2,670 research outputs found

    Student Ownership, Engagement, and the Love of Learning: Investigating the Correlation of Student Ownership to Student Engagement

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    This research study sought to determine whether providing students with increased student ownership opportunities leads to increased student engagement. Previous literature showed that when teachers allow increased student ownership, the engagement of students in class increased. One hundred and five students participated in this three-week study in an upper level English composition and literature class. For this study, students were surveyed to identify the correlation between student ownership of learning and their overall levels of student engagement in learning. The results, as a whole, confirmed that students are more engaged in learning when given more ownership opportunities

    Uitzendbureau als conjunctuurindicator voor de arbeidsmarkt?

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    Placental transfer of a hydroxylated polychlorinated biphenyl and effects on fetal and maternal thyroid hormone homeostasis in the rat

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    Earlier studies at our laboratory indicated that several hydroxylated polychlorinated biphenyls (OH-PCBs) detected in human blood could specifically inhibit thyroxine (T4) transport by competitive binding to the thyroid hormone transport protein transthyretin (TTR) in vitro. In the present study we investigated the effects of prenatal exposure to 5 mg/kg body weight of [14C]-labeled or unlabeled 4-OH-2,3,3',4',5-pentachlorobiphenyl (4-OH-CB107), one of the major metabolites of PCBs detected in human blood, from gestation days (GD) 10 to 16 on thyroid hormone status and metabolism in pregnant rats and their fetuses at GD 17 and GD 20. 4-OH-CB107 is a metabolite of both 2,3,3',4,4'-pentachlorobiphenyl (CB-105) and 2,3',4,4',5-pentachlorobiphenyl (CB-118). We were able to show the accumulation of 4-OH-CB107 in the fetal compartment. The fetal/maternal ratios at GD 20 in liver, cerebellum, and plasma were 11.0, 2.6, and 1.2, respectively. The 14C-4-OH-CB107-derived radioactivity in plasma was bound to TTR in both dams and fetuses. Fetal plasma TT4 and FT4 levels were significantly decreased at GD 17 and GD 20 (89 and 41␛espectively at GD 20). Fetal thyroid stimulating hormone levels were increased by 124 at GD 20. The T4 concentrations in fetal forebrain homogenates at GD20 were reduced by 35°but no effects could be detected on brain T3 concentrations. The deiodination of T4 to T3 was significantly increased in fetal forebrain homogenates at GD 17, and unaltered at GD 20. In addition, no alterations were observed in maternal and fetal hepatic T4-UDP-glucuronosyltransferase activity, type I deiodinase activity, and EROD activity. In conclusion, exposure of pregnant rats to 4-OH-CB107 results in the distribution of the compound in the maternal and fetal compartment, which is probably caused by the binding of the PCB metabolite to TTR. Consequently, TT4 levels in fetal plasma and brain samples were reduced. Despite reductions in fetal brain T4 levels, the active hormone (T3) in fetal brains remained unaffected

    The origin of stiffening in cross-linked semiflexible networks

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    Strain stiffening of protein networks is explored by means of a finite strain analysis of a two-dimensional network model of cross-linked semiflexible filaments. The results show that stiffening is caused by non-affine network rearrangements that govern a transition from a bending dominated response at small strains to a stretching dominated response at large strains. Thermally-induced filament undulations only have a minor effect; they merely postpone the transition.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
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