134,468 research outputs found

    Engaging the Digitally Engaged Student: Comparing Technology-Mediated Communication Use and Effects on Student Learning

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    The role of communication technologies in the learning process is both a dynamic and complex issue. Yet, we know surprisingly little about how the use of specific communication technologies may influence classroom performance, key learning outcomes, and other measures of course satisfaction. The research reported here attempts to add to our knowledge about the role of communication in the technology enhanced classroom (TEC) education and in technology-enhanced online (TEO) education through a direct comparison of two courses. Our findings indicate additional support for “The No Significant Difference Phenomenon.” Furthermore, we found that prior experiences lead students to gravitate towards their preferred learning environments, and that basic website elements are required in any learning environment to enhance student outcomes. Finally, we found that when used appropriately, the benefits of communication technology use in education outweigh many of the drawbacks

    WCIRA As A Campaign Issue, circa 1979

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    A sample managers\u27 response to unions\u27 anti-WCIRA campaign practices

    Using SCUBA to place upper limits on arcsecond scale CMB anisotropies at 850 microns

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    The SCUBA instrument on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope has already had an impact on cosmology by detecting relatively large numbers of dusty galaxies at high redshift. Apart from identifying well-detected sources, such data can also be mined for information about fainter sources and their correlations, as revealed through low level fluctuations in SCUBA maps. As a first step in this direction we analyse a small SCUBA data-set as if it were obtained from a Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) differencing experiment. This enables us to place limits on CMB anisotropy at 850 microns. Expressed as Q_{flat}, the quadrupole expectation value for a flat power spectrum, the limit is 152 microKelvin at 95 per cent confidence, corresponding to C_0^{1/2} < 355 microKelvin for a Gaussian autocorrelation function, with a coherence angle of about 20--25 arcsec; These results could easily be reinterpretted in terms of any other fluctuating sky signal. This is currently the best limit for these scales at high frequency, and comparable to limits at similar angular scales in the radio. Even with such a modest data-set, it is possible to put a constraint on the slope of the SCUBA counts at the faint end, since even randomly distributed sources would lead to fluctuations. Future analysis of sky correlations in more extensive data-sets ought to yield detections, and hence additional information on source counts and clustering.Comment: 12 pages, 9 postscript figures, uses mn.st

    Manager\u27s Memo: A New Look at Unionism, 1985

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    Book Review: Risking Christ for Christ\u27s Sake

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    A review of Risking Christ for Christ\u27s Sake: Towards an Ecumenical Theology of Pluralism by M.M. Thomas

    Book Review: River of Compassion: A Christian Commentary on the Bhagavad Gita

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    A review of River of Compassion: A Christian Commentary on the Bhagavad Gita by Bede Griffiths

    A review of nonequilibrium effects and surface catalysis on shuttle heating

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    A review is given of the nonequilibrium calculation techniques by various authors over the past decade to predict heat fluxes to the windward side of the Space Shuttle orbiter. The results of these techniques are compared with measurements made on the first few flights of the Space Shuttle. The calculations attempt to account for finite rate chemistry in the shock layer around the vehicle and for finite rate catalytic atom recombination on the thermal protection materials. The techniques considered are the axisymmetric viscous shock layer method, three dimensional reacting Euler equation solutions coupled with axisymmetric analog boundary layer method, and a recently developed nonequilibrium 3-D viscous shock layer method

    Correspondence to John Lamers, Vice President of the Advertising Posters Company regarding transferring employees and job posting, 1981

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    Includes job rating, pay rates, and classification. February 3, 1981

    For youth, by youth: a third student-run homeless shelter

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    This past winter, the third student-run homeless shelter in the United States came into being. Two recent Harvard graduates, Sam Greenberg and Sarah Rosenkrantz, who had volunteered at the Harvard Square Homeless Shelter as college students, saw a need within the Boston and Cambridge communities for a homeless shelter serving young adults. Drawing upon the Harvard Square Homeless Shelter’s student-run model, Sam and Sarah worked with Harvard College undergraduates to open Youth-to-Youth (Y2Y) Harvard Square, a homeless shelter exclusively for young adults ages 18–24. This article features an interview with Sam and Sarah about their work to establish Y2Y Harvard Square and the experiences of the college students leading and staffing the shelter

    An Annotated Checklist of the Stink Bugs (Heteroptera: Pentatomidae) of New Mexico

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    A list of the Pentatomidae of New Mexico with county records and collection dates is given. A total of 87 species of stink bugs is reported for New Mexico with 19 new state records
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