328 research outputs found
Investigating Parents\u27 Value of Children Learning About Agriculture
It is commonly held that parents have a profound impact on child development. Decades of research investigated the ways parents, the community, and school staff interact to foster student learning during kindergarten through twelfth grade education. Agriculture provides for daily needs through the growth, harvest, and processing of food, fiber, fuel, and forestry products. This research sought to understand the level of importance parents place on their children learning about agriculture in school.
A 26-question survey was distributed to a nationally representative sample of parents having at least one child in K-12 education within the United States. Results of this study indicate parents found it important, even very important, for students to learn about many agricultural topics in school. Factors historically associated with parent perceptions and support of student learning proved to not significantly impact this indicated level of importance. Therefore, further research is needed to understand what impacts parents’ value of their students learning about agricultural topics in school.
The conclusions of this study are of primary importance to entities conducting agricultural education outreach such as Agriculture in the Classroom programs, Extension, Career and Technical Education, agricultural industry organizations, and others interested in agricultural literacy
Evaluating the Utah Agriculture in the Classroom Preservice Teacher Seminar
Utah Agriculture in the Classroom hosts preservice teacher seminars in partnership with five universities across the state. From 2017-2021, approximately 600 college students participated in these seminars. The preservice seminars provided agriculture-themed lessons aligned to state educational standards for future teachers to use as they build resources for their classrooms
The delay-reward heuristic: What do people expect in intertemporal choice tasks?
Recent research has shown that risk and reward are positively correlated in many environments, and that people have internalized this association as a "risk-reward heuristic": when making choices based on incomplete information, people infer probabilities from payoffs and vice-versa, and these inferences shape their decisions. We extend this work by examining people's expectations about another fundamental trade-off-that between monetary reward and delay. In 2 experiments (total N = 670), we adapted a paradigm previously used to demonstrate the risk-reward heuristic. We presented participants with intertemporal choice tasks in which either the delayed reward or the length of the delay was obscured. Participants inferred larger rewards for longer stated delays, and longer delays for larger stated rewards; these inferences also predicted people's willingness to take the delayed option. In exploratory analyses, we found that older participants inferred longer delays and smaller rewards than did younger ones. All of these results replicated in 2 large-scale pre-registered studies with participants from a different population (total N = 2138). Our results suggest that people expect intertemporal choice tasks to offer a trade-off between delay and reward, and differ in their expectations about this trade-off. This "delay-reward heuristic" offers a new perspective on existing models of intertemporal choice and provides new insights into unexplained and systematic individual differences in the willingness to delay gratification
Vernacular museum: communal bonding and ritual memory transfer among displaced communities
Eclectically curated and largely ignored by the mainstream museum sector, vernacular museums sit at the interstices between the nostalgic and the future-oriented, the private and the public, the personal and the communal. Eluding the danger of becoming trivialised or commercialised, they serve as powerful conduits of memory, which strengthen communal bonds in the face of the ‘flattening’ effects of globalisation. The museum this paper deals with, a vernacular museum in Vanjärvi in southern Finland, differs from the dominant type of the house museum, which celebrates masculinity and social elites. Rather, it aligns itself with the small amateur museums of everyday life called by Angela Jannelli Wild Museums (2012), by analogy with Lévi-Strauss’ concept of ‘pensée sauvage’. The paper argues that, despite the present-day flurry of technologies of remembering and lavishly funded memory institutions, there is no doubt that the seemingly ‘ephemeral’ institutions such as the vernacular museum, dependent so much on performance, oral storytelling, living bodies and intimate interaction, nevertheless play an important role in maintaining and invigorating memory communities
The Student Movement Volume 109 Issue 3: Alumni, Autumn, and Political Affairs
HUMANS
AUSA: Not Just Party Planners, Interviewed by John Roosenberg
Former AU Professor Honored with Renaming of Anatomy Lab, Andrew Francis
The Best and the Worst of AU Majors, Interviewed by Marco Sciarabba
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Going Swiftly to the Polls: Celebrities and Political Stances, Melanie Webb
Criminal: A Podcast Beyond Crime, Amelia Stefanescu
NEWS
Professor Emerita Presents Second Volume of Andrews University\u27s History, Aiko J. Ayala Rios
Andrews University Drops in Niche Rankings, Amelia Stefanescu
IDEAS
El Norte: The Overlooked History of Hispanic North America, Sumin Lee
PULSE
I promise you, there is stuff to do around here: Eight fall-appropriate activities near campus, Nora Martin
Celebrating Culture and Cariño: Get to Know Genesis Fellowship, Addison Randall
The Student Take on Week of Prayer, Interviewed by Anna Rybachek
LAST WORD
people in the dark, Nate Millerhttps://digitalcommons.andrews.edu/sm-109/1002/thumbnail.jp
Maternal Morbidity Outcomes in Idiopathic Moyamoya Syndrome in New York State
Background: Pregnancy is associated with an increased risk of stroke in young women. Idiopathic moyamoya syndrome (IMMS) is a rare condition characterized by progressive narrowing of large cerebral arteries resulting in flimsy collaterals prone to rupture or thrombosis. Data are limited on pregnancy outcomes in women with IMMS. We hypothesized that IMMS would be associated with increased pregnancy morbidity, including stroke.
Conclusion: Pregnancies within 1 year prior or any time after IMMS diagnosis did not have increased maternal morbidity compared to unexposed pregnancies after adjusting for age and clustering of women with multiple pregnancies. Prospective studies are needed to better characterize increased maternal risks for women with moyamoya syndrome and develop preventive strategies
The Student Movement Volume 108 Issue 8: Conducting Us Into The Season
HUMANS
Eating Healthier at Andrews, Brooklyn Anderson
Honors Research with Shania Watts, Grace No
Social Media: Is It Really Social?, Colin Cha
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Journey to the Marvelous God - A double conducting recital, Aiko J. Ayala Rios
Love, Murder, and Secrets: A Night At The MSU French Film Festival, Amelia Stefanescu
What To Do About National Clean Out Your Refrigerator Day, Nate Miller
Places to Go: The Lake Michigan College Mendel Center, Madison Vath
NEWS
Argentina Election Article, Regan McCain
Qualitative Research Writing Group: Your Research Accountability Partner, Melissa Moore
Self-Driving Taxis, Katie Davis
Students\u27 reactions to Andrews\u27s National Ranking, Kiheon Chung
Upcoming Winter Events, Melissa Moore
IDEAS
Morally Gray, Katie Davis
Red and Green Flags, Ruben Colón
Remembering Matthew Perry, Corinna Bevier
SDAs and The Big Bang: A Survey, Erin Beers
Shoot Your Shot - Or Maybe Not?, Regan Westerman
PULSE
Burnout vs. Laziness: What\u27s The Difference?, Lexie Dunham
How Habits Happen, Anna Rybachek
The Mauricio Fund, Elianna Fisher
LAST WORD
Reality for a Second-Generation Immigrant, Gio Leehttps://digitalcommons.andrews.edu/sm-108/1007/thumbnail.jp
Reorganization of surviving mammal communities after the end-Pleistocene megafaunal extinction
Large mammals are at high risk of extinction globally. To understand the consequences of their demise for community assembly, we tracked community structure through the end- Pleistocene megafaunal extinction in North America.We decomposed the effects of biotic and abiotic factors by analyzing co-occurrence within the mutual ranges of species pairs. Although shifting climate drove an increase in niche overlap, co-occurrence decreased, signaling shifts in biotic interactions. Furthermore, the effect of abiotic factors on cooccurrence remained constant over time while the effect of biotic factors decreased. Biotic factors apparently played a key role in continental-scale community assembly before the extinctions. Specifically, large mammals likely promoted co-occurrence in the Pleistocene, and their loss contributed to the modern assembly pattern in which co-occurrence frequently falls below random expectations.
Includes supplementary materials
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