2,030 research outputs found
VIC ... High Yielding, Strong Gluten Durum
'Vic' (CI 17789) is a durum wheat cultivar (variety) developed by the North Dakota Agricultural Experiment Station, North Dakota State University, in cooperation with Agricultural Research, Science and Education Administration, the U. S. Department of Agriculture. Vic combines high grain yield and strong gluten characteristics. Gluten strength gives superior cooked firmness to various pasta products made from durum semolina. The improved yielding ability and strong gluten of Vic should make it a potential replacement for all presently grown normal height cultivars. Vic was developed in only six years from the final cross by utilizing early generation (F 3) yield and quality testing and three years of winter nurseries
Perfect design or practical study? A workshop on navigating the challenges of community based prevention research
Subject: There is a shared interest among public health researchers in tackling methodological issues surrounding community based research, and on moving beyond a focus on individual level change. As part of a project on community empowerment funded by the Peopleâs Health Trust, we have conducted a feasibility study on quantitative and economic evaluation of complex community-based interventions. To understand different quantitative methods that can be used to evaluate community empowerment interventions, we have undertaken a methodological literature review that identified the following sets of challenges: Defining population of interest â interventions taking place at a community level are not specifically targeted at a well-defined group of individuals. Therefore it is challenging to even find those who are affected by an intervention. Diverse and un-prescribed effects â the effect of community empowerment interventions are likely broad, suggesting we need to measure multiple outcomes in order to detect change. This increases the likelihood of detecting spurious change and can require a lot of resource. Furthermore, in many cases these outcomes are not pre-defined by a programme (i.e. communities choose their own foci)
Targeting Mr Average: Participation, gender equity and school sport partnerships
The School Sport Partnership Programme (SSPP) is one strand of the national strategy for physical education and school sport in England, the physical education and school sport Club Links Strategy (PESSCL). The SSPP aims to make links between school physical education (PE) and out of school sports participation, and has a particular remit to raise the participation levels of several identified under-represented groups, of which girls and young women are one. National evaluations of the SSPP show that it is beginning to have positive impacts on young people's activity levels by increasing the range and provision of extra curricular activities (Office for Standards in Education (OFSTED), 2003, 2004, 2005; Loughborough Partnership, 2005, 2006). This paper contributes to the developing picture of the phased implementation of the programme by providing qualitative insights into the work of one school sport partnership with a particular focus on gender equity. The paper explores the ways in which gender equity issues have been explicitly addressed within the 'official texts' of the SSPP; how these have shifted over time and how teachers are responding to and making sense of these in their daily practice. Using participation observation, interview and questionnaire data, the paper explores how the coordinators are addressing the challenge of increasing the participation of girls and young women. The paper draws on Walby's (2000) conceptualisation of different kinds of feminist praxis to highlight the limitations of the coordinators' work. Two key themes from the data and their implications are addressed: the dominance of competitive sport practices and the PE professionals' views of targeting as a strategy for increasing the participation of under-represented groups. The paper concludes that coordinators work within an equality or difference discourse with little evidence of the transformative praxis needed for the programme to be truly inclusive. © 2008 Taylor & Francis
What Does an Exemplary Middle School Mathematics Teacher Look Like? The Use of a Professional Development Rubric
A School University Research Network (SURN) committee composed of current mathematics teachers, central ofïŹce math supervisors, building administrators, mathematicians, and mathematics educators researched numerous sources regarding best practices in mathematics instruction. The resulting professional development rubric synthesizes their findings and can serve a professional development role by providing teachers and administrators with a tool to develop clarity and consensus on best mathematics instructional practices, and how these practices are implemented in the classroom. It is also being used as a tool for cooperating teachers in their supervision of student teachers and as a reïŹective method for self-evaluation
Sense of competence, autonomy and relatedness during primary-secondary transition: children express their own experiences
This paper contributes a greater understanding of the importance of a sense of
competence, autonomy and relatedness to children experiencing the primarysecondary schooling transition, drawing on the perspectives of the young people
themselves. We address how the perspectives of transitioning children can further
substantiate and illuminate Ryan and Deciâs Self Determination Theory (SDT; Ryan
and Deci, 2019). SDT claims that satisfaction of a personâs needs for competence
(attainment and confidence), autonomy (self-direction and capacity to critique) and
relatedness (feeling affectively bonded to others) allows them to achieve âpositiveexperience and wellness outcomesâ (p.219). We draw on data from two research
projects, one a survey study of 288 transitioning children; and one a life-history study of
23 transitioning children. Our findings illustrated the potential benefits of policymakers
giving priority to a wider range of conceptions of competence beyond attainment in
mathematics/English, in order to support transitioning childrenâs sense of competence
including their self-confidence. Findings also highlighted the need to nurture childrenâs
capacity to recognise and direct their own schooling trajectories more autonomously,
directing their energies into engagement with learning and relationships rather than
into riling against controls or seeking to avoid humiliation and punishment. Most
positively, our data manifested childrenâs high levels of relatedness to both peers
and teachers as they transitioned to new secondary schools. And above all, our data
emphasised and exemplified the need for relatedness to accompany childrenâs strong
sense of competence and autonomy during transition
The TANAMI Program
TANAMI (Tracking Active Galactic Nuclei with Austral Milliarcsecond
Interferometry) is a monitoring program to study the parsec-scale structures
and dynamics of relativistic jets in active galactic nuclei (AGN) of the
Southern Hemisphere with the Long Baseline Array and associated telescopes.
Extragalactic jets south of -30 degrees declination are observed at 8.4 GHz and
22 GHz every two months at milliarcsecond resolution. The initial TANAMI sample
is a hybrid radio and gamma-ray selected sample since the combination of VLBI
and gamma-ray observations is crucial to understand the broadband emission
characteristics of AGN.Comment: Confernce Proceedings for "X-ray Astronomy 2009" (Bologna), 3 pages,
3 figures, needs cls-fil
TANAMI - Tracking Active Galactic Nuclei with Austral Milliarcsecond Interferometry
We present a summary of the observation strategy of TANAMI (Tracking Active
Galactic Nuclei with Austral Milliarcsecond Interferometry), a monitoring
program to study the parsec-scale structure and dynamics of relativistic jets
in active galactic nuclei (AGN) of the Southern Hemisphere with the Australian
Long Baseline Array (LBA) and the trans-oceanic antennas Hartebeesthoek, TIGO,
and O'Higgins. TANAMI is focusing on extragalactic sources south of -30 degrees
declination with observations at 8.4 GHz and 22 GHz every ~2 months at
milliarcsecond resolution. The initial TANAMI sample of 43 sources has been
defined before the launch of the Fermi Gamma Ray Space Telescope to include the
most promising candidates for bright gamma-ray emission to be detected with its
Large Area Telescope (LAT). Since November 2008, we have been adding new
sources to the sample, which now includes all known radio- and gamma-ray bright
AGN of the Southern Hemisphere. The combination of VLBI and gamma-ray
observations is crucial to understand the broadband emission characteristics of
AGN and the nature of relativistic jets.Comment: Conference proceedings "2009 Fermi Symposium" eConf Proceedings
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