39 research outputs found

    Northington veterinary clinic: a new lease of life?

    No full text
    Adele Feakes, Diane Whatlin

    Cascade veterinary practice: changing times

    No full text
    Adele Feakes, Diane Whatlin

    'Context' matters: factors considered by employers when selecting new graduate veterinarians

    No full text
    Assisting students to develop employability attributes is considered a core responsibility of higher education institutions. While there are some common employability attributes across disciplines, there are also differences. Empirical research into employability from less-well represented disciplines, such as veterinary science, helps to broaden the current employability discourse. Using semi-structured interviews, and criterion sampling for maximal variation, this study explored factors employers consider when selecting new graduate veterinarians for employment. Eighteen employers were interviewed and data were analysed using thematic analysis within the context of an interpretivist, constructivist lens. Accounts were distilled into 20 sub-themes, or ‘selection factors’, and arranged into four interlinked themes: (1) personal attributes; (2) interpersonal skills; (3) veterinary capabilities; and (4) job match. This work illuminates the complexity of each selection factor including local influences, employer interpretations and ‘filter in’ and ‘filter out’ considerations. Findings emphasise the critical role that employer circumstances and needs can play in the selection of new graduate veterinarians, and the influence of perceptions of candidate job suitability and employee-workplace match. Our results resonate with existing employability literature, while highlighting some nuanced and previously underemphasised selection factors that may be of relevance beyond our discipline.Daniel Schull, Eva King, Wendy Hamood and Adele Feake

    The sturgeon falls paleosol and the composition of the atmosphere 1.1 Ga BP

    No full text
    A paleosol is exposed along the north bank of the Sturgeon River, some 25 km SW of Baraga, Michigan. The paleosol was developed on hydrothermally altered Keweenawan basalt and is overlain by the Jacobsville sandstone. Textures, mineralogy, and chemical composition change gradually upwards from unweathered metabasalt, through the paleosol, to the contact of the paleosol with the Jacobsville sandstone. Many of these changes are similar to those in modern soils developed on basaltic rocks. However, K has clearly been added to the paleosol, probably by solutions which had equilibrated with K-feldspar in the Jacobsville sandstone. The Keweenawan basalt was oxidized quite extensively during its conversion to greenstone. During weathering, the remaining Fe was oxidized to Fe and was retained in the paleosol. The composition of the parent greenstone and its change during weathering can be used to define an approximate lower limit to the ratio of the O pressure to the CO pressure in the atmosphere during the formation of the paleosol P P >0.04 . Free O must have been present in the atmosphere 1.1 Ga ago, but its partial pressure could have been 10 times lower than in the atmosphere today

    Na3[B20H17NH3]: synthesis and liposomal delivery to murine tumors.

    No full text
    corecore