51 research outputs found
Student Perceptions of the Effectiveness of Adaptive Courseware for Learning
Despite the increasing research on the effectiveness of adaptive learning courseware by vendors and academic institutions, there are few published, peer-reviewed studies on adaptive courseware that address the student experience and student perception of this teaching and learning tool. Over the course of two academic years, 2017/2018 and 2018/2019, researchers at the University of Mississippi conducted 16 course-based student focus groups and gathered data from 4 end-of-semester surveys to understand how students are experiencing adaptive courseware and whether or not they find it adds value to their education. Our study found that, although students generally find courseware to be helpful in their learning, they do not agree the courseware is adaptive, and they find the benefits of the courseware to be undermined by poor implementation and frequent overpricing
The pharmaceutical use of permethrin: Sources and behavior during municipal sewage treatment
This is the author's accepted manuscript. The final published article is available from the link below. Copyright @ 2010 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC.Permethrin entered use in the 1970s as an insecticide in a wide range of applications, including agriculture, horticultural, and forestry, and has since been restricted. In the 21st century, the presence of permethrin in the aquatic environment has been attributed to its use as a human and veterinary pharmaceutical, in particular as a pedeculicide, in addition to other uses, such as a moth-proofing agent. However, as a consequence of its toxicity to fish, sources of permethrin and its fate and behavior during wastewater treatment are topics of concern. This study has established that high overall removal of permethrin (approximately 90%) was achieved during wastewater treatment and that this was strongly dependent on the extent of biological degradation in secondary treatment, with more limited subsequent removal in tertiary treatment processes. Sources of permethrin in the catchment matched well with measured values in crude sewage and indicated that domestic use accounted for more than half of the load to the treatment works. However, removal may not be consistent enough to achieve the environmental quality standards now being derived in many countries even where tertiary treatment processes are applied.United Utilities PL
Sentencing drug offenders under the 2003 Criminal Justice Act: Challenges for the probation service
For the most part the 2003 Criminal Justice Act, which came into effect in England and Wales in April 2005, was accepted by the probation service with relatively little opposition. Given the enormity of its impact acquiescence to this degree of change ought to come as something of a surprise. The 2003 Act changed fundamentally the nature of community supervision, it brought to an end the traditional range of non-custodial penalties and replaced them with a single community order to which sentencers could add any of 12 possible requirements. This paper considers the impact of the 2003 legislation on one particular offender group - drug misusers. Drug misusing offenders have the potential to pose serious difficulties for probation officers; the habitual nature of drug addiction and a tendency toward an irregular lifestyle make drug misusers particularly susceptible to breach. Under the new legislation courts have significantly fewer options available to them when responding to incidents of offender non-compliance. This paper argues that many of the provisions of the 2003 Act together with developments elsewhere in the UK are likely to have impacted disproportionately on those groups whose lifestyles are chaotic and whose routines are incompatible with the terms and conditions of modern day probation practice. It concludes that greater flexibility towards non-compliance, supported by regular and consistent judicial review, would encourage improved rates of compliance and retention in treatment and improved outcomes for offenders
Assumption without representation: the unacknowledged abstraction from communities and social goods
We have not clearly acknowledged the abstraction from unpriceable âsocial goodsâ (derived from
communities) which, different from private and public goods, simply disappear if it is attempted to
market them. Separability from markets and economics has not been argued, much less established.
Acknowledging communities would reinforce rather than undermine them, and thus facilitate
the production of social goods. But it would also help economics by facilitating our understanding
of â and response to â financial crises as well as environmental destruction and many social problems,
and by reducing the alienation from economics often felt by students and the public
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Disease-Induced Microbial Shifts in Citrus Indicate Microbiome-Derived Responses to Huanglongbing Across the Disease Severity Spectrum
Plant microbiomes are critical components to plant health and can influence disease outcomes. We provide empirical data describing disease-induced shifts within the citrus microbiome at different levels of huanglongbing (HLB) disease severity. HLB is associated with an invasive phloem-limited bacterium, âCandidatus Liberibacter asiaticusâ, that is introduced into the aerial portions of the tree by an insect vector. Disease manifests as aboveground foliar and fruit symptoms and significant root decline belowground. During the early phase of disease, there were depletions of putative keystone taxa in leaves and roots, followed by enrichments of putative beneficial taxa, suggesting a microbially derived immune response involved in plant protection that is ancillary to immune components encoded in the plantâs genome. In the late phase of disease, we observed enrichments of parasitic and saprophytic microorganisms, particularly in the roots. The community shifts within the root compartment are emblematic of a disease-induced dysbiosis where pathogens other than âCa. L. asiaticusâ begin to dominate the community. Furthermore, we define key taxa enriched in trees with a slower rate of disease development, referred to as survivor trees, that are hallmarks of those found in trees in the early phase of disease that may be drivers of the survivor tree phenotype. We propose a disease ecology model that illustrates the relationship between the pathogen, the microbiome, and the host plant that highlights microorganisms that may serve as disease facilitators or antagonists
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