4,444 research outputs found
Occupational therapy students’ views of health promotion
With the increased interest in the contribution of occupational therapists to health promotion, the College of Occupational Therapists (2004a) recommended that pre-registration programmes should prepare graduates for practice which includes health promotion. This study ascertained the views of second year occupational therapy students about health promotion. Thirty five (30%) students responded to a self report questionnaire and demonstrated positive views about the future relationship between health promotion and occupational therapy. The students thought health promotion should be included in the education of occupational therapists and did not think that there had bee
Experimental Performance of a Solar Air Collector with a Perforated Back Plate in New Zealand
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The effects of positive school engagement on math and reading achievement in midwestern suburban middle school students
Ensuring high academic achievement in schools with increasingly diverse students is a challenge. Assessing student engagement can be a powerful tool in predicting potential success and identifying students who may need additional support. Positive youth development theory supports focusing on a young person’s strengths, and an asset-based approach to education can raise student achievement. During the 2007-2008 school year, seventh grade students were assessed for school engagement using the Developmental Assets Profile. Students were identified as either not engaged or engaged in school. For two years, achievement in reading and math as well as grade point average was collected and analyzed using two-way analyses of variance for time (seventh grade to eighth grade) and engagement level. Overall findings indicate that students who are engaged in school achieve at higher rates and have higher grade point averages in both reading and math. Identifying students who are not engaged and using techniques to raise engagement levels can lead to higher achievement
Wit
A brilliant and respected university professor, known for her teaching of the difficult and metaphysical poems of John Donne, is diagnosed with terminal cancer. Throughout the course of her experimental treatments, she comes to an understanding of her work, and her life, with profound humor. Winner of the 1999 Pulitzer Prize for Drama, the New York Times called Wit (sometimes written W;t) a “brutally human and beautifully layered new play…you feel both enlightened and, in a strange way, enormously comforted.” Presented in an intimate staging atmosphere, WIT is sure to move you.https://digitalcommons.cedarville.edu/theatre_productions/1034/thumbnail.jp
Ciliated Protozoan Colonization of Substrates From Weeks Bay, Alabama
Ciliated protozoan colonization of artificial substrates was examined during a 12-mo period from Jan. to Dec. 2001 in Weeks Bay, Alabama. Artificial substrates (glass slides) were suspended in the water at three locations in the Bay for a period of I wk/mo, and the population density of the stalked peritrich Vorticella was determined. Environmental data collected during the colonization period were compared with the population results. There was a positive correlation between colonization and water temperature at two sites and between phosphate and colonization at one site. Additionally, a negative correlation was determined between colonization and dissolved oxygen at two sites, between colonization and nitrate at one site, and between colonization and pH at one site. The protozoan assemblage varied from month to month, although the overall dominance of Vorticella was maintained. Although the size of the population of Vorticella is likely influenced by a number of different variables, we believe that temperature and bacterial abundance are the likely controlling factors
Settlement of the Acorn Barnacle Balanus From Mobile Bay and Weeks Bay, Alabama
Barnacle cyprids and metamorphosed settlers were collected using glass slides as artificial substrates at six sites in the Mobile Bay area. Three sites were located in Weeks Bay, Alabama, where the highest settlement concentration occurred near the entrance to Mobile Bay. Two sites in the north end of Weeks Bay near the Fish River had very reduced settlement. The remaining three locations were on the north shore of Dauphin Island, Alabama. Settlement at Dauphin Island was most abundant at the deeper of two sites at the Dauphin Island Sea Lab boat dock, possibly because the substrates were exposed to less wave action. The other two sites at Dauphin Island were shallow and relatively unsettled when compared with the deep site. Adult barnacles recovered from the Weeks Bay and Dauphin Island locations include Balanus eburneus, B. venustus, B. improvisus, and B. subalbidus. Our data indicate two primary settlement periods for these species, late winter to spring and late summer to fall, with the highest settlement occurring in Feb. and March
A Study of a Mini-drift GEM Tracking Detector
A GEM tracking detector with an extended drift region has been studied as
part of an effort to develop new tracking detectors for future experiments at
RHIC and for the Electron Ion Collider that is being planned for BNL or JLAB.
The detector consists of a triple GEM stack with a small drift region that was
operated in a mini TPC type configuration. Both the position and arrival time
of the charge deposited in the drift region were measured on the readout plane
which allowed the reconstruction of a short vector for the track traversing the
chamber. The resulting position and angle information from the vector could
then be used to improve the position resolution of the detector for larger
angle tracks, which deteriorates rapidly with increasing angle for conventional
GEM tracking detectors using only charge centroid information. Two types of
readout planes were studied. One was a COMPASS style readout plane with 400
micron pitch XY strips and the other consisted of 2x10mm2 chevron pads. The
detector was studied in test beams at Fermilab and CERN, along with additional
measurements in the lab, in order to determine its position and angular
resolution for incident track angles up to 45 degrees. Several algorithms were
studied for reconstructing the vector using the position and timing information
in order to optimize the position and angular resolution of the detector for
the different readout planes. Applications for large angle tracking detectors
at RHIC and EIC are also discussed.Comment: Submitted to the IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Scienc
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