298 research outputs found
The Nostalgic Turn and The Politics of Ressentiment
The Greatest Generation, Band of Brothers, We Were Soldiers, Nick at Night, and the confederate battle flag. We are looking backward, because looking forward is too problematic. We are living within a global conservative restoration, which has gained intensity since 9/11 and gained further solidification since the most recent elections. Ira Shor elaborated the concept of the conservative restoration in his text, Culture Wars: School and Society in the Conservative Restoration 1969-1984 (1986)
Variation and Optimality
This study procedes from two fundamental assumptions which have nevertheless not always received wide acceptance in the fields of phonology and sociolinguistics: (1) that variable or optional rules, and the empirical, quantitative study of variation in language, may have important implications for theories of phonological/morphological derivation
Fostering Agentic Engagement: Working toward Empowerment and Equity through Pedagogical Partnership
An established body of research details the faculty role in promoting student engagement. Newer scholarship on agentic engagement foregrounds student-initiated engagement in classroom learning. Our SoTL project explored how participating in student-faculty pedagogical partnerships supported two undergraduate students in expanding agentic engagement to encompass student empowerment and equity both within and beyond the classroom. We draw on the students’ autoethnographic accounts of three interrelated experiences: (1) joining a pedagogical partnership program as pedagogical consultants and developing confidence in, capacity for, and commitment to supporting student and faculty learning; (2) carrying that confidence, capacity, and commitment into the courses in which those students were enrolled to enact agentic engagement in their own and in support of others’ learning; and (3) expanding the agentic engagement they developed in the first two instances beyond classroom learning. This study has implications for classroom instruction, faculty professional development, and student advising and retention
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A Comparison of Skills Considered Important for Success as an Entry Level Manager in the Hospitality Industry vs. The Skills Recent Graduates Possess
This paper presents and discusses the findings of a study to determine if the historic gap between the skills industry and education consider important for success as an entry level manager still exists. A review of literature identified a list of skills considered important for success by both industry and higher education. Of the eighty nine skills identified, forty two showed no significant difference, six skills were considered more important by the recruiters and forty one skills were considered more important by the educators. The top 10 skills were the same for both groups; however their order is slightly different
Prescription analgesia and adjuvant use by pain severity at admission among nursing home residents with non-malignant pain
Objective: We estimated the use of prescribed analgesics and adjuvants among nursing home residents without cancer who reported pain at their admission assessment, in relation to resident-reported pain severity.
Methods: Medicare Part D claims were used to define 3 classes of analgesics and 7 classes of potential adjuvants on the 21st day after nursing home admission (or the day of discharge for residents discharged before that date) among 180,780 residents with complete information admitted between January 1, 2011 and December 9, 2016, with no cancer diagnosis.
Results: Of these residents, 27.9% reported mild pain, 46.6% moderate pain, and 25.6% reported severe pain. The prevalence of residents in pain without Part D claims for prescribed analgesic and/or adjuvant medications was 47.3% among those reporting mild pain, 35.7% among those with moderate pain, and 24.8% among those in severe pain. Among residents reporting severe pain, 33% of those ≥ 85 years of age and 35% of those moderately cognitively impaired received no prescription analgesics/adjuvants. Use of all classes of prescribed analgesics and adjuvants increased with resident-reported pain severity, and the concomitant use of medications from multiple classes was common.
Conclusion: Among nursing home residents with recognized pain, opportunities to improve the pharmacologic management of pain, especially among older residents, and those living with cognitive impairments exist
Investigating current efficacies of several nematocides for use in cattle according to the fecal egg count reduction test
Utilizing small groups of naturally infected replacement heifers, fecal egg count reduction tests (FECRT) were conducted in the later months of 2007 at the University of Arkansas Savoy Research Station. Each test was 28 d in length, consisting of individual fecal nematode egg counts (EPG) and coprocultures. For the first test, the calves were ranked by beginning EPG, blocked, and randomly assigned treatment within each block. Nine to ten animals were in each treatment group. In this test, neither IVOMEC (® Merial) or IVERMECTIN (® Durvet), both delivered as an injectable at the rate of 0.2 mg of ivermectin kg-1 BW, resulted in egg count reductions of ≥ 90%. Post-treatment coprocultures relative to both products contained a mixture of Cooperia and Haemonchus spp larvae. Also in this first test, Safe-Guard (® Intervet), delivered as a suspension at the rate of 5.0 mg of fenbendazole kg-1 BW, resulted in egg count reductions of 100% (d 7 and 14) and 88-87% (d 21 and 28). Posttreatment coprocultures specific to Safe-Guard yielded only Cooperia spp larvae. In the second test, which was of follow-up treatments given immediately after the first test (animals re-sorted to treatment group), Safe-Guard at the above rate resulted in egg count reductions of 99-100% (d 7 and 14) and 54-18% (d 21 and 28). Also in the second test, Cydectin (® Fort Dodge) treatment at the rate of 0.2 mg of moxidectin kg-1 BW resulted in egg count reductions of 96-92% (d 7 to 28) and SafeGuard treatment at the rate of 10 mg of fenbendazole kg-1 BW resulted in egg count reductions of 100-88% (d 7 to 28). As was the case in the first test, post-treatment coprocultures from animals treated with Safe-Guard yielded only Cooperia spp larvae. Treatment of cattle with Cydectin resulted in coprocultures that primarily yielded Cooperia, but with a trace of Haemonchus spp larvae
Exile Vol. XXIX No. 1
Once by Kate Silliman 1
Mute by Robert Youngblood 1
Photo by Walter Gunn 2
Cactus Man by Bruce Pedretti 3
From Years On Nauset Beach by 4
Lazy Days of The Matter That Fills You With Guild (And Ecstacy) by Eric Stevenson 5
Tennessee Friday by Becky Hinshaw 6
Photo by Jenny Gardner 7
Street Opera by Bill Hayes 7
Antonia by Ruth Wick 8
Photo by Sheila Waters 9
Tunnel Vision by Jeff Reynold 10
Mrs. Matthews by Kate Reynolds 10
A White Mountain by Ruth Wick 11
The Last Days Of Oliver Descantes by Jeff Hamilton 12-23
Photo by Christopher Hooper 24
Baptism by Becky Hinshaw 25
Sunday Afternoon by August West 26
The Joke\u27s On by Christopher B. Broughm 26
Photo by Mark Baganz 27
Blues by Dave Rheingold 28
Speaking To You Through Derision by Jeff Hamilton 29
Photo by Jenny Gardner 30
Northern Lights by Adrienne Wehr 31
Tripping On The Yawn Of Tomorrow by Kate Reynolds 32
Cleo by Kim Kiefer 33
Kuei Mei by Amy Pence 34
Drawing by Peter Brooke 35
Cover Drawing by Peter Brooke -title pag
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