2,085 research outputs found
ALTERNATIVE DELIVERY MODE (ADM) PROGRAM DELIVERY AND PERFORMANCE OF STUDENTS
Alternative Delivery Mode (ADM) of instruction had become an option of schools, parents, and learners to access education. Despite its implementation for several years, research on its delivery and students’ academic performance was not endeavored. Hence, this study was conducted to determine the relationship of Alternative Delivery Mode (ADM) program and performance of the students. The respondents of the study were 30 students from nine elementary schools in the Division of Digos, Davao del Sur. Results showed that most of the respondents enrolled in the Alternative Delivery Mode (ADM) were male, at age 11, and were laborers. Most of them were low performers. The respondents rated the Alternative Delivery Mode (ADM) implementation as moderate. It further revealed that there was no significant difference in the level of implementation of Alternative Delivery Mode in terms of gender and age but it showed significant relationship between the level of implementation of the program and the performance of the students. Intensification of Alternative Delivery Mode (ADM) was recommended.
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The role of screened exact exchange in accurately describing properties of transition metal oxides: Modeling defects in LaAlO3
The properties of many intrinsic defects in the wide band gap semiconductor
LaAlO3 are studied using the screened hybrid functional of Heyd, Scuseria, and
Ernzerhof (HSE). As in pristine structures, exact exchange included in the
screened hybrid functional alleviates the band gap underestimation problem,
which is common to semilocal functionals; this allows accurate prediction of
defect properties. We propose correction-free defect energy levels for bulk
LaAlO3 computed using HSE that might serve as guide in the interpretation of
photoluminescence experiments
Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy and Wound Healing
Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT) has been around since the 1860s and is now a well-established form of treatment. HBOT has been proven to be a safe therapeutic option and has been successful in treating non-healing wounds, traumatic wounds, and radiation-induced wounds. There has also been success in treating other conditions such as inflammatory bowel disease, carbon monoxide poisoning, and decompression sickness with HBOT. The way HBOT works is by exposing the body to 100% pure oxygen in a closed chamber, which exceeds normal atmospheric pressure by two to three times. With HBOT, large amounts of oxygen enters the body, which assists in controlling inflammation, improving the process of cleaning damaged cells leading to an improved immunity response. HBOT also relieves hypoxia, which increases the amount of oxygen dissolved in blood plasma to promote and accelerate the healing process
Community Redevelopment, Public Use, and Eminent Domain
Published just weeks before the U.S. Supreme Court handed down their controversial decision on Kelo v. City of New London in 2005, this article, in correctly predicting the outcome of the Supreme Court opinion, explores in Section I how the concept of what constitutes a public use has evolved over the decades from traditionally accepted uses such as public roads, buildings (e.g., government buildings and schools), and utilities to urban redevelopment. It explains how the broad concepts of community redevelopment have been stretched to encompass needed economic development projects that promise jobs, tax revenue, and other public benefits similar to those currently being debated before the courts of our country. Section II begins by briefly examining the development of the public use clause with respect to eminent domain. Section III discusses a recent policy guide adopted by the American Planning Association (APA) on community redevelopment. Section IV then examines three significant cases from 2004 that crystallized around the question of what constitutes a valid public purpose under eminent domain when the government\u27s motivation is to promote economic development in the municipality. Section V concludes that the U.S. Supreme Court should confirm that economic development is a valid public use for the purpose of eminent domain, and that the public-private partnerships that have evolved to assist governments in meeting redevelopment needs are a necessary and appropriate strategy fostering a valid public use
HI observations of the nearest starburst galaxy NGC 253 with the SKA precursor KAT-7
We present HI observations of the Sculptor Group starburst spiral galaxy NGC
253, obtained with the Karoo Array Telescope (KAT-7). KAT-7 is a pathfinder for
the SKA precursor MeerKAT, under construction. The short baselines and low
system temperature of the telescope make it very sensitive to large scale, low
surface brightness emission. The KAT-7 observations detected 33% more flux than
previous VLA observations, mainly in the outer parts and in the halo for a
total HI mass of M. HI can be found at
large distances perpendicular to the plane out to projected distances of ~9-10
kpc away from the nucleus and ~13-14 kpc at the edge of the disk. A novel
technique, based on interactive profile fitting, was used to separate the main
disk gas from the anomalous (halo) gas. The rotation curve (RC) derived for the
HI disk confirms that it is declining in the outer parts, as seen in previous
optical Fabry-Perot measurements. As for the anomalous component, its RC has a
very shallow gradient in the inner parts and turns over at the same radius as
the disk, kinematically lagging by ~100 km/sec. The kinematics of the observed
extra planar gas is compatible with an outflow due to the central starburst and
galactic fountains in the outer parts. However, the gas kinematics shows no
evidence for inflow. Analysis of the near-IR WISE data, shows clearly that the
star formation rate (SFR) is compatible with the starburst nature of NGC 253.Comment: 18 pages, 20 figures, 8 Tables. Accepted for publication to MNRA
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