10,269 research outputs found
From Tarde to Deleuze and Foucault: The Infinitesimal Revolution (Review)
From Tarde to Deleuze and Foucault: The Infinitesimal Revolution
,Palgrave Macmillan: London, 2018; 154 pp.: ISBN 9783319551487
Sergio Tonkonoff
Special Section Guest Editorial: White Papers in Biophotonics
This guest editorial introduces the White Papers in Biophotonics
Reduced-rank spatio-temporal modeling of air pollution concentrations in the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis and Air Pollution
There is growing evidence in the epidemiologic literature of the relationship
between air pollution and adverse health outcomes. Prediction of individual air
pollution exposure in the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) funded
Multi-Ethnic Study of Atheroscelerosis and Air Pollution (MESA Air) study
relies on a flexible spatio-temporal prediction model that integrates land-use
regression with kriging to account for spatial dependence in pollutant
concentrations. Temporal variability is captured using temporal trends
estimated via modified singular value decomposition and temporally varying
spatial residuals. This model utilizes monitoring data from existing regulatory
networks and supplementary MESA Air monitoring data to predict concentrations
for individual cohort members. In general, spatio-temporal models are limited
in their efficacy for large data sets due to computational intractability. We
develop reduced-rank versions of the MESA Air spatio-temporal model. To do so,
we apply low-rank kriging to account for spatial variation in the mean process
and discuss the limitations of this approach. As an alternative, we represent
spatial variation using thin plate regression splines. We compare the
performance of the outlined models using EPA and MESA Air monitoring data for
predicting concentrations of oxides of nitrogen (NO)-a pollutant of primary
interest in MESA Air-in the Los Angeles metropolitan area via cross-validated
. Our findings suggest that use of reduced-rank models can improve
computational efficiency in certain cases. Low-rank kriging and thin plate
regression splines were competitive across the formulations considered,
although TPRS appeared to be more robust in some settings.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/14-AOAS786 the Annals of
Applied Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aoas/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
The Las Vegas Promise Neighborhood Initiative: A Community-Based Approach to Improving Educational Opportunity & Achievement
Since the 1980s, the standards and accountability movement in U.S. education has focused heavily on reform at the classroom and school level, with insufficient regard for how social, political, and community contexts impact student learning and achievement (Berliner, 2006; Horsford, 2010; Noguera, 2003; Oakes, 1989; Wells et al., 2004). This emphasis on standardization and high-stakes testing has stigmatized, and in many instances, penalized low-income and historically underserved students and communities through the use of student subgroup and school designations. It also largely has ignored the research literature documenting the significant impact poverty, neighborhood context, and related out-of-school factors such as housing, food security, health care, and family supports have on student learning and achievement (See Anyon, 1997; Berliner, 2006; Kozol, 1991; Noguera, 2003; Oakes, 1989).
At the federal level, policy efforts intended to equalize educational opportunities, whether through school desegregation in the 1960s and 1970s, effective schools programs in the 1980s, or most recently, No Child Left Behind, have failed to acknowledge as Berliner (2006) noted, that “all educational efforts that focus on classrooms and schools, as does NCLB, could be reversed by family, could be negated by neighborhoods, and might well be subverted or minimized by what happens to children outside of school” (p. 951). While a number of federal programs have sought to mitigate the negative impacts of poverty and segregation on urban education (i.e., Title I, Magnet Schools Assistance), on April 30, 2010, the U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Innovation and Improvement launched its Promise Neighborhoods program and described it as “the first federal initiative to put education at the center of comprehensive efforts to fight poverty in urban and rural areas” (U.S. Department of Education, 2011).
This report by The Lincy Institute examines the renewed interest in neighborhood-scale education reform as demonstrated by the Promise Neighborhoods program and its implications for education reform in Southern Nevada. More specifically, it offers a brief overview of Promise Neighborhoods, description of the original Las Vegas Promise Neighborhood planning grant application, and discussion of the collaborative activity that LVPN partners have engaged in since to advance the coordinated provision of community-based supports for school success. This report seeks to illustrate how and why the Las Vegas Promise Neighborhood Initiative, and other neighborhood-based education reform efforts hold “promise” for school improvement and success in Southern Nevada. The next section offers a brief overview of Promise Neighborhoods, followed by a description of local efforts in Las Vegas
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