57 research outputs found
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Integrating constructive feedback in personalised e-learning
When using e-learning material some students progress readily, others have difficulties. In a traditional classroom the teacher would identify those with difficulties and direct them to additional resources. This support is not easily available within e-learning. A new approach to providing constructive feedback is developed that will enable an e-learning system to identify areas of weakness and provide guidance on further study. The approach is based on the tagging of learning material with appropriate keywords that indicate the contents. Thus if a student performs poorly on an assessment on topic X, there is a need to suggest further study of X and participation in activities related to X such as forums. As well as supporting the learner this type of constructive feedback can also inform other stakeholders. For example a tutor can monitor the progress of a cohort; an instructional designer can monitor the quality of learning objects in facilitating the appropriate knowledge across many learners
Bezerromycetales and Wiesneriomycetales ord. nov. (class Dothideomycetes), with two novel genera to accommodate endophytic fungi from Brazilian cactus
During a survey of endophytic fungi from the cactus Tacinga inamoena in a Brazilian tropical
dry forest (Caatinga) some undescribed ascomycetous fungi were isolated. These fungi are
characterized by superficial and immersed, globose to subglobose, smooth or hairy
ascomata, bitunicate asci, and muriformly septate, ellipsoidal ascospores. Multigene
phylogenetic analyses using sequences from partial ITS, SSU and LSU nrDNA and the
translation elongation factor 1-alpha gene (tef1) demonstrated a monophyletic clade
accommodating these endophytic fungi in the class Dothideomycetes, closely related to the
order Tubeufiales. Based on morphological features and phylogenetic analyses, these fungi
could not be placed in the order Tubeufiales, in the new order Wiesneriomycetales, or any
other known genus in the class Dothideomycetes. Thus, two new genera (Bezerromyces,
with B. brasiliensis and B. pernambucoensis, and Xiliomyces with X. brasiliensis), a new
family (Bezerromycetaceae) and a new order (Bezerromycetales) are introduced to
accommodate these novel taxa. Our phylogenetic analyses also demonstrated that the clade
accommodating Wiesneriomycetaceae represents a new order, here introduced as
Wiesneriomycetales.Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento CientÃfico e Tecnológico (CNPq) (Process
203132/2014-9), Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de NÃvel Superior (CAPES)
and Fundação de Amparo à Ciência e Tecnologia de Pernambuco (FACEPE) of Brazil.http://link.springer.com/journal/115572018-04-30hb2017Microbiology and Plant Patholog
TFOS DEWS II Report Executive Summary
This article presents an Executive Summary of the conclusions and recommendations of the 10-chapter TFOS DEWS II report. The entire TFOS DEWS II report was published in the July 2017 issue of The Ocular Surface. A downloadable version of the document and additional material, including videos of diagnostic and management techniques, are available on the TFOS website: www.TearFilm.org
Development and bloom in hybrids of wild passion fruit cultivated in different types of pots and shading levels
Ornamental hybrids of passion flowers are thoroughly diffused in many countries and used in the decoration of houses and gardens. However, the cultivation of ornamental passion fruits practically unexploited in Brazil. This study aimed at evaluating the growth and blooming of F1 hybrids of Passiflora L. (P. sublanceolata J.M. MacDougal [ex P. palmeri var. sublanceolata Killip] vs. P. foetida var. foetida L.) cultivated in ceramic and concrete pots under different shading levels. The vegetative and flower evaluations were carried out weekly, in clonal cuttings 60 days after rooting. The height, leaf length and width, the number of internodes and leaves and stem diameter were evaluated using a randomized complete design in a factorial scheme which corresponded to two genotypes, two types of pot, three shading levels (25 %, 50 %, 75 %) and seven weeks of evaluation, with four replications. For the variable number of flowers, the same experimental design was adopted. However, the number of evaluations was modified for three periods, but this was not considered for the flower diameter and leaf area. The shading levels of 25 % and 50 % were the most favorable to the growth in height, whereas hybrid genotypes under 25 % shade had greater increase in the number of leaves, internodes and stem diameter, showing tolerance to moderate shade. The higher values for length, width and leaf area were observed at 75 % shade. The greatest number of flowers was verified at 25 % shadow in concrete pots. As for the types of pot, the ceramic ones were more favorable to the growth of hybrid plants during the first weeks of acclimatization to the treatments, and the concrete ones were more propitious to blooming. Thus, the use of hybrid plants in concrete pots for the ornamentation of internal environments is recommended, if they are well illuminated
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