8 research outputs found

    Teaching Planning Studios: An Online Assessment Task to Enhance the First Year Experience

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    Planning studios, through learning by doing, introduce students to relevant practical skills. The problem is that not all students, especially in the first-year, spend the required time on task, so they fall behind and fail to catch up. The article is based on the Community of Inquiry framework and proposes an online assessment to ensure that teaching, social, and cognitive elements are present when there is no face-to-face contact between the teaching team and students. The article follows a planning cohort across their first two studios that adopted the online assessment, and it provides an opportunity to evaluate the impact on the first-year experience.Griffith Sciences, Griffith School of EnvironmentNo Full Tex

    Does mosquito control have an effect on mosquito-borne disease? The case of Ross River virus disease and mosquito management in Queensland, Australia

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    We examined the relationship between types of mosquito control programs and the mosquito-borne Ross River virus (RRV) disease in Queensland, Australia. Mosquito control information was collected through a survey of the responsible agencies (local governments), and RRV disease notification data were provided by the Queensland state health authority. The study developed a typology of mosquito control programs, based on the approaches used. Based on the analysis of data on RRV disease rates between mosquito control types within 4 climatic regions, each region had different combinations of mosquito control strategies in their programs; there were also general similarities in the relationship between program types and RRV rates between the regions. The long-term RRV disease rates were lower in areas where the mosquito control program included pre-emptive (rather than reactive) surveillance based on an extensive (rather than incomplete) knowledge of mosquito habitats, and where treatment of both saltwater and freshwater habitats (compared to only saltwater habitats, in coastal areas) occurred. The data indicate that mosquito control is an effective public health intervention to reduce mosquito-borne disease; hence, climate change adaptation strategies should ensure that adequate resources are available for effective vector control so as to manage the risk of mosquito-borne diseases

    TRAEMS: THE TRANSPORT PLANNING ADD-ON ENVIRONMENTAL MODELLING SYSTEM

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    This paper describes the advanced development, at Griffith University, of a GIS-based system that combines outputs from transport scenario testing methods with land use information for modelling the environmental impacts from road traffic. This system, known as “the TRansport Add-on Environmental Modelling System (TRAEMS) ” was developed using MapInfo GIS and is intended for use by transport planners as an add-on module to existing transport planning models. The model incorporates environmental factors such as noise, air pollution, energy consumption and pollution in stormwater run-off in a system that will fit almost seamlessly onto the current range of transport models in use. By incorporating these factors into a userfriendly computer package, the transport planning process and environmental implications can be considered simultaneously, creating the potential for a more efficient and environmentally sensitive planning process. The outputs from the system provide planners with immediate information on the environmental effects of any transport proposal being considered and thereby aid in the selection of a preferred alternative. This paper reports progress in the development of the noise, air pollution and water quality modules of this system and demonstrates the maximum utility of this form of modelling in the testing of transport planning scenarios. Proceedings of the 19 th ARRB Transport Research Conference, Section C, pp114-13

    The impact of urban form on travel behavior in three Baghdad neighbourhoods affected by terrorism

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    The article examines: 1) how travel behaviour was influenced by urban form in three terrorism-affected Baghdad districts; and 2) how the responses to terrorism in these neighbourhoods affected travel behaviour. The results suggest that urban form can mediate the impacts of terrorism and counter-terrorism with traditional urban form districts being more resilient than modern high-rise districts
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