946 research outputs found
Framing up Digital Literacy: Reviewing and Reframing Information Literacy Modules
When it comes to updating Information Literacy modules, it can be a daunting task to know where to start. This article will explore utilizing the ACRL Information Literacy Framework to identify skill gaps in the modules, create learner-centered experiences, and incorporate 21st-century literacy skills
Accommodations in the College Setting: The Perspectives of Students Living with Disabilities
Using a critical interpretive framework, the authors utilized semi-structured interviews to understand the experiences and perceptions of two college students living with disability concerning their use of accommodations, modifications, and adaptations in program requirements, classroom instruction, and testing. The central research questions were: “Are accommodations perceived as effective in supporting students with disabilities in their academic and social pursuits? Do students perceive that accommodations allow them maximum engagement and participation in their educational experiences?” and “To what extent are accommodations perceived by the participants as leveling the playing field for students with disabilities?” And, finally, “What do the participants perceive as the biggest obstacles to success for students with disabilities?” An understanding of the participants’ perceptions will enhance the overall awareness and appreciation for the experiences of students living with disability and will have direct implications for faculty-student interactions, student-to-student interactions as well as larger interactions within society
Mobile mapping for the automated analysis of road signage and delineation
A portable mobile stereo vision system designed for the assessment of road signage and delineation (lines and road studs or 'cat eyes') in low light conditions is presented. This novel system allows both geometric and photometric measurements to be made on objects in a scene. Using the system, it has been shown that retro-reflectors, and in particular road signs, can be identified by nature of their reflective properties. In addition, a novel imaging application has been investigated that facilitates the detection of defective road studs. Any objects examined can also be positioned on a national grid through the fusion of stereo vision with global positioning system technology. Automated feature extraction and analysis routines make the system fully autonomous
Catching the “Tail/Tale” of Teaching Qualitative Inquiry to Novice Researchers
This article responds to the call for deeper examination of qualitative inquiry teaching practices by presenting representative examples from the pedagogies of three teacher-educators who have taught Qualitative Research Methods courses for the past 15 years. We focus in particular on the pedagogical complexities of teaching data analysis, which is a topic that remains under-theorized and under-represented in contemporary scholarship on qualitative methodologies. Using a critical friends framework, we analyze and synthesize our pedagogical responses to key dilemmas we have encountered in our respective contexts, all state universities, to introducing qualitative inquiry to novice researchers who often enter the analytic process with positivist notions of knowledge creation. They sometimes enter the analytic process with the belief if they can only “catch the tail” of this thing called qualitative research they will be able to “do it right.” Yet, as the metaphor implies, catching a fierce beast by the tail, thinking you can control its actions, can intrude on the inductive and holistic character of the qualitative inquiry process
An Anomalous Phase in the Relaxor Ferroelectric Pb(ZnNb)O
X-ray diffraction studies on a Pb(ZnNb)O (PZN) single
crystal sample show the presence of two different structures. An outer-layer
exists in the outer most 10 to 50~m of the crystal, and undergoes a
structural phase transition at the Curie temperature K. The
inside phase is however, very different. The lattice inside the crystal
maintains a cubic unit cell, while ferroelectric polarization develops below
. The lattice parameter of the cubic unit cell remains virtually a
constant, i.e., much less variations compared to that of a typical relaxor
ferroelectric, in a wide temperature range of 15 K to 750 K. On the other hand,
broadening of Bragg peaks and change of Bragg profile line-shapes in both
longitudinal and transverse directions at clearly indicate a structural
phase transition occurring.Comment: to be submitted for PR
Operational reliability assessment of the GEOS A spacecraft
Decision theory application to GEOS A spacecraft operational reliability assessmen
Exact solution of a linear molecular motor model driven by two-step fluctuations and subject to protein friction
We investigate by analytical means the stochastic equations of motion of a
linear molecular motor model based on the concept of protein friction. Solving
the coupled Langevin equations originally proposed by Mogilner et al. (A.
Mogilner et al., Phys. Lett. {\bf 237}, 297 (1998)), and averaging over both
the two-step internal conformational fluctuations and the thermal noise, we
present explicit, analytical expressions for the average motion and the
velocity-force relationship. Our results allow for a direct interpretation of
details of this motor model which are not readily accessible from numerical
solutions. In particular, we find that the model is able to predict
physiologically reasonable values for the load-free motor velocity and the
motor mobility.Comment: 12 pages revtex, 6 eps-figure
Testing the single-pass VOC removal efficiency of an active green wall using methyl ethyl ketone (MEK)
© 2017, The Author(s). In recent years, research into the efficacy of indoor air biofiltration mechanisms, notably living green walls, has become more prevalent. Whilst green walls are often utilised within the built environment for their biophilic effects, there is little evidence demonstrating the efficacy of active green wall biofiltration for the removal of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) at concentrations found within an interior environment. The current work describes a novel approach to quantifying the VOC removal effectiveness by an active living green wall, which uses a mechanical system to force air through the substrate and plant foliage. After developing a single-pass efficiency protocol to understand the immediate effects of the system, the active green wall was installed into a 30-m3 chamber representative of a single room and presented with the contaminant 2-butanone (methyl ethyl ketone; MEK), a VOC commonly found in interior environments through its use in textile and plastic manufacture. Chamber inlet levels of MEK remained steady at 33.91 ± 0.541 ppbv. Utilising a forced-air system to draw the contaminated air through a green wall based on a soil-less growing medium containing activated carbon, the combined effects of substrate media and botanical component within the biofiltration system showed statistically significant VOC reduction, averaging 57% single-pass removal efficiency over multiple test procedures. These results indicate a high level of VOC removal efficiency for the active green wall biofilter tested and provide evidence that active biofiltration may aid in reducing exposure to VOCs in the indoor environment
Classifying shape of internal pores within AlSi10Mg alloy manufactured by laser powder bed fusion using 3D X-ray micro computed tomography : influence of processing parameters and heat treatment
The authors gratefully acknowledge the support provided by the EPSRC (grant EP/R021694/1). The authors also wish to thank Rosie Bird at the University of Aberdeen for assisting with Avizo.Peer reviewedPostprin
Trauma-Informed Youth Sport: Identifying Program Characteristics and Challenges to Advance Practice
This purpose of this qualitative study was to explore shared characteristics and local challenges of trauma-informed youth sport program design and implementation through the voices of ten program facilitators (e.g., director, trainer; 8 women, 2 men; average age of 36.2 years, SD = 6.03) across four U.S. regions. Within a postpositivist approach and through thematic analysis of semi-structured interviews (average length of 53 minutes), shared characteristics identified by facilitators included promoting a safe and supportive environment, cultivating healthy relationships among adults and peers, and intentional psychological and social skill-building (e.g., attentional cues). Facilitators also explained the importance of understanding the local context to engage youth and develop key strategies to mitigate challenges such as prioritizing the voices of youth involved in their programs, attending to staff needs and providing continual development and training, and collaboration among community partners to support their programmatic efforts. The study findings may be used to inform future research conceptualizing best practices for inclusive youth sport settings and provide added context for facilitators in the development, implementation, and sustainability of the trauma-informed approach
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