 2700 years B.P. There are approximately five major stages over the course of the late Holocene hydrologic evolution in Walker Lake: an early lowstand (\u3e 2400 years B.P.), a lake-filling period (∼ 2400 to ∼ 1000 years B.P.), a lake-level lowering period during the Medieval Warm Period (MWP) (∼ 1000 to ∼ 600 years B.P.), a relatively wet period (∼ 600 to ∼ 100 years B.P.), and the anthropogenically induced lake-level lowering period (\u3c 100 years B.P.). The most pronounced lowstand of Walker Lake occurred at ∼ 2400 years B.P., as indicated by the relatively high values of δ18O. This is generally in agreement with the previous lower resolution paleoclimate results from Walker Lake, but contrasts with the sediment records from adjacent Pyramid Lake and Siesta Lake. The pronounced lowstand suggests that the Walker River that fills Walker Lake may have partially diverted into the Carson Sink through the Adrian paleochannel between 2700 to 1400 years B.P
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