3,420 research outputs found
Judgements as a basis for informal workplace learning - preliminary research findings
Informal learning can be broadly characterised as learning found in everyday opportunities where learners interact with the world around them. It can be distinguished from formal learning where the purpose, structure and content for learning are imposed on the learner. When informal learning occurs in the context of work or organised settings, factors such as performance, practice, sociocultural dynamics and situational context influence its nature and quality. Previous research by Beckett, Hager and Halliday (Beckett, 1996; Beckett & Hager, 2000, 2002; Hager, 2001; Halliday & Hager, 2002) asserts that productive informal learning is better characterised as a growing capacity to make contextual-sensitive judgements - a discretionary and discriminating process that involves holistic and embodied knowing. Our paper reports on progress in an Australian Research Council funded Discovery project designed to test this judgement-as-learning approach. Detailed case studies of critical incidents in a range of workplaces are being constructed and the learning or otherwise by key players involved in these incidents is being elucidated and analysed. This empirical investigation provides a means of analysing significant workplace events in order to develop a model of informal learning and an associated theory of practice. The paper outlines the overall project rationale and discusses findings from one initial case study. Additional findings from other case studies developed after submission of this paper, will be presented and discussed at the conference
The coil-globule transition of confined polymers
We study long polymer chains in a poor solvent, confined to the space between
two parallel hard walls. The walls are energetically neutral and pose only a
geometric constraint which changes the properties of the coil-globule (or
"-") transition. We find that the temperature increases
monotonically with the width between the walls, in contrast to recent
claims in the literature. Put in a wider context, the problem can be seen as a
dimensional cross over in a tricritical point of a model. We roughly
verify the main scaling properties expected for such a phenomenon, but we find
also somewhat unexpected very long transients before the asymptotic scaling
regions are reached. In particular, instead of the expected scaling exactly at the (-dependent) theta point we found that increases
less fast than , even for extremely long chains.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure
Topological Constraints at the Theta Point: Closed Loops at Two Loops
We map the problem of self-avoiding random walks in a Theta solvent with a
chemical potential for writhe to the three-dimensional symmetric
U(N)-Chern-Simons theory as N goes to 0. We find a new scaling regime of
topologically constrained polymers, with critical exponents that depend on the
chemical potential for writhe, which gives way to a fluctuation-induced
first-order transition.Comment: 5 pages, RevTeX, typo
Recommended from our members
Photoplethysmographic sensors for perfusion measurements in spinal cord tissue
Sensors for recording photoplethysmographic signals from the nervous tissue of the spinal cord are described. The purpose of these sensors is to establish whether perfusion is compromised in various states of injury which occur in certain animal models of spinal cord injury, for example compression injury. Various measures of perfusion are applicable such as the amplitude of the photoplethysmograph signal and the oxygen saturation, measured using a dual wavelength configuration. Signals are usually compared to baseline measurements made in uninjured subjects. This paper describes two types of probe, one based on optical fibres, and one in which optotes are placed in direct contact with the tissue surface. Results from a study based on a compression model utilising a fibreoptic sensor are presented
Recent Advances in the Foundations and Applications of Unbiased Learning to Rank
Since its inception, the field of unbiased learning to rank (ULTR) has remained very active and has seen several impactful advancements in recent years. This tutorial provides both an introduction to the core concepts of the field and an overview of recent advancements in its foundations along with several applications of its methods.The tutorial is divided into four parts: Firstly, we give an overview of the different forms of bias that can be addressed with ULTR methods. Secondly, we present a comprehensive discussion of the latest estimation techniques in the ULTR field. Thirdly, we survey published results of ULTR in real-world applications. Fourthly, we discuss the connection between ULTR and fairness in ranking. We end by briefly reflecting on the future of ULTR research and its applications.This tutorial is intended to benefit both researchers and industry practitioners who are interested in developing new ULTR solutions or utilizing them in real-world applications
In-service Initial Teacher Education in the Learning and Skills Sector in England: Integrating Course and Workplace Learning
The aim of the paper is to advance understanding of in-service learning and skills sector trainee teachers’ learning and propose ways of improving their learning. A conceptual framework is developed by extending Billett’s (International Journal of Educational Research 47:232–240, 2008) conceptualisation of workplace learning, as a relationally interdependent process between the opportunities workplaces afford for activities and interactions and how individuals engage with these, to a third base of participation, the affordances of the initial teacher education course. Hager and Hodkinson’s (British Educational Research Journal 35:619–638, 2009) metaphor of ‘learning as becoming’ is used to conceptualise the ways trainees reconstruct learning in a continuous transactional process of boundary crossing between course and workplace. The findings of six longitudinal case studies of trainees’ development, and evidence from other studies, illustrate the complex interrelationships between LSS workplace affordances, course affordances and trainee characteristics and the ways in which trainees reconstruct learning in each setting. The experience of teaching and interacting with learners, interactions with colleagues, and access to workplace resources and training are important workplace affordances for learning. However, some trainees have limited access to these affordances. Teaching observations, course activities and experiences as a learner are significant course affordances. Trainees’ beliefs, prior experiences and dispositions vary and significantly influence their engagement with course and workplace affordances. It is proposed that better integration of course and workplace learning through guided participation in an intentional workplace curriculum and attention to the ways trainees choose to engage with this, together with the use of practical theorising has the potential to improve trainee learning
Relaxation of Surface Profiles by Evaporation Dynamics
We present simulations of the relaxation towards equilibrium of one
dimensional steps and sinusoidal grooves imprinted on a surface below its
roughening transition. We use a generalization of the hypercube stacking model
of Forrest and Tang, that allows for temperature dependent
next-nearest-neighbor interactions. For the step geometry the results at T=0
agree well with the t^(1/4) prediction of continuum theory for the spreading of
the step. In the case of periodic profiles we modify the mobility for the tips
of the profile and find the approximate solution of the resulting free boundary
problem to be in reasonable agreement with the T=0 simulations.Comment: 6 pages, Revtex, 5 Postscript figures, to appear in PRB 15, October
199
Probabilistic Weyl laws for quantized tori
For the Toeplitz quantization of complex-valued functions on a
-dimensional torus we prove that the expected number of eigenvalues of
small random perturbations of a quantized observable satisfies a natural Weyl
law. In numerical experiments the same Weyl law also holds for ``false''
eigenvalues created by pseudospectral effects.Comment: 33 pages, 3 figures, v2 corrected listed titl
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