90 research outputs found
The derivation of performance expressions for communication protocols from timed Petri net models
Petri Net models have been extended in a variety of ways and have been used to prove the correctness and evaluate the performance of communication protocols. Several extensions have been proposed to model time. This work uses a form of Timed Petri Nets and presents a technique for symbolically deriving expressions which describe system performance. Unlike past work on performance evaluation of Petri Nets which assumes a priori knowledge of specific time delays, the technique presented here applies to a wide range of time delays so long as the delays satisfy a set of timing constraints. The technique is demonstrated using a simple communication protocol
A queer politics of emotion: reimagining sexualities and schooling
peer-reviewedThis paper draws together Hochschildās (1979; 1983) concepts of emotional labour and feeling rules with Ahmedās affective economies (2004a, 2004b; 2008; 2010) and queer phenomenology (2006a, 2006b) as a way to address wider questions about sexuality and schooling. It highlights the value of the everyday politics of emotion for elucidating and clarifying the specificities, pertinence and complementarities of Hochschildās and Ahmedās work for reimagining the relationship between sexualities and schooling. The combination of their approaches allows for a focus on the individual, bodily management of emotions while demonstrating the connectedness of bodies and spaces. It enables disruption of āinclusiveā and āprogressiveā educational approaches that leave heterosexuality uninterrupted and provides insight into how power works in and across the bodies, discourses, practices, relations and spaces of schools to maintain a collective orientation towards heterosexuality. It also counters linear narratives of progressive change, elucidating how change is a hopeful but messy process of simultaneous constraint, transgression and transformation. Key moments from a three-year study with LGBT-Q teachers entering into civil partnerships (CP) in Ireland serve as exploratory examples of the theoretical ideas put forward in this paper.ACCEPTEDpeer-reviewe
Theorising variation in engagement in professional and curriculum development: performativity, capital, systems and purpose
Increasingly, policymakers seek to improve the quality of teaching through curriculum innovations and continuing professional development (CPD) programmes. However, engagement by schools and teachers varies due to mediating influences of neoliberal policies. In this article, we contribute to understanding how these tendencies affect participation. Problematising the notion of context, we examine ways in which systemic influences interacted with participation in a government-funded mathematics professional and curriculum development programme and also with participantsā purposes.
A 3-level clustered Randomised Controlled Trial (RCT) and an implementation and process evaluation were augmented by in-depth case studies, cross-case analysis and the application of theoretical constructs to interpret findings. Theories of capital, figured worlds and systemic coupling are utilised to theorise context.
Different levels of engagement are partly explainable by: the interaction of schools' relative systemic advantage and disadvantage; their orientation and coupling to performativity regimes; and the alignment or dissonance between continuing professional development or change programmes and the pedagogical and CPD cultures and purposes of the āactorsā (schools, departments and teachers). Performativity concerns restricted what were considered legitimate outcomes in some case study schools. This depended on teachers and schools' positioning in terms of relative degrees of systemic privilege or disadvantage - understood as economic, cultural, social and symbolic capital - and also in terms of figured worlds and system coupling. The case studies provide insights into how collaborative professional learning can be fostered more productively. Methodologically, we demonstrate the power of combining methodologies and applying explanatory social theory to augment quasi-experimental paradigms
Institutional Mergers in Ireland
The importance of knowledge as a driver of social and economic growth and prosperity, and the increasingly competitive āglobal race for knowledge and talentā (Hazelkorn, Higher Educ Manage Policy 21(1):55ā76, 2009) have combined to transform the higher education landscape, forcing national governments and higher education institutions (HEIs) to pursue new ways of addressing the challenges of a multi-polar world order. Rising demand for higher education (HE), as part of the broader shift from elite to mass to universal participation, has led to the emergence of new models of provision. At the same time, many governments face restrictions on public resources due to high levels of public and private debt; accordingly, system-level and institutional restructuring has been contemplated as a way to enhance quality, performance and efficiency
Neonatal imitation predicts infant rhesus macaque (Macaca mulatta) social and anxiety-related behaviours at one year
The identification of early markers that predict the development of specific social trajectories is critical to understand the developmental and neurobiological underpinnings of healthy social development. We investigated, in infant rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta), whether newbornsā capacity to imitate facial gestures is a valid predictive marker for the emergence of social competencies later in development, at one year of age. Here we first assessed whether infant macaques (Nā=ā126) imitate lipsmacking gestures (a macaque affiliative expression) performed by a human experimenter in their first week of life. We then collected data on infantsā social interactions (aggression, grooming, and play) and self-scratching (a proxy indicator of anxiety) at 11ā14 months when infants were transferred into a new enclosure with a large social group. Our results show that neonatal imitators exhibit more dominant behaviours, are less anxious, and, for males only, spend more time in play at one year old. These findings suggest that neonatal imitation may be an early predictor of infant sociality and may help identify infants at risk of neurodevelopmental social deficits
Engagement Across Developmental Periods
The goal of this chapter is to provide a cohesive developmental framework and foundation for which to understand student engagement across early childhood, middle childhood, and adolescence. Guided by the bioecological theory of human development and the person-environment fit perspective, this chapter extends Finn\u27s participation-identification model of engagement by mapping student engagement within a larger developmental sequence. This chapter discusses student engagement within specific developmental periods that are tied to the developmental tasks, opportunities, and challenges unique to early childhood, middle childhood, and adolescence. Student engagement is found to be a nuanced developmental outcome, and the differences may be a result of the maturation of biological, cognitive, and socioemotional developmental tasks and the changing contextual landscape for the children and adolescents. Recommendations for future research as well as policy implications are also discussed
Environmental Impact of Metal and Metalloid Leaching from Highway Marking Glass Beads
Recently, metals
and metalloids have been observed at elevated
concentrations in glass beads imported to the US. Average total concentrations
in imported batches ranged from 103 to 683 mg kg<sup>ā1</sup> for As, 62 to 187 mg kg<sup>ā1</sup> for Sb, and 23 to 179
mg kg<sup>ā1</sup> for Pb. The labile fraction associated with
the glass beads resulted in leached concentrations as great as 538
Ī¼g L<sup>ā1</sup> for As, 1092 Ī¼g L<sup>ā1</sup> for Pb, and 160 Ī¼g L<sup>ā1</sup> for Sb. Sequential
extraction was conducted as well to better understand the form of
metals and metalloids associated with the glass beads. Only 0.23%
of As, 3.40% of Pb, 2.37% of Ba, and 1.92% of Mn were extracted in
the exchangeable (As, Mn, and Ba) and the oxidizable forms (Pb), whereas
greater than 97% of metals and metalloids present were associated
with the glass matrix. Nonparametric statistics were applied to test
total concentrations that resulted in exceedances in the groundwater
quality criteria. Results demonstrated that the As, Pb, and Sb limits
were exceeded for 98%, 58%, and 15% of the samples tested respectively
suggesting a potential environmental impact to groundwater used as
a drinking water source
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