9,252 research outputs found
Lessons Learned in Eurasia Ministry: Mostly the Hard Way
The present article is based on a speech delivered at a conference of the United Methodist Church: “Eurasia-Central Asia – In Mission Together,” Fulton, Maryland, May 5, 2017
A Promising Start: Year Up's Initial Impacts on Low-Income Young Adults' Careers
Year Up, a non-profit organization headquartered in Boston, was founded by a former software entrepreneur in 2000 to provide a year of training and work experience to urban young adults ages 18 to 24. It has been able to develop a network of program sites across the country without the constraints imposed by public funding. Initial results from a small-scale impact study conducted by Mobility demonstrate that Year Up students experience remarkable earnings gains after a year in the labor market, compared to a control group. These gains were achieved during one of the worst economic recessions in recent memory, a recession that hit young people particularly April 2011 A Promising Start Year Up's Initial Impacts on Low-Income Young Adults' Careers Anne Roder Mark Elliott economic mobility corporation 1 A Promising Start Year Up's Initial Impacts on Low-Income Young Adults' Careers hard. Also, the Year Up experience does not deter young people from pursuing further education—program participants are just as likely to enroll in postsecondary education as control group members
What's Next After Work First: Workforce Development Report to the Field
Moving people into the workforce quickly may be the best first step to moving them out of poverty; but, by itself, rapid attachment is not likely to achieve the more important workforce development goals of enabling people to keep their jobs and leave poverty behind. This report explores the new challenges to building self-sufficiency brought about by the work first orientation of welfare reform, and the steps that practitioners, policymakers, and researchers may need to consider to keep their poverty alleviation strategies on track. The report includes descriptions of innovations in three key areas -- employer involvement, working with work first, and postemployment services -- which P/PV believes to be necessary to advance workforce development in the uncertain climate of welfare and education and training reform
Increasing State Restrictions on Russian Protestant Seminaries
In sum, Russian Protestant seminaries are presently undergoing a trial by state inspection that threatens their very existence. Academics Perry Glanzer and Konstantin Petrenko are correct in asserting that the Russian state’s “power to license and accredit” is “the power of life and death” over any educational institution.
State justifications for close oversight of Protestant seminaries appear overstated at best and lack credibility at worst. As regards state concerns for quality control, should not the Russian constitution’s requirement for separation of church and state take precedence over a secular government’s presumption to instruct believers on how best to train their clergy
Evaluating the Impact of SDC on the GMRES Iterative Solver
Increasing parallelism and transistor density, along with increasingly
tighter energy and peak power constraints, may force exposure of occasionally
incorrect computation or storage to application codes. Silent data corruption
(SDC) will likely be infrequent, yet one SDC suffices to make numerical
algorithms like iterative linear solvers cease progress towards the correct
answer. Thus, we focus on resilience of the iterative linear solver GMRES to a
single transient SDC. We derive inexpensive checks to detect the effects of an
SDC in GMRES that work for a more general SDC model than presuming a bit flip.
Our experiments show that when GMRES is used as the inner solver of an
inner-outer iteration, it can "run through" SDC of almost any magnitude in the
computationally intensive orthogonalization phase. That is, it gets the right
answer using faulty data without any required roll back. Those SDCs which it
cannot run through, get caught by our detection scheme
Relationship between use of ankle-foot orthoses and quality of life and psychological well being : a research plan
An ankle-foot orthosis (AFO) is an externally applied device that encompasses the joints of the ankle and foot, used to modify the structural and functional characteristics of the neuromuscular and skeletal systems(ISO,1989,a&b). AFOs are prescribed for people who have a loss of function affecting their mobility, experienced in wide range of conditions such as stroke, poliomyelitis, cerebral palsy, spina bifida and osteoarthritis
Through the Eye of a Needle: The Challenge of Providing Employment Services in New York's Chinatown Post September 11th
Prepared for the US Department of Labor, this P/PV report evaluates the effectiveness of the National Emergency Grant (NEG) money awarded to organizations in Chinatown in the wake of September 11th. Through interviews with program staff and key informants, P/PV examines the outcomes achieved by individual grantees, assesses the effect of the NEG on overall service provision and provides recommendations about how the Chinatown NEG could be adjusted to respond to similar situations in the future
Gearing Up: An Interim Report on the Sectoral Employment Initiative
Gearing Up is the first P/PV report on the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation's Sectoral Employment Initiative. It provides information about the various strategies being pursued, who is participating, and the sites' successes and struggles through the initiative's first two years. The report concludes with observations on those factors that appear critical to participating organizations' attaining their goals
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