91 research outputs found

    The Outcomes Book: Debate and Consensus after the WPA Outcomes Statement

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    The WPA Outcomes Statement represents a working consensus among composition scholars about what college students should learn and do in a composition program. But as a single-page document, the statement cannot convey the kind of reflective process that a writing program must undertake to address the learning outcomes described. The Outcomes Book relates the fuller process by exploring the matrix of concerns that surrounded the developing statement itself, and by presenting the experience of many who have since employed it in their own settings. For departments, programs, and individuals, this collection levers the Outcomes Statement in all its simplicity and complexity into a rich discussion of the programmatic essentials of writing theory and pedagogy--and what these look like at writing programs informed by the Outcomes Statement. It is written in the hope that faculty and administrators alike will use the Statement as a tool for cyclically reflecting on their own programs and practice.https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/usupress_pubs/1153/thumbnail.jp

    Prokaryotic Community Structure and Metabolisms in Shallow Subsurface of Atacama Desert Playas and Alluvial Fans After Heavy Rains: Repairing and Preparing for Next Dry Period

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    The Atacama Desert, the oldest and driest desert on Earth, displays significant rains only once per decade. To investigate how microbial communities take advantage of these sporadic wet events, we carried out a geomicrobiological study a few days after a heavy rain event in 2015. Different physicochemical and microbial community analyses were conducted on samples collected from playas and an alluvial fan from surface, 10, 20, 50, and 80 cm depth. Gravimetric moisture content peaks were measured in 10 and 20 cm depth samples (from 1.65 to 4.1% w/w maximum values) while, in general, main anions such as chloride, nitrate, and sulfate concentrations increased with depth, with maximum values of 13–1,125; 168–10,109; and 9,904–30,952 ppm, respectively. Small organic anions such as formate and acetate had maximum concentrations from 2.61 to 3.44 ppm and 6.73 to 28.75 ppm, respectively. Microbial diversity inferred from DNA analysis showed Actinobacteria and Alphaproteobacteria as the most abundant and widespread bacterial taxa among the samples, followed by Chloroflexi and Firmicutes at specific sites. Archaea were mainly dominated by Nitrososphaerales, Methanobacteria, with the detection of other groups such as Halobacteria. Metaproteomics showed a high and even distribution of proteins involved in primary metabolic processes such as energy production and biosynthetic pathways, and a limited but remarkable presence of proteins related to resistance to environmental stressors such as radiation, oxidation, or desiccation. The results indicated that extra humidity in the system allows the microbial community to repair, and prepare for the upcoming hyperarid period. Additionally, it supplies biomarkers to the medium whose preservation potential could be high under strong desiccation conditions and relevant for planetary exploration.This work was funded by the Spanish Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad/Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional Grants no. ESP2014-58494-R, ESP2015-69540-R (MINECO/FEDER), ESP2017-89053-C2-2-P, and “María de Maeztu” program project no. MDM-2017-0737; the NASA ASTEP “Life in the Atacama (LITA)” project no. NNX11AJ87G, and NASA Astrobiology Institute Colaborative Agreement 7 (CAN-7) project No. NNX15BB01A. MF-M had a posdoctoral grant from the Comunidad de Madrid/European Union YEI program, and IG-C had a FPI grant from the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitivity (MINECO).With funding from the Spanish government through the ‘Severo Ochoa Centre of Excellence’ accreditation (MDM-2017-0737).Peer reviewe

    The Vehicle, 1965, Vol. 7

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    Vol. 7 Table of Contents CommentaryElaine Lancepage 3 Lost Island and The Unseen SeaDaun Alan Leggpage 5 ElegyWilliam Mosierpage 6 AwayDavid Dixpage 7 DulceyRoberta Mathewspage 8 Alarum Tuam JonneDavid Walkerpage 11 Little BrotherSteve Gibbspage 13 River RunningDaun Alan Leggpage 15 PortraitRobert D. Thomaspage 16 The RockRoger Lewis Hudsonpage 17 Jarman HospitalElaine Lancepage 18 Of Domes and DiamondsDwight Ashbypage 19 Friday NightRoger J. Barrypage 20 MurderHelen Coxpage 23 Vigil SongDaun Alan Leggpage 24 Had You But Been the OneDavid Helmpage 25 To A Useless WeaponDarlene Brewerpage 25 Out of the NightPat Hartpage 26 La MortAdrian Beardpage 28 Mrs. Milton\u27s LamentBob Millerpage 30 Cockle CoveSusan McCabepage 31 Loss of VirtueJim Rinnertpage 32 The KeepsakeDwight Ashbypage 33 The RuinsRoger Lewis Hudsonpage 35 Ante Major OdysseyDaun Alan Leggpage 38 ReligionAnthony Barrettepage 39 All JoyJim Rinnertpage 40 SesameElaine Lancepage 40 CenterpieceDwight Ashbypage 41 A Great White WaveJohn Rhodespage 42 QueryElaine Lancepage 44 PistachioRita Salyerspage 45 FacadeKathleen McCormackpage 46 Winter Wisp AwaySteve Gibbspage 46 ScenarioDavid Dixpage 47 Damn-GodSteve Gibbspage 48 AccidentElaine Lancepage 48https://thekeep.eiu.edu/vehicle/1013/thumbnail.jp

    Writing settlement after Idle No More: non-indigenous responses in Anglo-Canadian poetry

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    This article examines the representation of settlement in Canada in the wake of Idle No More in recent Anglo-Canadian literature. It argues that Idle No More engendered a new vocabulary for settler-invader citizens to position themselves in relation to this Indigenous movement, with non-Indigenous Canadians self-identifying as “settlers” and “allies” as a means of both orienting themselves with respect to Indigenous resistance to the settler-invader nation-state and signalling an attempted solidarity with Idle No More that would not lapse into appropriation. Four very different poetic texts by non-Indigenous authors demonstrate this reconsideration of settlement in the wake of Idle No More: Arleen Paré’s Lake of Two Mountains (2014); Rachel Zolf’s Janey’s Arcadia (2014); Rita Wong’s undercurrent (2015); and Shane Rhodes’s X (2013). Although only the latter two of these collections make explicit reference to Idle No More, all four of these texts engage with historical and current colonialisms, relationships to land and water, and relationships between Indigenous peoples and settler-invaders, providing examples of new understandings and representations of (neo)colonial settlement in post-Idle No More Canada

    Arizona\u27s Vulnerable Populations

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    Arizona’s vulnerable populations are struggling on a daily basis but usually do so in silence, undetected by traditional radar and rankings, often unaware themselves of their high risk for being pushed or pulled into a full crisis. Ineligible for financial assistance under strict eligibility guidelines, they don’t qualify as poor because vulnerable populations are not yet in full crisis. To be clear, this report is not about the “poor,” at least not in the limited sense of the word. It is about our underemployed wage earners, our single-parent households, our deployed or returning military members, our under-educated and unskilled workforce, our debt-ridden neighbors, our uninsured friends, our family members with no savings for an emergency, much less retirement

    Time Scale Hierarchies in the Functional Organization of Complex Behaviors

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    Traditional approaches to cognitive modelling generally portray cognitive events in terms of ‘discrete’ states (point attractor dynamics) rather than in terms of processes, thereby neglecting the time structure of cognition. In contrast, more recent approaches explicitly address this temporal dimension, but typically provide no entry points into cognitive categorization of events and experiences. With the aim to incorporate both these aspects, we propose a framework for functional architectures. Our approach is grounded in the notion that arbitrary complex (human) behaviour is decomposable into functional modes (elementary units), which we conceptualize as low-dimensional dynamical objects (structured flows on manifolds). The ensemble of modes at an agent’s disposal constitutes his/her functional repertoire. The modes may be subjected to additional dynamics (termed operational signals), in particular, instantaneous inputs, and a mechanism that sequentially selects a mode so that it temporarily dominates the functional dynamics. The inputs and selection mechanisms act on faster and slower time scales then that inherent to the modes, respectively. The dynamics across the three time scales are coupled via feedback, rendering the entire architecture autonomous. We illustrate the functional architecture in the context of serial behaviour, namely cursive handwriting. Subsequently, we investigate the possibility of recovering the contributions of functional modes and operational signals from the output, which appears to be possible only when examining the output phase flow (i.e., not from trajectories in phase space or time)
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