2,089 research outputs found
PROGRAM EVALUATION OF READING PLUS : STUDY OF THE IMPACT ON READING ACHIEVEMENT FOR NINTH-GRADE STUDENTS IN MOORE COUNTY SCHOOLS
The following is a program evaluation of the Reading Plus program in Moore County Schools from southern North Carolina and its impact on reading achievement for ninth-grade students. Reading Plus is a valuable asset that may be utilized to increase student ability to read. The Reading Plus program increases the degree of phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, reading stamina, comprehension, character recognition and recall, vocabulary acquisition skills, and Lexile levels of students when the program is implemented with fidelity.
The results of this study show that students who spent sufficient time on task, with each component of the program, demonstrated growth in all the areas mentioned above. Teachers who implemented this pilot were overwhelmingly pleased with the student outcomes and the program itself. The outcomes of this program evaluation were so impressive that the Reading Plus program is now being implemented at Riverside High School in Durham Public Schools, located in central North Carolina
Stamper, John 16??-????
Genealogy of the John Stamper family in Carter County, Kentucky.
This John Stamper was born sometime in the 1600s. His son, also named John, was born in 1647, England and died in 1690, Middlesex County, Virginia. It is unclear when the senior John Stamper died, although it is presumed it was prior to 1702.https://scholarworks.moreheadstate.edu/ccpl_genealogy/1012/thumbnail.jp
Green, Paris
Genealogy of the Paris Green family in Carter County, Kentucky. Paris Green lived from 1871 until 1937.https://scholarworks.moreheadstate.edu/ccpl_genealogy/1000/thumbnail.jp
Mineralogy and provenance of the TiO₂ - ilmenite heavy mineral sand deposit of Nataka
The Nataka heavy mineral sand deposit occurs along the northeast Mozambique coastline. It comprises a regional Pleistocene elliptical structure extending from Somalia, passing through Kenya, Tanzania, Madagascar and Mozambique, to Richards Bay in South Africa. The deposit consists of fine- to medium- grained, unconsolidated red sediments, hosting heavy minerals. The deposit mineral assemblage is made up of non-valuable phases comprising mostly magnetite, hematite, chromite, monazite, and the valuable phases dominated by ilmenite (50.91 wt. %), with additional zircon and rutile (9.96 and 3.52 wt. % respectively). The total heavy minerals comprise about 5% volume, of which 2 % are valuable heavy minerals making up about 445 Mt (million tonnes) probable resources. This study focuses on the mineralogical characterization of ilmenite from the Nataka deposit, alongside with sediment provenance. Mineralogical and chemical characterisation of ilmenite undertaken on 32 samples from 16 selected drill holes using a combination of QEMSCAN and EPMA revealed that the ilmenite has undergone different stages of alteration, at distinct environment conditions, yielding products spanning from hydrated ilmenite to leucoxene. The alteration dominantly involved groundwater, which was oxidizing and acidic, hence the predominance of ilmenite-pseudorutile alteration. Long exposure to direct sunshine has been hypothesized as a different process that might have favoured the direct alteration of ilmenite to leucoxene and of pseudorutile to leucoxene, on a smaller scale. The major impurities in the ilmenite are Al and Si, which are enriched in the advanced ilmenite alteration products (leucoxene), where they fill pores and cracks. Chromium impurities occur as discrete grains of chrome spinel. The compositional variety of magnetite, Cr-spinel, tourmaline, zircon and rutile indicate major contribution from granitoid terranes, subjected to granulite metamorphic facies (750 to 1000 :C), and minor contribution from mafic plutonic intrusions. The granitoid field as a sediment source area if analysed in conjunction with zircon ages (1100 – 900 Ma, 900 – 700 Ma, and 650 – 500 Ma), and zircon δ¹⁸O (7.07 ‰) is consistent with preferential sourcing from the proximal Mesoproterozoic Nampula Complex, with some contribution from igneous plutonic rocks from Xixano, Lalamo and Montepuez Complexes
Recollections of World War
This is Ralph Scurry's personal memoir of World War II
Measuring values with the Schwartz Values Survey at a university in the Western Cape, South Africa
Includes abstract.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 45-47).The aim of this study is to determine whether the Schwartz universal value types are the same for South African students compared to other international studies. A total of 136 students completed the Schwartz Values Survey across three academic study years. The survey reports respondent values and the extent of their religiosity on a Likert-scale. The measure for internal consistency reliability for eight of the ten motivational value types is good, with poor reliability scores for Stimulation and Security. No statistically significant difference presents across the student academic years. The motivational value type Tradition is consistent with a high degree of religiosity. Hedonism is consistent with a low degree of religiosity
Anne Fitzgerald Interview - Part 1 (Boone County)
(Starts around 23:08)
An interview with Anne Fitzgerald by Robert M. Rennick on the place names of communities in Boone County, Kentucky
Employment mobility in high-technology agglomerations: the cases of Oxfordshire and Cambridgeshire
This paper examines labour market behaviour of the highly skilled in high-tech local economies, taking the UK examples of Oxfordshire and Cambridgeshire as case studies. It reports on data from a survey of members of three scientific institutes to compare rates of employee mobility in the two locations and considers the likely explanations and implications of those patterns
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Designing an Exploratory Visual Interface to the Results of Citizen Surveys
Surveys are used by public authorities to monitor the quality and reach of public services and provide information needed to help improve them. The results of such surveys tend to be used in internal reports, with highly-aggregated summaries being released to the public. Even where data are released, many citizens do not have the capability to explore and interpret them. This o ffers limited scope for citizens to explore the results and use them to help hold service providers to account - objectives that are increasingly important in public service provision. We work closely with an English local authority to develop an innovative interactive interface to a citizen survey to demonstrate what can be achieved by applying a visual approach to the exploration of such data. In so doing we (a) make a case for web-based interactive visualisation to make this kind of information accessible both internally to those working in local government and externally to citizens in a way that is not achieved through a regular Open Data release or existing applications; (b) use techniques from both cartography and information visualization to inform the design of fluid visual interactions that enable diverse users - from the casual citizen browser to those interested in more in-depth analysis - to view, compare and interpret the survey outputs from a wide variety of perspectives; and (c) document experiences and reactions to the provision of information in this form, with log analysis playing a role in this exercise. Our reflections on our successes and otherwise will inform future exploratory interface design to help citizens access information and hold public service providers to account
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