11 research outputs found
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Children researching links between poverty and literacy
Two groups of six children (aged eleven) in two UK primary schools – one in an area of socio-economic advantage and one in an area of socio-economic disadvantage – were trained in research methods. They were supported to undertake their own research projects about aspects of literacy, which they identified themselves. Areas explored include:
- homework experiences
- learning environments and
- how confidence affects literacy.
These research studies provide rich descriptions of children’s own literacy experiences, generating data that is not easily accessible to adults. The absence of power relations in the data collection by having child researchers means that the responses are untainted by efforts to ‘please the adult’. This report will be of interest to teachers, educationalists, government bodies, policy maker
The Role Of Work Life Balance In Job Satisfaction And Job Benefit
This paper investigates the influence of job benefits on job satisfaction of Public and Private Business Schools in Pakistan. Further it also examines the mediating effect of Work Life Balance (WLB) on job satisfaction and job benefit relationship. A sample of 329 respondents is collected from Business Schools in Pakistan by using a structured questionnaire. The results show that there is a mediation effect of WLB on the relationship of job satisfaction and job benefit
Psychological Morbidity in patients with Idiopathic Hirsutism presenting for Laser Treatment at a Tertiary Care Hospital
Objective: The objective of our study was to determine the frequency of depression, anxiety, and stress in females presenting for laser treatment of hirsutism at a dermatology clinic.
Materials and Methods: This was a cross-sectional descriptive study. 152 female participants of all ages presenting for laser treatment of hirsutism to the dermatology department –removed for blind review--from June 2019 to Dec 2019, were included using a consecutive convenient sampling technique. Patients having an FG (Ferriman and Gallwey) score of 8 or more, were included whereas those having any underlying cause (as assessed by history and examination and laboratory investigations where required) for both hirsutism and psychological disorder were excluded. The participants were given an Urdu version of the DASS 21 (depression, anxiety, and stress scale) to complete.
Results: The participants had a mean age of 30.22 (SD = 9.17). The prevalence of depression, anxiety, and stress in the sample was found to be 13.2%, 23.7%, and 17.8%, respectively. Mean depression, anxiety, and stress scores on DASS 21 were 4.43(SD=4.87, Cut-off= 10), 4.34(SD=5.12, Cut-off= 8), and 8.21(SD=6.26, Cut-off=15), respectively, indicating that the scores were within the normal range. Anxiety was the most common illness in the sample and both depression and stress showed a decline with advancing age up till 45years of age. No statistically significant association was found between the severity of hirsutism and depression, stress, and anxiety scores.
Conclusion: Psychological morbidity was found to be lower in patients of idiopathic hirsutism presenting for laser treatment. The long-term efficacy of laser treatment needs further evaluation in future research
Effects of inspiratory muscle training in patients with obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) is a common disorder marked by repetitive occurrence of breathing cessation during sleep due to partial or complete upper airway obstruction. An obstructive airway and the successive asphyxia chronically overload the inspiratory muscles resulting in an increased inspiratory effort. The present systematic review aimed to examine the effects of inspiratory muscle training (IMT) on inspiratory muscle strength [maximal inspiratory pressure (PImax)], severity of disease [apnea hypopnoea index (AHI)], sleep quality [Pittsburgh sleep quality index (PSQI)], day time sleepiness [Epworth sleepiness scale (ESS)], lung function [forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1)] and exercise capacity [cardiopulmonary exercise testing, (CPET), 6 minute walk test, (6MWT)] in mild to severe OSA. Among 953 articles retrieved from various databases (PubMed, SCOPUS, Web of Science and Cochrane), 7 articles were found to be eligible for the present review. Randomized controlled trials reporting the effect of IMT in OSA were selected. The quality assessment was conducted using Cochrane risk-of-bias tool for randomized trials. All seven studies were meta-analyzed. The result depicted significant change in PImax, ES 1.73 (95%CI 0.54 to 2.92, p=0.004), PSQI -1.29 (95%CI -1.94 to -0.65, p<0.0001), ESS -1.08 (95% CI -1.79 to - 0.37, p=0.003) and FEV1 0.74 (95%CI 0.20 to 1.28, p=0.007). IMT may be considered as an effective treatment strategy in mild to severe OSA resulting in improved inspiratory muscle strength, sleep quality, daytime sleepiness, and lung function. However, there is still dearth evidence on repercussion of IMT on lung function and exercise capacity and warrants high quality evidence to reach definitive conclusions
Requirement Engineering Challenges in Agile Software Development
Agile software development has large success rate due to its benefits and promising nature but natively where the size of the project is small. Requirement engineering (RE) is crucial as in each software development life cycle, “Requirements” play a vital role. Though agile provides values to customer’s business needs, changing requirement, and interaction, we also have to face impediments in agile, many of which are related to requirement challenges. This article aims to find out the challenges being faced during requirement engineering of agile projects. Many research studies have been conducted on requirement challenges which are somehow biased, no suggestions are given to improve the agile development process, and the research does not highlight large-scale agile development challenges. Hence, this article covers all the challenges discussed above and presents a comprehensive overview of agile models from requirement engineering perspective. The findings and results can be very helpful for software industry to improve development process as well as for researchers who want to work further in this direction