3,687 research outputs found
The Conduits and Barriers to Reentry for Formerly Incarcerated Individuals in San Bernardino
Numerous scholars have noted that the majority of prisoners will be reincarcerated within three years of their release. However, while there has been extensive research on recidivism, much less attention has been paid to the reentry process in the sociological and criminological literature. Given the high rates of former prisoners reentering society with struggles that may affect their friends, family members, and communities, policymakers and practitioners should understand the successful methods for their reintegration. In this paper, we explore the conduits and barriers to reentry for a sample of San Bernardino county callers using United Way’s 211 Reentry Call Center from 2014-2015. We find that human needs resources (i.e. housing, clothes, and food assistance) and legal assistance are the two most frequently requested services. The callers in our sample have intersecting, disadvantaged identities and require multiple services which suggests a need for collaboration across agencies
Pipe joints reinforced in place with fitted aluminum sleeves
Installation of an aluminum sleeve, using specially designed tools, reinforces solder- sealed ferrule joints in installed small-diameter aluminum tubing. Tubing joints reinforced by this method withstand considerable torsional tensional, and vibrational stresses at moderately elevated temperatures
P-03 An Evaluation of Foot-washing as Practiced in the Seventh-day Adventist Church
This project studies theological and historical connections and correlations between foot-washing and the Lord’s Supper. The goal is to explore the biblical basis for the Seventh-Day Adventist practice of the communion ceremony. It is hard to infer an obvious connection because both events are never presented together. However, upon a thorough exegesis of the text, theological connections involving symbolism of Christ’s death, a clear mandate to perform foot-washing, as well as a consistency in the timeline unite both events. So far this study has proven that foot-washing is a practice based upon biblical mandate rather than Christian tradition
An Evaluation of Footwashing as Practiced by the Seventh-day Adventist Church
My goal in conducting this honors thesis is to find the biblical, theological, and historical reasons for why Seventh-day Adventists perform footwashing and the Lord\u27s Supper in the same ceremony. A more thorough analysis of the scriptural texts depicting footwashing and the Lord\u27s Supper could help us discern whether there is a strong thematic connection that justifies their joining into one ceremony. Additionally, research into the origins of the practice of footwashing within the Early Christian Church and the Early Seventh-day Adventist Church will help us discern whether the way that the Seventh-day Adventist Church performs communion is based on biblical principle or Christian tradition
A unique Fock quantization for fields in non-stationary spacetimes
In curved spacetimes, the lack of criteria for the construction of a unique
quantization is a fundamental problem undermining the significance of the
predictions of quantum field theory. Inequivalent quantizations lead to
different physics. Recently, however, some uniqueness results have been
obtained for fields in non-stationary settings. In particular, for vacua that
are invariant under the background symmetries, a unitary implementation of the
classical evolution suffices to pick up a unique Fock quantization in the case
of Klein-Gordon fields with time-dependent mass, propagating in a static
spacetime whose spatial sections are three-spheres. In fact, the field equation
can be reinterpreted as describing the propagation in a
Friedmann-Robertson-Walker spacetime after a suitable scaling of the field by a
function of time. For this class of fields, we prove here an even stronger
result about the Fock quantization: the uniqueness persists when one allows for
linear time-dependent transformations of the field in order to account for a
scaling by background functions. In total, paying attention to the dynamics,
there exists a preferred choice of quantum field, and only one
-invariant Fock representation for it that respects the standard
probabilistic interpretation along the evolution. The result has relevant
implications e.g. in cosmology.Comment: Typos correcte
The Road traveled to becoming a safe high school
Many urban school districts share a common profile of high dropout rates, low graduation rates, high discipline statistics and acts of school violence, and low student achievement on assessments. Researchers have argued high schools are teaching students in ways that are not only ineffective but also fail to provide the requisite tools for students to achieve success in the 21st century (Gates Foundation, 2010). Additional voices claim urban high schools are not adequately preparing students to become successful citizens for a knowledge-based society (Cuban, 2007).
Using qualitative methodology, this naturalistic study revealed five factors that contribute to creating a safe urban high school in a large school district. Open, Axial and selective coding were used to generate understandings and linkages from the interviews, observations, artifacts and literature related to high school reform and school safety. Five research questions anchored the basis for this study.
Findings from this study revealed that principal leadership and learning proved to be two significant factors that characterize a safe school. Findings also revealed internal and external factors that appear to have contributed to the development of a previously unsafe high school to being a safe one. Specifically - resources, administrative support and community context contributed to one urban high school becoming safe. The study report concludes with the introduction of an organizing framework related to factors that contribute to a safe school
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Composite polymer membranes for laserinduced fluorescence thermometry
We demonstrate a modified version of laser-induced fluorescence thermometry (LIFT) for mapping temperature gradients in the vicinity of small photothermal devices. Our approach is based on temperature sensitive fluorescent membranes fabricated with rhodamine B and polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS). Relevant membrane features for LIFT, such as temperature sensitivity, thermal quenching and photobleaching are presented for a range of 25 °C to 90 °C, and their performance is evaluated upon obtaining the temperature gradients produced in the proximity of optical fiber micro-heaters. Our results show that temperature measurements in regions as small as 750 μm x 650 μm, with a temperature resolution of 1 °C, can be readily obtained
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