4 research outputs found
Stakeholder analysis report: Presenting the results of the study on preschool education in Bosnia & Herzegovina
This report presents an analysis of stakeholder views, conducted in the framework of the Erasmus+ funded TEACHER Project, which is part of the Work Package 1: Developing a curriculum in accordance with the labour market needs (assessing competences the labour market requires). This package included plans for the design and implementation of an analysis of stakeholders’ views on pre-school teaching, to capture what is currently on offer and stakeholder views on the requirements and personal attributes of a teacher within this contexts. The report elaborates on the stakeholders’ roles and responsibilities in the Early childhood Education and Care (ECEC) in the country, and their relevance in the TEACHER Project as a key stakeholder groups. The report integrates pictures, drawn by children who were interviewed separately as beneficiaries of the project, to represent some of the ideas that stakeholders had about teaching in pre-school contexts
Evaluation of the Accelerating Improvement in Knowlsey: Pathways to Success Initiative
The Pathways to Success initiative aimed to raise standards, especially in literacy, across the primary and secondary phases in Knowsley, Merseyside. The project commenced in February 2018 and concluded in July 2019. It was funded through the Department for Education’s Strategic School Improvement Fund (SSIF) and coordinated by the Knowsley Education Commission, set up in November 2016. The project focused on 30 schools in an area with exceptionally high levels of disadvantage and a poor record of student achievement over a number of years, particularly for students at age sixteen. Participating schools were able to access support from a PtS Adviser, development sessions organised at school level and centrally, and modest additional funding to implement a locally-authored Accelerated Improvement Plan overseen by an Accelerated Improvement Group. Key approaches included intensive work in classrooms, capacity building and leadership development, and school-to-school support
Genetic disorders in children with obesity
Zespoły genetyczne, którym towarzyszy otyłość w wieku dziecięcym,
występują rzadko. Na potrzebę diagnostyki genetycznej
u dziecka otyłego, oprócz wolnego tempa wzrastania, wskazuje
występowanie charakterystycznych anomalii fenotypowych, deficytów
w zakresie narządów zmysłów (wzrok, słuch), opóźnienie rozwoju
psychoruchowego i/lub różnego stopnia upośledzenie umysłowe.
Znajomość tych zespołów ułatwia prowadzenie kompleksowej
terapii u chorych. Najnowsze badania molekularne pokazują, że
schorzenia te są heterogenne pod względem genetycznym.
Celem pracy było przedstawienie klinicznych i genetycznych
aspektów najlepiej poznanych i najczęściej występujących zespołów
genetycznych przebiegających z otyłością, takich jak: zespół
Bardet-Biedl, zespół Cohen, zespół Alström i zespół Prader-Willi.Genetic syndromes with obesity in children are very rare. There is
a need of genetic diagnostics in obese child when its growth is
slow and it has characteristic phenotype anomalies, deficits of sight
or hearing, psychomotor retardation and/or mental retardation of
different degree. The knowledge of these syndromes enables to undertake early and complex therapy. Recent molecular studies
reveal that such syndromes are genetically heterogenic.
The aim of the paper is to present clinical and genetic aspects of
the most known and the most common genetic syndromes with
obesity like: Bardet-Biedl syndrome, Cohen syndrome, Alström
syndrome and Prader-Willi syndrome