6,062 research outputs found
The Burden of Acting White: Implications for Transition
This study used a phenomenological qualitative approach that engaged Black students in discussions about the burden of acting White and its impact on their in-school and postschool outcomes and postschool transition visions. Six seventh- and eighth-grade Black students identified as at risk for school failure, a principal, and five teachers participated in this study. The authors identified and addressed the following themes: (a) the existence of the burden of acting White; (b) students' definitions of acting Black or White; (c) teachers' inability to intervene and counteract the impacts of acting White; (d) the significance of postschool visions; and (e) academic orientation. The authors conclude by discussing the need for transition programs focused on self-determination.Yeshttps://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/manuscript-submission-guideline
Kinetics of Thymocyte Subset Development and Selection Revealed by Cyclosporin A Treatment
Cyclosporin A (CsA) inhibits the development of mature thymocytes from their
CD4+ CD8+ precursors, but may allow autoreactive cells to mature. Using 3-color flow
cytometry, we have followed the progressive development of thymocytes, including
potentially autoreactive cells, during CsA treatment. Numbers of CD4+ CD8+ CD3high
thymocytes dropped immediately, suggesting that the generation of these mature thymocyte
precursors, normally dependent upon positive selection, was inhibited by CsA.
Numbers of CD4- CD8+ thymocytes also declined rapidly, but CD4- CD8+ thymocytes
were unaffected lfor 2 days, suggesting that the mature single-positive subsets are not
symmetrically derived from a common GsA-sensitive precursor. An exceptional subset of
CD8 SP thymocytes, expressing CD45RA, did not respond to CsA for about 10 days,
indicating that they are distantly derived from a CsA-sensitive precursor. Apoptosis of
TCR-Vβ3+ thymocytes caused by Mtυ-6, quantified according to the down-regulation of
CD4 and CD8 on immature thymocytes, was partially inhibited by CsA, to maximal effect
within 24 hours. This did not, however, facilitate their development into mature thymocytes
Determining the date of diagnosis – is it a simple matter? The impact of different approaches to dating diagnosis on estimates of delayed care for ovarian cancer in UK primary care
Background Studies of cancer incidence and early management will increasingly draw on routine electronic patient records. However, data may be incomplete or inaccurate. We developed a generalisable strategy for investigating presenting symptoms and delays in diagnosis using ovarian cancer as an example. Methods The General Practice Research Database was used to investigate the time between first report of symptom and diagnosis of 344 women diagnosed with ovarian cancer between 01/06/2002 and 31/05/2008. Effects of possible inaccuracies in dating of diagnosis on the frequencies and timing of the most commonly reported symptoms were investigated using four increasingly inclusive definitions of first diagnosis/suspicion: 1. "Definite diagnosis" 2. "Ambiguous diagnosis" 3. "First treatment or complication suggesting pre-existing diagnosis", 4 "First relevant test or referral". Results The most commonly coded symptoms before a definite diagnosis of ovarian cancer, were abdominal pain (41%), urogenital problems(25%), abdominal distension (24%), constipation/change in bowel habits (23%) with 70% of cases reporting at least one of these. The median time between first reporting each of these symptoms and diagnosis was 13, 21, 9.5 and 8.5 weeks respectively. 19% had a code for definitions 2 or 3 prior to definite diagnosis and 73% a code for 4. However, the proportion with symptoms and the delays were similar for all four definitions except 4, where the median delay was 8, 8, 3, 10 and 0 weeks respectively. Conclusion Symptoms recorded in the General Practice Research Database are similar to those reported in the literature, although their frequency is lower than in studies based on self-report. Generalisable strategies for exploring the impact of recording practice on date of diagnosis in electronic patient records are recommended, and studies which date diagnoses in GP records need to present sensitivity analyses based on investigation, referral and diagnosis data. Free text information may be essential in obtaining accurate estimates of incidence, and for accurate dating of diagnoses
Off-diagonal Interactions, Hund's Rules and Pair-binding in Hubbard Molecules
We have studied the effect of including nearest-neighbor, electron-electron
interactions, in particular the off-diagonal (non density-density) terms, on
the spectra of truncated tetrahedral and icosahedral ``Hubbard molecules,''
focusing on the relevance of these systems to the physics of doped C.
Our perturbation theoretic and exact diagonalization results agree with
previous work in that the density-density term suppresses pair-binding.
However, we find that for the parameter values of interest for the
off-diagonal terms {\em enhance} pair-binding, though not enough to offset the
suppression due to the density-density term. We also find that the critical
interaction strengths for the Hund's rules violating level crossings in
C, C and C are quite insensitive to the
inclusion of these additional interactions.Comment: 20p + 5figs, Revtex 3.0, UIUC preprint P-94-10-08
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Integrating reading and literature into content area curriculum through thematic units
The goals of this project include developing a way to efficiently teach the many required subjects in the overloaded elementary school day and incorporating litrature into content area curriculum
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