925 research outputs found
An Evaluation Of Selected Pupils In The Physical Education Program In A Senior High School In South Central Texas
The adolescent is often one of the most misunderstood, misguided, and uncontrollable ox all age groups. Since many a-parent, teacher, and above all the adolescent himself do not understand the phenomena encountered by the adolescent, many a little life is lost at this stage.
The term adolescent comes from the Latin verb, adolescent, meaning to grow into maturity, and includes the age group or span from approximately eleven to twenty-one years of age. Physically, this is the stage for spurts of growth, clamor for individual and group identity. Individual differences are often ignored, pooled or generalized, in many schools. Many schools lack the proper guidance departments and personnel. All too soon, the adolescent is caught up in a dragnet of misguided delinquents and shelved as trouble makers. Energies, potentials, differences, and environments have to be reckoned with, studied, and given vent to. The physical educator has to know himself in order to make the coordination effective and useful. Physical education is the accumulation of wholesome experiences through participation in large muscle activities that promote optimum growth and development.
Though all departments, levels, and phases of the school curriculum are to be a greenhouse where young lives are to be nurtured, watered, and allowed to flourish, the physical education department has one area essential to adolescent development not found in other branches of the school\u27s program; development of the physical aspects and faculties of the adolescent
Effects of Stormwater Management and an Extended Culvert on Stream Health in Dug Run, Allen County, Ohio, USA
Changes in stream hydrology and habitat—associated with urbanization—have impacted diversity, abundance, and movement of both macroinvertebrates and fish. In 2008 the University of Northwestern Ohio began developing the western half of the campus, incorporating stormwater management practices. This provided an opportunity to examine 3 sections of the Dug Run stream that flows through campus: 1 section on the western half of campus that filters stormwater through the soil, and 2 sections on the eastern half of campus which are affected by both urbanization and a culvert that extends under a building and a road. Significant differences in macroinvertebrate Stream Quality Monitoring (SQM) index scores ( p < 0.001), fish diversity ( p < 0.010), and abundance of Orangethroat Darters (Etheostoma spectabile) ( p < 0.001) were observed between the western and the 2 eastern sections of Dug Run. Lower SQM index scores and lower Orangethroat Darter abundances were found in the urbanized sections of the stream, while lower fish diversity numbers were found upstream of the culvert. The western portion of campus, designed to filter stormwater runoff through the soil, was the only section studied with sensitive macroinvertebrates, a higher SQM index score, and a greater abundance of Orangethroat Darters
Multisensor Observation and Simulation of Snowfall During the 2003 Wakasa Bay Field Experiment
This research seeks to assess and improve the accuracy of microphysical assumptions used in satellite passive microwave radiative transfer models and retrieval algorithms by exploiting complementary observations from satellite radiometers, such as TRMM/AMSR-E/GPM, and coincident aircraft instruments, such as the next generation precipitation radar (PR-2). We focus in particular on aircraft data obtained during the Wakasa Bay field experiment, Japan 2003, pertaining to surface snowfall events. The observations of vertical profiles of reflectivity and Doppler-derived fall speeds are used in conjunction with the radiometric measurements to identify 1-D profiles of precipitation particle types, sizes, and concentrations that are consistent with the observations
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Uganda - Synthesising Evidence for Targeted National Responses to Climate Change
The rapidly changing climate conditions in Uganda are likely to cause increase of extreme weather events such as erratic rainfall pattern, floods, landslides, hailstorms, ice melting, heat and drought that may lead to a multitude of livelihoods disruptions. The Integrated Database for African Policymakers, (IDAPS), will integrate climate, crops, fisheries and hydrology information with livelihoods data so policy makers can examine the synthesised evidence and develop more appropriate national responses to climate change impacts, particularly among the most vulnerable populations in rural parts of Uganda
Quality of Life and Autonomy in Emerging Adults with Early‐Onset Neuromuscular Disorders
Emerging adulthood is an important period in the development of one’s identity and autonomy. The ways in which identity and autonomy are viewed by emerging adults and how they impact quality of life (QoL) in individuals with early‐onset neuromuscular conditions is not yet known. This study focused on understanding and exploring relationships between self‐perceptions of emerging adulthood, autonomy, and QoL. Five previously validated measures were incorporated into an online survey and distributed to young adults with early‐onset neuromuscular conditions and unaffected controls. Topics explored included individuals’ views regarding their overall QoL, disease‐specific QoL, components of emerging adulthood, and autonomy. We found that a sense of higher disease impact was associated with a lower Overall General QoL. Additionally, perceptions of key autonomy factors “negativity” and “instability” were uniquely associated with Overall General QoL in the case group as compared to controls, whereas “attitudinal autonomy” (attaining the ability to plan and follow through with goals) was important to this age group regardless of health status. The specific factors of emerging adulthood and autonomy that were significantly correlated with Overall General QoL can be used for developing targeted counseling and interventions to improve QoL for individuals and their families.Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/146967/1/jgc40713.pd
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Heatwaves: an invisible risk in UK policy and research
In 2019, a heatwave – an unusual extended period of hot weather – broke the UK’s highest recorded temperature of 38.7 °C set in 2003. Of concern is that for summer 2019, this resulted in 892 excess deaths. With the intensity and frequency of UK heatwaves projected to increase, and summer temperatures predicted to be 5 °C hotter by 2070, urgent action is needed to prepare for, and adapt to, the changes now and to come. Yet it remains unclear what actions are needed and by whom. In response, a systematic literature review of UK heatwaves peer-reviewed publications, inclusive of keyword criteria (total papers returned = 183), was conducted to understand what lessons have been learnt and what needs to happen next. Our research shows that heatwaves remain largely an invisible risk in the UK. Communication over what UK residents should do, the support needed to make changes, and their capacity to enact those changes, is often lacking. In turn, there is an inherent bias where research focuses too narrowly on the health and building sectors over other critical sectors, such as agriculture. An increased amount of action and leadership is therefore necessary from the UK government to address this
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On Visible Homelessness and the Micro-Aesthetics of Public Space
In this article, we investigate the circumstances that have produced the current municipal regulatory approach to homelessness in the City of Melbourne, Victoria, and the ways in which visibly homeless people are policed through a micro-aesthetics of their presence in public space, which involves the monitoring of their bodily demeanour and their physical possessions. Our study contributes to and draws from a range of debates, including studies of the governmental conjunction of poverty and crime, analysis of the co-implication of law and spatiality, research on the criminalisation of homelessness and homeless people, and the burgeoning criminological interest in the significance of the visual field for our understandings of crime and criminality. This article recounts how homelessness, public space and questions of aesthetics have recently coalesced in debates about the regulation of homelessness in the public space of Melbourne’s city centre. It approaches the issues through comparative consideration of genres of municipal management frameworks in other jurisdictions, detailed textual consideration of the Protocol on Homelessness in the City of Melbourne and an empirical study of visible homelessness in the public places of central Melbourne
Antibodies against heart muscle and nuclear constituents in cardiomyopathy,
The prevalence of HAB and ANA was determined in eight patients with idiopathic hypertrophic subaortic stenosis (IHSS) and 35 patients with cardiomyopathy (CM). HAB was found in 88 per cent of patients with IHSS and in 17 per cent of those with CM. Antinuclear antibody was found in 63 per cent of patients with IHSS and 43 per cent of those with CM. Aging alone was not responsible for the high prevalence of ANA in the former group, but may be partly so in the latter. There was an increased tendency for women in both groups to have ANA. An increased serum concentration of IgM was also observed in women in the IHSS and CM groups. Serum concentrations of IgG and IgA, precipitating antibodies to nuclear constituents, rheumatoid factors, and a positive serologic test for syphilis were not increased in patients with idiopathic cardiomyopathy. Positivity to HAB and ANA did not remain constant and was not present frequently in sera in follow-up studies of these patients. No instance of a negative test becoming positive was recorded for either HAB or ANA. The high prevalence of ANA in patients with IHSS and CM and an increased prevalence of HAB in patients with IHSS may suggest that an autoimmune disturbance is operative in these forms of cardiomyopathy.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/34168/1/0000456.pd
Constructing a WISE High Resolution Galaxy Atlas
After eight months of continuous observations, the Wide-field Infrared Survey
Explorer (WISE) mapped the entire sky at 3.4 {\mu}m, 4.6 {\mu}m, 12 {\mu}m and
22 {\mu}m. We have begun a dedicated WISE High Resolution Galaxy Atlas (WHRGA)
project to fully characterize large, nearby galaxies and produce a legacy image
atlas and source catalogue. Here we summarize the deconvolution technique used
to significantly improve the spatial resolution of WISE imaging, specifically
designed to study the internal anatomy of nearby galaxies. As a case study, we
present results for the galaxy NGC 1566, comparing the WISE super-resolution
image processing to that of Spitzer, GALEX and ground-based imaging. The is the
first paper in a two part series; results for a much larger sample of nearby
galaxies is presented in the second paper.Comment: Published in the AJ (2012, AJ, 144, 68
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