1,998 research outputs found
Estimating the Effect of Leaders on Public Sector Productivity: The Case of School Principals
Although much has been written about the importance of leadership in the determination of organizational success, there is little quantitative evidence due to the difficulty of separating the impact of leaders from other organizational components – particularly in the public sector. Schools provide an especially rich environment for studying the impact of public sector management, not only because of the hypothesized importance of leadership but also because of the plentiful achievement data that provide information on institutional outcomes. Outcome-based estimates of principal value-added to student achievement reveal significant variation in principal quality that appears to be larger for high-poverty schools. Alternate lower-bound estimates based on direct estimation of the variance yield smaller estimates of the variation in principal productivity but ones that are still important, particularly for high poverty schools. Patterns of teacher exits by principal quality validate the notion that a primary channel for principal influence is the management of the teacher force. Finally, looking at principal transitions by quality reveals little systematic evidence that more effective leaders have a higher probability of exiting high poverty schools.
Charter School Quality and Parental Decision Making With School Choice
Charter schools have become a very popular instrument for reforming public schools, because they expand choices, facilitate local innovation, and provide incentives for the regular public schools while remaining under public control. Despite their conceptual appeal, evaluating their performance has been hindered by the selective nature of their student populations. This paper investigates the quality of charter schools in Texas in terms of mathematics and reading achievement and finds that, after an initial start-up period, average school quality in the charter sector is not significantly different from that in regular public schools. Perhaps most important, the parental decision to exit a charter school is much more sensitive to education quality than the decision to exit a regular public school, consistent with the notion that the introduction of charter schools substantially reduces the transactions costs of switching schools. Low income charter school families are, however, less sensitive to school quality than higher income families.
The Probable Detection of SN 1923A: The Oldest Radio Supernova?
Based upon the results of VLA observations, we report the detection of two
unresolved radio sources that are coincident with the reported optical position
of SN 1923A in M83. For the source closest to the SN position, the flux density
was determined to be 0.30 +/- 0.05 mJy at 20 cm and 0.093 +/- 0.028 mJy at 6
cm. The flux density of the second nearby source was determined to be 0.29 +/-
0.05 at 20 cm and 0.13 +/- 0.028 at 6 cm. Both sources are non-thermal with
spectral indices of alpha = -1.0 +/- 0.30 and -0.69 +/- 0.24, respectively. SN
1923A has been designated as a Type II-P. No Type II-P (other than SN 1987A)
has been detected previously in the radio. The radio emission from both sources
appears to be fading with time. At an age of approximately 68 years when we
observed it, this would be the oldest radio supernova (of known age) yet
detected
AQUARIUM EXPERIMENTS COMPARING THE FEEDING BEHAVIOUR OF ROCK LOBSTER JASUS LALANDII ON ABALONE AND SEA URCHINS AT TWO SITES ON THE WEST COAST OF SOUTH AFRICA
Predation by the rock lobster Jasus lalandii is influential in regulating the composition of shallow-reef communities on the west coast of South Africa. Two previous and independent studies addressing this topic, but conducted 600 km apart (one in Cape Town and the other in Port Nolloth on the west coast of South Africa) and using different experimental protocols, revealed contradictory results regarding the feeding behaviour of J. lalandii. The Port Nolloth study showed that juvenile abalone Haliotis midae hiding under sea urchins Parechinus angulosus were safe from predation by rock lobsters, which seemed to prefer the sea urchins as food. However, the Cape Town study showed that rock lobsters preferentially selected juvenile abalone over sea urchins. Because of the importance of these results to abalone ranching and the South African abalone fishery, the experiments were repeated at the two study sites, using a standardized experimental protocol. Rock lobsters from both sites showed a strong preference for juvenile abalone over sea urchins, even in the presence of kelp Ecklonia maxima. There was no significant difference (F3.92 = 0.09, p > 0.1) in abalone consumption by rock lobsters between the two sites. Therefore, at least in the absence of preferred prey such as mussels, sea urchins appear to provide only limited protection to juvenile abalone from rock lobsters.Afr. J. mar. Sci. 25: 377–38
A Search for Core-Collapse Supernova Progenitors In Hubble Space Telescope Images
Identifying the massive progenitor stars that give rise to core-collapse
supernovae (SNe) is one of the main pursuits of supernova and stellar evolution
studies. Using ground-based images of recent, nearby SNe obtained primarily
with KAIT, astrometry from 2MASS, and archival images from HST, we have
attempted the direct identification of the progenitors of 16 SNe II and SNe
Ib/c. We may have identified the progenitors of the SNe II 1999br, 1999ev, and
2001du as supergiant stars with M^0_V ~ -6 mag in all three cases. We may have
also identified the progenitors of the SNe Ib 2001B and 2001is as very luminous
supergiants with M^0_V ~ -8 to -9 mag, and possibly the progenitor of the SN Ic
1999bu as a supergiant with M^0_V ~ -7.5 mag. Additionally, we have recovered
at late times SNe 1999dn, 2000C, and 2000ew, although none of these had
detectable progenitors on pre-SN images. In fact, for the remaining SNe only
limits can be placed on the absolute magnitude and color (when available) of
the progenitor. The detected SN II progenitors and limits are consistent with
red supergiants as progenitor stars, although possibly not as red as we had
expected. Our results for the SNe Ib/c do not strongly constrain either
Wolf-Rayet stars or massive interacting binary systems as progenitors.Comment: 19 pages, 23 figures, to appear in PASP (2003 Jan
Spectral Modeling of SNe Ia Near Maximum Light: Probing the Characteristics of Hydro Models
We have performed detailed NLTE spectral synthesis modeling of 2 types of 1-D
hydro models: the very highly parameterized deflagration model W7, and two
delayed detonation models. We find that overall both models do about equally
well at fitting well observed SNe Ia near to maximum light. However, the Si II
6150 feature of W7 is systematically too fast, whereas for the delayed
detonation models it is also somewhat too fast, but significantly better than
that of W7. We find that a parameterized mixed model does the best job of
reproducing the Si II 6150 line near maximum light and we study the differences
in the models that lead to better fits to normal SNe Ia. We discuss what is
required of a hydro model to fit the spectra of observed SNe Ia near maximum
light.Comment: 29 pages, 14 figures, ApJ, in pres
The Environments of Supernovae in Post-Refurbishment Hubble Space Telescope Images
The locations of supernovae in the local stellar and gaseous environment in
galaxies contain important clues to their progenitor stars. Access to this
information, however, has been hampered by the limited resolution achieved by
ground-based observations. High spatial resolution Hubble Space Telescope (HST)
images of galaxy fields in which supernovae had been observed can improve the
situation considerably. We have examined the immediate environments of a few
dozen supernovae using archival post-refurbishment HST images. Although our
analysis is limited due to signal-to-noise ratio and filter bandpass
considerations, the images allow us for the first time to resolve individual
stars in, and to derive detailed color-magnitude diagrams for, several
environments. We are able to place more rigorous constraints on the masses of
these supernovae. A search was made for late-time emission from supernovae in
the archival images, and for the progenitor stars in presupernova images of the
host galaxies. We have detected SN 1986J in NGC 891 and, possibly, SN 1981K in
NGC 4258. We have also identified the progenitor of the Type IIn SN 1997bs in
NGC 3627. By removing younger resolved stars in the environments of SNe Ia, we
can measure the colors of the unresolved stellar background and attribute these
colors generally to an older, redder population. HST images ``accidentally''
caught the Type Ia SN 1994D in NGC 4526 shortly after its outburst; we measure
its brightness. Finally, we add to the statistical inferences that can be made
from studying the association of SNe with recent star-forming regions.Comment: 20 pages, 29 figures, to appear in A
Why does the Engel method work? Food demand, economies of size and household survey methods
Estimates of household size economies are needed for the analysis of poverty and inequality. This paper shows that Engel estimates of size economies are large when household expenditures are obtained by respondent recall but small when expenditures are obtained by daily recording in diaries. Expenditure estimates from recall surveys appear to have measurement errors correlated with household size. As well as demonstrating the fragility of Engel estimates of size economies, these results help resolve a puzzle raised by Deaton and Paxson (1998) about differences between rich and poor countries in the effect of household size on food demand
Absolute-Magnitude Distributions and Light Curves of Stripped-Envelope Supernovae
The absolute visual magnitudes of three Type IIb, 11 Type Ib and 13 Type Ic
supernovae (collectively known as stripped-envelope supernovae) are studied by
collecting data on the apparent magnitude, distance, and interstellar
extinction of each event. Weighted and unweighted mean absolute magnitudes of
the combined sample as well as various subsets of the sample are reported. The
limited sample size and the considerable uncertainties, especially those
associated with extinction in the host galaxies, prevent firm conclusions
regarding differences between the absolute magnitudes of supernovae of Type Ib
and Ic, and regarding the existence of separate groups of overluminous and
normal-luminosity stripped-envelope supernovae. The spectroscopic
characteristics of the events of the sample are considered. Three of the four
overluminous events are known to have had unusual spectra. Most but not all of
the normal luminosity events had typical spectra. Light curves of
stripped-envelope supernovae are collected and compared. Because SN 1994I in
M51 was very well observed it often is regarded as the prototypical Type Ic
supernova, but it has the fastest light curve in the sample. Light curves are
modeled by means of a simple analytical technique that, combined with a
constraint on E/M from spectroscopy, yields internally consistent values of
ejected mass, kinetic energy, and nickel mass.Comment: 39 pages, 14 figures, 7 tables; Accepted to A
Walls talk: Microbial biogeography of homes spanning urbanization.
Westernization has propelled changes in urbanization and architecture, altering our exposure to the outdoor environment from that experienced during most of human evolution. These changes might affect the developmental exposure of infants to bacteria, immune development, and human microbiome diversity. Contemporary urban humans spend most of their time indoors, and little is known about the microbes associated with different designs of the built environment and their interaction with the human immune system. This study addresses the associations between architectural design and the microbial biogeography of households across a gradient of urbanization in South America. Urbanization was associated with households' increased isolation from outdoor environments, with additional indoor space isolation by walls. Microbes from house walls and floors segregate by location, and urban indoor walls contain human bacterial markers of space use. Urbanized spaces uniquely increase the content of human-associated microbes-which could increase transmission of potential pathogens-and decrease exposure to the environmental microbes with which humans have coevolved
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