1,141 research outputs found

    ASEAN 2015 INTEGRATION AND IMPLICATION FOR PHYSICAL EDUCATION AND SPORT

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    ASEAN formed on 8th August 1967 will be integrated in 2015 with a charter a legal frameworkand based on 3 pillars:-(1) Socio-Cultural Community(2) Economic Community(3) Political-Security CommunityThe future of our ASEAN people depends on ASEAN 2015 Integration.(1) ASEAN population is the 3rd largest in Asia with 600 million after India,China.(2) Our economy is valued at US1.85trillionin2008.ASEANisthe3rdlargestinAsiaafterJapanandChinawithGDP1.85 trillion in 2008. ASEAN is the 3rd largest in Asia afterJapan and China with GDP 1506 billion (2008), China 4402,Japan4402, Japan 4924. ASEAN GDP increased170% over the past decade.(3) US foreign direct investment (FDI) into ASEAN totaled 130billion(2007)thelargestdestinationforUSinAsia.(4)ASEANisthe3rdlargestUStradingpartnerinAsiaafterChinaandJapan.(5)USexportstoASEAN130 billion (2007) the largestdestination for US in Asia.(4) ASEAN is the 3rd largest US trading partner in Asia after China and Japan.(5) US exports to ASEAN 66 billion in 2008 up 6.2% from 2002.(6) ASEAN’s 3rd largest export market is US-12%, Japan-12%, China-10%, India-3%.(7) ASEAN does 6% of all world trade.

    Design Matters, and so does Philosophy of Design 2003 John Eggleston Memorial Lecture

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    Why bother about philosophy of design?The theme of the 2003 DATA International Research Conference is ‘Design Matters’. If there is one country in the world that has shown this to be true for design and technology education, it is the UK. Design has had a well established place in general technology education for many years. This is demonstrated in the names of this subject: ‘Craft, Design and Technology’, and more recently ‘Design and Technology’. The particular emphasis on design becomes even more evident if one realises that internationally the name Technology Education is more common. This, of course, does not necessarily mean that in what is called ‘Technology Education’ design is always underestimated, but the fact that the word ‘design’ is an explicit element in the subject’s name in UK practice is meaningful

    Intersecting Autoethnographies: Two Academics Reflect on Being Parent-Researchers

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    This article presents two intersecting autoethnographies generated by two academics working in the same university, who were both parent-researchers. We researched aspects of our own children’s lives, primarily in the home focusing on their engagement with dance and music. As autoethnographers we engaged in shared and individual systematic sociological introspection. In this inquiry we employed observation, copious field notes, video and photographic recording to gather longitudinal data about often unpredictable moments of creative arts engagement that occurred in the home setting. Our research provided a unique window into child directed dance and music behaviours which are rarely seen and which offers insights into the creative education process

    Does Branch Structure of an Invasive Shrub (Elaeagnus umbellata) Alter Bird Perching Behavior?

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    Autumn Olive, Elaeagnus umbellata, has been introduced throughout the United States. Research on the impacts of invasive plants like E. umbellata on bird behavior has produced conflicting results with some birds preferring to use invasives while others avoid them. Branch structure has been implicated in bird preference for certain woody species. Thus, we asked the question, does E. umbellata differ in branch structure from common natives in the landscape and, if so, how does this difference impact the behavior of native birds? We examined this question during the non-fruiting season at study sites with mixed open and shrubby second growth forest habitats in Michigan and Indiana. We found that E. umbellata branches were twice as dense and 45% smaller in diameter than those of native cherry, Prunus serotina, but did not differ from two other native shrubs. Birds did not show a preference for perching in native shrub branches in choice tests using bird feeders in situ with invasive or native branches. Mist net capture rates for birds also did not differ between E. umbellata and native shrub sites. We concluded that native birds do not avoid E. umbellata during the non-fruiting season for perching despite a unique branch structure

    How to Measure the Effectiveness of Teachers: Validation of an Instrument based on the Creative Action Methodology

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    Creative Action methodology brings together nature (how our brains function) and nurture (the way we educate). When using Creative Action methodology as a didactical method in vocational and primary education, students become more motivated to learn, perform better, and show less oppositional behavior. In this way, the Creative Action methodology adds to the effectiveness of teachers. In this paper, we describe the development of an instrument to measure teachers’ effectiveness. In this article, the research conducted to validate the measurement instrument will be described. Results suggest that the instrument has internal and predictive validity

    Patient Safety in Interventional Radiology: A CIRSE IR Checklist

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    Interventional radiology (IR) is an invasive speciality with the potential for complications as with other invasive specialities. The World Health Organization (WHO) produced a surgical safety checklist to decrease the morbidity and mortality associated with surgery. The Cardiovascular and Interventional Society of Europe (CIRSE) set up a task force to produce a checklist for IR. Use of the checklist will, we hope, reduce the incidence of complications after IR procedures. It has been modified from the WHO surgical safety checklist and the RAD PASS from Holland

    The complete mitochondrial genome of Epomophorus gambianus (Chiroptera: Pteropodidae) and its phylogenetic analysis

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    The Gambian epauletted fruit bat, Epomophorus gambianus, is widely distributed across sub-Saharan Africa. Its assembled and annotated mitochondrial genome (GenBank accession no. KT963027) is 16,702 bases in length, containing 13 protein-coding genes, 22 transfer RNA genes, two ribosomal RNA genes and two non-coding regions: the control region (D-loop) and the origin of light-strand replication (OL). The average base composition is 32.2% A; 27.6% C; 14% G; and 26.1% T. The mitogenome presented a structural composition greatly conserved between members of the Pteropodidae family

    Recent trends in cutaneous malignant melanoma in the Yorkshire region of England; incidence, mortality and survival in relation to stage of disease, 1993–2003

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    The aim of this study was to investigate recent trends in incidence, mortality and survival in patients diagnosed with malignant melanoma (MM) in relation to stage (Breslow thickness). Cases of primary invasive and in situ MM diagnosed between 1st January 1993 and 31st December 2003 in the former Yorkshire Health Authority were identified from cancer registry data. Over the study period, the incidence of invasive MM increased from 5.4 to 9.7 per 100 000 in male subjects and from 7.5 to 13.1 per 100 000 in female subjects. Most of this increase was seen in thin tumours (<1.5 mm). Thin tumours were more likely to be diagnosed in the younger age groups and be classified as superficial spreading melanoma. In situ melanoma rates increased only slightly. Over the same time period, mortality rates have been relatively constant in both male and female subjects. Five-year relative survival varied from 91.8% (95% CI 90.4–93.1) for patients with thin tumours to 41.5% (95% CI 36.7–46.3) for those with thick tumours. In multivariable analyses, Breslow thickness was the most important prognostic factor. Age, sex and level of deprivation were also identified as independent prognostic factors. The trends in incidence suggest that the increase is real, rather than an artefact of increased scrutiny, implying that primary prevention in the Yorkshire area of the UK has failed to control trends in incidence. Mortality, in contrast, appears to be levelling off, indicating that secondary prevention has been more effective

    Influence of climatic variables on crown condition in pine forests of Northern Spain

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    Producción CientíficaThe aim of this study was to find relationships between crown condition and some climatic parameters to identify which are those having a main influence on crown condition, and how this influence is shown in the tree (crown transparency), and to contribute to the understanding of how these parameters will affect under future climate change scenarios
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