12,081 research outputs found
Collaborating with youths as coteachers in literacy learning
The authors featured in this department column share instructional practices that support transformative literacy teaching and disrupt “struggling reader” and “struggling writer” labels.This work was supported by a Boston University Consortium grant and a Boston University School of Education Faculty Research Award. (Boston University Consortium; Boston University School of Education Faculty Research Award)Accepted manuscrip
Extracting Nuclear Transparency from p-A Cross sections
We study nuclear structure effects on the transparency in high transverse
momentum and reactions. We show that in the DWIA-eikonal
approximation, even when correlations are included, one can get a factorized
expression for the transparency. This depends only on the average nucleon
density and a correlation function. We develop a technique to include
correlations in a Monte-Carlo Glauber type calculation. We compare calculations
of using the eikonal formalism and a continuous density, with a Monte Carlo
method based on discrete nucleons.Comment: 22 pages, 9 postscript figures. LaTeX with epsf styl
Breadboard linear array scan imager using LSI solid-state technology
The performance of large scale integration photodiode arrays in a linear array scan (pushbroom) breadboard was evaluated for application to multispectral remote sensing of the earth's resources. The technical approach, implementation, and test results of the program are described. Several self scanned linear array visible photodetector focal plane arrays were fabricated and evaluated in an optical bench configuration. A 1728-detector array operating in four bands (0.5 - 1.1 micrometer) was evaluated for noise, spectral response, dynamic range, crosstalk, MTF, noise equivalent irradiance, linearity, and image quality. Other results include image artifact data, temporal characteristics, radiometric accuracy, calibration experience, chip alignment, and array fabrication experience. Special studies and experimentation were included in long array fabrication and real-time image processing for low-cost ground stations, including the use of computer image processing. High quality images were produced and all objectives of the program were attained
Positioning adolescents in literacy teaching and learning
Secondary literacy instruction often happens to adolescents rather than with them. To disrupt this trend, we collaborated with 12th-grade “literacy mentors” to reimagine literacy teaching and learning with 10th-grade mentees in a public high school classroom. We used positioning theory as an analytic tool to (a) understand how mentors positioned themselves and how we positioned them and (b) examine the literacy practices that enabled and constrained the mentor position. We found that our positioning of mentors as collaborators was taken up in different and sometimes unexpected ways as a result of the multiple positions available to them and institutional-level factors that shaped what literacy practices were and were not negotiable. We argue that future collaborations with youth must account for the rights and duties of all members of a classroom community, including how those rights and duties intersect, merge, or come into conflict within and across practices.The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: This research was supported by a Faculty Research Award from the School of Education at Boston University. (Faculty Research Award from the School of Education at Boston University)Accepted manuscrip
Supporting Special-Purpose Health Care Models via Web Interfaces
The potential of the Web, via both the Internet and intranets, to facilitate development of clinical information systems has been evident for some time. Most Web-based clinical workstations interfaces, however, provide merely a loose collection of access channels. There are numerous examples of systems for access to either patient data or clinical guidelines, but only isolated cases where clinical decision support is presented integrally with the process of patient care, in particular, in the form of active alerts and reminders based on patient data. Moreover, pressures in the health industry are increasing the need for doctors to practice in accordance with ¿best practice¿ guidelines and often to operate under novel health-care arrangements. We present the Care Plan On-Line (CPOL) system, which provides intranet-based support for the SA HealthPlus Coordinated Care model for chronic disease management. We describe the interface design rationale of CPOL and its implementation framework, which is flexible and broadly applicable to support new health care models over intranets or the Internet
International capital mobility in an era of globalisation: adding a political dimension to the 'Feldstein–Horioka Puzzle'
The debate about the scope of feasible policy-making in an era of globalisation continues to be set within the context of an assumption that national capital markets are now perfectly integrated at the international level. However, the empirical evidence on international capital mobility contradicts such an assumption. As a consequence, a significant puzzle remains. Why is it, in a world in which the observed pattern of capital flows is indicative of a far from globalised reality, that public policy continues to be constructed in line with more extreme variants of the globalisation hypothesis? I attempt to solve this puzzle by arguing that ideas about global capital market integration have an independent causal impact on political outcomes which extends beyond that which can be attributed to the extent of their actual integration
Analytic solutions of the 1D finite coupling delta function Bose gas
An intensive study for both the weak coupling and strong coupling limits of
the ground state properties of this classic system is presented. Detailed
results for specific values of finite are given and from them results for
general are determined. We focus on the density matrix and concomitantly
its Fourier transform, the occupation numbers, along with the pair correlation
function and concomitantly its Fourier transform, the structure factor. These
are the signature quantities of the Bose gas. One specific result is that for
weak coupling a rational polynomial structure holds despite the transcendental
nature of the Bethe equations. All these new results are predicated on the
Bethe ansatz and are built upon the seminal works of the past.Comment: 23 pages, 0 figures, uses rotate.sty. A few lines added. Accepted by
Phys. Rev.
Hodge Dual for Soldered Bundles
In order to account for all possible contractions allowed by the presence of
the solder form, a generalized Hodge dual is defined for the case of soldered
bundles. Although for curvature the generalized dual coincides with the usual
one, for torsion it gives a completely new dual definition. Starting from the
standard form of a gauge lagrangian for the translation group, the generalized
Hodge dual yields precisely the lagrangian of the teleparallel equivalent of
general relativity, and consequently also the Einstein-Hilbert lagrangian of
general relativity.Comment: 8 pages, no figures. Accepted for publication in Journal of Physics
Repassivation of Pits in Aluminum Thin Films
The effect of metal film thickness on repassivation of pits in sputter-deposited Al thin films was investigated in chloride solutions. The repassivation potential and the critical current density, which is the pit current density below which pits stop growing, were determined for pits in Al thin films ranging from 100 Ǻ to 43 μm in thickness. The repassivation potential first decreased as thickness increased from 100 to 4350 Ǻ, and then increased as the film thickness increased further. This behavior was found to be a consequence of the pit current-density/potential relationship. The critical current density, a more informative parameter, decreased for increasing metal film thickness, even when the repassivation potential increased. The critical current density is the minimum current density needed to maintain the critical pit environment and prevent repassivation. The repassivation potential for a given metal film thickness is the potential at which the pit current density drops below the critical value. Mass-transport and ohmic resistance both increase as the metal film thickness increases, but the former enhances pit stability and the latter destabilizes pitting in this system. Pit repassivation, and thus stability, are strongly influenced by mass-transport considerations for pits in very thin pits, even though dissolution at low potentials is not under pure mass-transport control. Ohmic effects become increasingly important as the film thickness increases.J.R.S. was supported by the NASA-Langley Research Center La^2ST Program and the NSF under DMR-9357463
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