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SCHOOL CLIMATE and SCHOOL ORGANISATION: A STUDY IN RELATIONSHIPS.
This work is the product of two years' in-service study of one middle school.
The aim was to examine the major structural dimensions of perceived school "climate", and assess the influence of internal organisation upon that climate.
Initial attention is given to the evolution of the school, its physical structure, environment, staffing and routine procedures.
The central part of the study is concerned to present and analyse the expressed attitudes and activities of the personnel in the school; pupils, teachers and ancillary staff.
Within a broadly "illuminative" paradigm the tactical methodology utilises a variety of research techniques notably questionnaires, personal interviews, participant observation and assessment of the formal records of school life.
The final part of the study reflects upon a period of change at the school which followed upon the appointment of a new headteacher in January 1979. Assessment is made of the organisational changes rapidly introduced into the school and the response of staff to a markedly different style of leadership.
The conclusion summarises the major findings, discusses the interaction between climate and organisation and reflects upon the suitability of the phenomenological approach to such case study analysis
CMS Central Hadron Calorimeter
We present a description of the CMS central hadron calorimeter. We describe
the production of the 1996 CMS hadron testbeam module. We show the results of
the quality control tests of the testbeam module. We present some results of
the 1995 CMS hadron testbeam.Comment: 7 pages, 11 Figures, corresponding author: H. Budd, [email protected]
Research Report: Usefulness of investigating error profiles in diagnosis of naming impairments
peer-reviewedBackground: Word-retrieval difficulties are commonly experienced by people with aphasia (PwA) and also by
typically ageing persons. Differentiation between true naming impairments and naming difficulties found in
healthy persons may, therefore, be challenging.
Aims: To investigate the extent to which the Maltese adaptation of the Boston Naming Test (BNT) can identify
people with lexical retrieval difficulties and to differentiate them from people with unimpaired word finding.
Methods & Procedures: Naming performance of a group of PwA was compared with the performance of a control
group. Performance on theMaltese adaptation of the BNT was investigated in terms of scores, range of scores and
error profiles of the two groups.
Outcomes & Results: All PwA scored below the mean score of the controls, indicating that persons who scored
above the mean score may be considered as unimpaired. However, a number of the controls obtained very low
scores that overlapped with the scores obtained by the PwA. This indicated that scores alone cannot be used to
differentiate between impaired and unimpaired people. Some types of errors were only produced by people with
impaired naming, and did not appear at all in error profiles of unimpaired individuals.
Conclusions & Implications: Mild–moderate anomic impairments may be missed if naming impairment is assessed
and diagnosed using a cut-off score. In order to differentiate between people with impaired and unimpaired
naming, it is necessary to look at error profiles, apart from the number of errors, as the presence of atypical errors
may be an important indicator of naming impairments
A national quality incentive scheme to reduce antibiotic overuse in hospitals; evaluation of perceptions and impact
In 2016/2017, a financially-linked antibiotic prescribing quality improvement initiative (AMR-CQUIN) was introduced across acute hospitals in England. This aimed for >1% reductions in Defined Daily Doses / 1000 admissions of total antibiotics, piperacillin/tazobactam and carbapenems compared with 2013/2014 and improved review of empiric antibiotic prescriptions
Adaptation of the WHO Essential Medicines List for national antibiotic stewardship policy in England: being AWaRe.
OBJECTIVES:Appropriate use of and access to antimicrobials are key priorities of global strategies to combat antimicrobial resistance (AMR). The WHO recently classified key antibiotics into three categories (AWaRe) to improve access (Access), monitor important antibiotics (Watch) and preserve effectiveness of 'last resort' antibiotics (Reserve). This classification was assessed for antibiotic stewardship and quality improvement in English hospitals.
METHODS:Using an expert elicitation exercise, antibiotics used in England but not included in the WHO AWaRe index were added to an appropriate category following a workshop consensus exercise with national experts. The methodology was tested using national antibiotic prescribing data and presented by primary and secondary care.
RESULTS:In 2016, 46/108 antibiotics included within the WHO AWaRe index were routinely used in England and an additional 25 antibiotics also commonly used in England were not included in the WHO AWaRe index. WHO AWaRe-excluded and -included antibiotics were reviewed and reclassified according to the England-adapted AWaRE index with the justification by experts for each addition or alteration. Applying the England-adapted AWaRe index, Access antibiotics accounted for the majority (60.9%) of prescribing, followed by Watch (37.9%) and Reserve (0.8%); 0.4% of antibiotics remained unclassified. There was unexplained 2-fold variation in prescribing between hospitals within each AWaRe category, highlighting the potential for quality improvement.
CONCLUSIONS:We have adapted the WHO AWaRe index to create a specific index for England. The AWaRe index provides high-level understanding of antibiotic prescribing. Subsequent to this process the England AWaRe index is now embedded into national antibiotic stewardship policy and incentivized quality improvement schemes
Biogeochemistry of Arsenic and Antimony in the North Pacific Ocean
The biogeochemical cycles of the metalloid elements arsenic and antimony were examined along a 15,000 km surface water transect and at 9 vertical profile stations in the western North Pacific Ocean as part of the 2002 IOC Contaminant Baseline Survey. Results show that the speciation of dissolved arsenic (As III, As V, and methylated As) was subtly controlled by the arsenate (AsV)/phosphate ratio. An additional fraction of presumed organic arsenic previously reported in coastal waters was also present (~15% of the total As) in oceanic surface waters. Dissolved inorganic antimony displayed mildly scavenged behavior that was confirmed by correlations with aluminum, but atmospheric inputs that may be anthropogenic in origin also affected its concentrations. Monomethyl antimony, the predominant organic form of the element, behaved almost conservatively throughout the water column, radically changing the known biogeochemical cycle of antimony
The twilight of the Liberal Social Contract? On the Reception of Rawlsian Political Liberalism
This chapter discusses the Rawlsian project of public reason, or public justification-based 'political' liberalism, and its reception. After a brief philosophical rather than philological reconstruction of the project, the chapter revolves around a distinction between idealist and realist responses to it. Focusing on political liberalism’s critical reception illuminates an overarching question: was Rawls’s revival of a contractualist approach to liberal legitimacy a fruitful move for liberalism and/or the social contract tradition? The last section contains a largely negative answer to that question. Nonetheless the chapter's conclusion shows that the research programme of political liberalism provided and continues to provide illuminating insights into the limitations of liberal contractualism, especially under conditions of persistent and radical diversity. The programme is, however, less receptive to challenges to do with the relative decline of the power of modern states
Long-Baseline Neutrino Facility (LBNF) and Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment (DUNE) Conceptual Design Report Volume 2: The Physics Program for DUNE at LBNF
The Physics Program for the Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment (DUNE) at
the Fermilab Long-Baseline Neutrino Facility (LBNF) is described
Overhaul and Installation of the ICARUS-T600 Liquid Argon TPC Electronics for the FNAL Short Baseline Neutrino Program
The ICARUS T600 liquid argon (LAr) time projection chamber (TPC) underwent a
major overhaul at CERN in 2016-2017 to prepare for the operation at FNAL in the
Short Baseline Neutrino (SBN) program. This included a major upgrade of the
photo-multiplier system and of the TPC wire read-out electronics. The full TPC
wire read-out electronics together with the new wire biasing and
interconnection scheme are described. The design of a new signal feed-through
flange is also a fundamental piece of this overhaul whose major feature is the
integration of all electronics components onto the signal flange. Initial
functionality tests of the full TPC electronics chain installed in the T600
detector at FNAL are also described
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