2,407 research outputs found
The Arizona Kith and Kin Project Evaluation, Brief #3
Professional Development with Family, Friend, and Neighbor Providers: Implications for Dual Language Learners. Indigo Cultural Center, for the Association for Supportive Child Care, with support from First Things First and Valley of the Sun United Way
The Arizona Kith and Kin Project Evaluation, Brief #4
Despite the prevalence of family, friend, and neighbor (FFN) child care (NSECE, 2015), relatively little is known about the characteristics of this type of care, quality of care, and the features of effective quality improvement initiatives for FFN care providers. In general, the early childhood field has remained relatively silent about FFN child care in policy and research discourses surrounding child well-being and quality initiatives (Shivers, 2012; Whitebook et al., 2004). The overall goal of the analyses described in this brief, Brief #4 in a series of four, was to explore and analyze FFN providers’ awareness and use of community resources. This sample was obtained by collecting data from providers involved in a 14-week training-support group intervention known as the Arizona Kith and Kin Project. The providers in the Arizona Kith and Kin Project represent a critical population of providers who are serving young children in Arizona
The Parable of the Boiled System Safety Professional: Drift to Failure
Recall from the Parable of the Boiled Frog, that tossing a frog into boiling water causes the frog to jump out and hop away while placing a frog in suitable temperature water and slowly bringing the water to a boil results in the frog boiling due to not being aware of the slowly increasing danger, theoretically, of course. System safety professionals must guard against allowing dangers to creep unnoticed into their projects and be ever alert to notice signs of impending problems. People have used various phrases related to the idea, most notably, latent conditions, James Reason in Managing the Risks of Organizational Accidents (1, pp 10-11), Drift to Failure, Sydney Dekker (2, pp 82-86) in Resilience Engineering: Chronicling the Emergence of Confused Consensus in Resilience Engineering: Concepts and Precepts, Hollnagel, Woods and Leveson, and normalization of deviance, Diane Vaughan in The Challenger Launch Decision: Risky Technology, Culture, and Deviance at NASA (3). Reason also said, If eternal vigilance is the price of liberty, then chronic unease is the price of safety (1, p 37). Our challenge as system safety professionals is to be aware of the emergence of signals that warn us of slowly eroding safety margins. This paper will discuss how system safety professionals might better perform in that regard
Supporting Dynamic Languages on the Java Virtual Machine
In this note, I propose two extensions to the Java virtual machine (or VM) to allow dynamic languages such as Dylan, Scheme and Smalltalk to be efficiently implemented on the VM. These extensions do not affect the performance of pure Java programs on the machine. The first extension allows for efficient encoding of dynamic data; the second allows for efficient encoding of language-specific computational elements
A wind-tunnel and analytical study of the conversion from wing lift to rotor lift on a composite-lift V/TOL aircraft
Wind tunnel and analytical study of conversion from wing lift to rotor lift on composite lift VTOL aircraf
Low-speed wind-tunnel investigation of a large scale advanced arrow-wing supersonic transport configuration with engines mounted above wing for upper-surface blowing
Tests have been conducted in a full scale tunnel to determine the low speed aerodynamic characteristics of a large scale advanced arrow wing supersonic transport configuration with engines mounted above the wing for upper surface blowing. Tests were made over an angle of attack range of -10 deg to 32 deg, sideslip angles of + or - 5 deg, and a Reynolds number range of 3,530,000 to 7,330,000. Configuration variables included trailing edge flap deflection, engine jet nozzle angle, engine thrust coefficient, engine out operation, and asymmetrical trailing edge boundary layer control for providing roll trim. Downwash measurements at the tail were obtained for different thrust coefficients, tail heights, and at two fuselage stations
HOVERING CHARACTERISTICS OF A ROTOR HAVING AN AIRFOIL SECTION DESIGNED FOR AUTILITY TYPE OF HELICOPTER
Hovering characteristics of rotor having airfoil section designed for utility type helicopte
Normal stress anisotropy and marginal stability in athermal elastic networks
Hydrogels of semiflexible biopolymers such as collagen have been shown to
contract axially under shear strain, in contrast to the axial dilation observed
for most elastic materials. Recent work has shown that this behavior can be
understood in terms of the porous, two-component nature and consequent
time-dependent compressibility of hydrogels. The apparent normal stress
measured by a torsional rheometer reflects only the tensile contribution of the
axial component on long (compressible) timescales, crossing over
to the first normal stress difference, at short
(incompressible) times. While the behavior of is well understood for
isotropic viscoelastic materials undergoing affine shear deformation,
biopolymer networks are often anisotropic and deform nonaffinely. Here, we
numerically study the normal stresses that arise under shear in subisostatic,
athermal semiflexible polymer networks. We show that such systems exhibit
strong deviations from affine behavior and that these anomalies are controlled
by a rigidity transition as a function of strain
Communicating Risk to Program Managers
Program Managers (PM) can protect program resources and improve chances of success by anticipating, understanding and managing risks. Understanding the range of potential risks helps one to avoid or manage the risks. A PM must choose which risks to accept to reduce fire fighting, must meet the expectations of stakeholders consistently, and avoid falling into costly "black holes" that may open. A good risk management process provides the PM more confidence to seize opportunities save money, meet schedule, even improve relationships with people important to the program. Evidence of managing risk and sound internal controls can mean better support from superiors for the program by building a trust and reputation from being on top of issues. Risk managers have an obligation to provide the PM with the best information possible to allow the benefits to be realized (Small Business Consortium, 2004). The Institute for Chartered Accountants in England and Wales sees very important benefits for companies in providing better information about what they do to assess and manage key business risks. Such information will: a) provide practical forward-looking information; b) reduce the cost of capital; c) encourage better risk management; and d) improve accountability for stewardship, investor protection and the usefulness of financial reporting. We are particularly convinced that enhanced risk reporting will help listed companies obtain capital at the lowest possible cost (The Institute of Chartered Accountants in England &Wales, June 2002). Risk managers can take a significant role in quantifying the success of their department and communicating those figures to executive (program) management levels while pushing for a broader risk management role. Overall, risk managers must show that risk management work matters in the most crucial place-the bottom line- as they prove risk management can be a profit center (Sullivan, 2004)
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