2,856 research outputs found
Diversity, Dilemmas and Transformation in Post-Compulsory Education: an Introduction to the Special Issue on Work Based Research
As governments recognize the central place of post-compulsory education in regenerating and modernizing the economic and social fabric of society (BIS 2008), it is appropriate for us as educational researchers to question whether this recognition beckons a different role for research in post-compulsory education. Much of this research is work based, using a broad interpretation of this term, and the majority of articles received by this journal (though the proportion published is a lower one) reflect this balance. Work based research in education poses particular challenges for the researcher and the practitioner, whether the focus is practitioner research, in which case the dilemmas can centre on potential role conflict between practitioner and researcher roles, or whether the work based research is observational â analyzing othersâ professional practice, in which case the dilemmas can centre on power relations between researcher and researched, the politics of research, and ethical questions around care for participants and the degree of their involvement or non-involvement in the total research enterprise. This article reviews the prospects for work based research in post-compulsory education and introduces the articles in this special issue
Cooperation and defection in ghetto
We consider ghetto as a community of people ruled against their will by an
external power. Members of the community feel that their laws are broken.
However, attempts to leave ghetto makes their situation worse. We discuss the
relation of the ghetto inhabitants to the ruling power in context of their
needs, organized according to the Maslow hierarchy. Decisions how to satisfy
successive needs are undertaken in cooperation with or defection the ruling
power. This issue allows to construct the tree of decisions and to adopt the
pruning technique from the game theory. Dynamics of decisions can be described
within the formalism of fundamental equations. The result is that the strategy
of defection is stabilized by the estimated payoff.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figure
A theoretical approach to nursing assessment
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/73763/1/j.1365-2648.1985.tb00500.x.pd
Psychophysiological processes of stress in chronic physical illness: a theoretical perspective
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/75576/1/j.1365-2648.1990.tb01843.x.pd
Social identity and environmental concern: the importance of contextual effects
This study draws on social identity theory to explain differences in individual support for environmental protection, a conative component of environmental concern. It argues that an individualâs identification with higher social unitsâcommunity, nation, and worldâstrengthens its in-group solidarity and empathy and, in consequence, its readiness to protect the environment benefitting the in-groupâs welfare. The study hypothesizes that country-level manifestations of social identity (1) lift individualsâ support for environmental protection above the level that their own social identity suggests (elevator effect), and (2) reinforce the effect of individualsâ social identity on their support for environmental protection (amplifier effect). Using a sample of over 30,000 individuals located in 38 countries around the world, the study finds strong evidence for the two contextual effects. The findings indicate that social identity plays an important role not just as an individual attribute but also as a central component of culture in fostering environmental concern
Branching Processes and Evolution at the Ends of a Food Chain
In a critically self--organized model of punctuated equilibrium, boundaries
determine peculiar scaling of the size distribution of evolutionary avalanches.
This is derived by an inhomogeneous generalization of standard branching
processes, extending previous mean field descriptions and yielding
together with , as distribution exponent of avalanches starting from
species at the ends of a food chain. For the nearest neighbor chain one obtains
numerically , and for the
first return times of activity, again distinct from bulk exponents.Comment: REVTex file, 12 pages, 2 figures in eps-files uuencoded, psfig.st
Learning from the early adopters: developing the digital practitioner
This paper explores how Sharpe and Beethamâs Digital Literacies Framework which was derived to model studentsâ digital literacies, can be applied to lecturersâ digital literacy practices. Data from a small-scale phenomenological study of higher education lecturers who used Web 2.0 in their teaching and learning practices are used to examine if this pyramid model represents their motivations for adopting technology-enhanced learning in their pedagogic practices. The paper argues that whilst Sharpe and Beethamâs model has utility in many regards, these lecturers were mainly motivated by the desire to achieve their pedagogic goals rather than by a desire to become a digital practitioner
Exploring the psychological rewards of a familiar semirural landscape: connecting to local nature through a mindful approach
This study analyses a 53,000 word diary of a year engaging with nature through over 200 trips to a semi-rural landscape. Thematic analysis revealed two themes; the transition from observer to nature connectedness and the ways in which the natural environment was experienced once a connection was made. These themes are discussed in relation to theories that seek to explain the positive effect of nature and nature connectedness. The findings are important as they suggest that repeated engagement with local semi-rural countryside can lead to a mindful approach and psychological rewards that do not require travel into the wilderness. The work informs further research into outcomes and processes of nature based interventions such as: trip frequency, duration and diary keeping
State authenticity
State authenticity is the sense that one is currently in alignment with oneâs true or real self. We discuss state authenticity as seen by independent raters, describe its phenomenology, outline its triggers, consider its well-being and behavioral implications, and sketch out a cross-disciplinary research agenda
The Fairness Challenge in Computer Networks
In this paper, the concept of fairness in computer networks is investigated. We motivate the need of examining fairness issues by providing example future application scenarios where fairness support is needed in order to experience sufficient service quality. Fairness definitions from political science and their application to computer networks are described and a state-of-the-art overview of research activities in fairness, from issues such a queue management and tcp-friendliness to issues like fairness in layered multi-rate multicast scenarios, is given. We contribute with this paper to the ongoing research activities by defining the fairness challenge with the purpose of helping direct future investigations to with spots on the map of research in fairness
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