130 research outputs found
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Transforming assessment and teaching practices in science inquiry
ASSISTME (Assessing Inquiry in Science, Technology, and Mathematics Education) is an EU FP7 research project. In collaboration with 8 European countries, this fouryear (20132017) project aims to find out how to support primary and secondary teachers in the formative assessment of inquirybased learning in science, technology and mathematics.
Within this context, we developed a professional development programme that aimed to support primary teachers in their teaching and assessment of science inquiry. Our research aims to investigate how teachers transform their teaching of science inquiries and the assessment conversations that they have during classroom inquiries. This paper begins to identify what kinds of professional development experiences enable this transformation to take place.
Our data sources include written teacher reflections, audiorecordings of the professional development meetings and observed lessons and semistructured postlesson interviews. We draw from a multistep, opencoding analysis of selected transcripts of the audiorecordings of classroom talk made during lesson observations. We substantiate this with teacher reflections, arising from the professional development sessions, to extend our understanding of effective ways to guide teachers in transforming their teaching and assessment practices in scientific inquiry.
Our preliminary analysis suggests that transforming the assessment and teaching of science inquiry requires some specific professional development opportunities. Sharing some examples of classroom inquiries that were bounded, initially, and then later open (Wenning, 2005) gave teachers the confidence to incorporate inquiry within their existing practice. This was introduced in conjunction with regular professional reading (Turner et al, 2011) and a focus on discrete inquiry skills (e.g. making predictions).
Collectively, this allowed teachers to sharpen their professional understanding of classroom inquiry. The critical teacher reflections, made during professional development days, supported teachers in refining their formative practice. Their assessment conversations went beyond accepting or rejecting answers and, instead, facilitated a more open and formative discussion that encouraged children to share their ideas with others
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Primary teachers' understanding of science inquiry: influences on their teaching and formative assessment practice
In England, recent changes to the National Curriculum for primary science (Great Britain, DfE, 2013) have tried to respond to the legacy of national tests set at the end of primary schooling (10-11 years old) and establish a better balance between formative and summative assessment practice. Within this context, we have developed a professional development programme that aimed to support primary teachers in their teaching and assessment of science inquiry. Our research aims to investigate what kinds of professional development approaches support the formative assessment of primary science inquiry and how these are reinterpreted into teacher practice. This paper reports on the preliminary findings emerging from our study. Our data sources include written teacher reflections, audiorecordings of the professional development meetings and observed lessons and semistructured post lesson interviews. We draw from a multi-step, open-coding analysis of selected lesson observations and substantiate this with teacher discussions arising from the professional development sessions to extend our understanding of effective ways to guide teachers in transforming their teaching and assessment practice of scientific inquiry. Our preliminary analysis suggests that providing primary teachers with strategies to engage their learners with specific inquiry skills over a number of different contexts for inquiry enables the teachers to introduce more open approaches to dialogue in their inquiry lessons. These structures equip them with sufficient understanding of what to target and look for in children’s answers that enable them to go beyond accepting or rejecting answers and, instead, facilitate discussion which allows children to share their ideas with others. We are still in the process of data collection and analysis. Further findings will have implications for professional developers and pre-service teaching. The findings also generate debate about professional learning and understanding of pedagogy and assessment in inquiry classrooms
Population pharmacokinetics of benznidazole in adult patients with Chagas disease
AIM: To build a population pharmacokinetic (PopPK) model to
characterize benznidazole (BNZ) pharmacokinetics in adults with
chronic Chagas disease. METHODS: Prospective, open-label,
single-center clinical
trial(EudraCT:2011-002900-34;CINEBENZclinicaltrials.govnumber:NCT01755403), approved by the local ethics committee. Patients received 2.5mg/kg/12h (Abarax(R), Elea Laboratory, Argentina) for 60 days. Plasma BZN samples were taken at several times along the study and analyzed by HPLC-UV. The PopPK analysis was done with NONMEMv.7.3. Demographic and biological data were tested as covariates. Intraindividual, interoccasion and residual variability were modeled. Internal and external validations were completed to assess the robustness of the model. Later on, simulations were performed to generate the BNZ concentration-time course profile for different dosage regimens. RESULTS: A total of 358 plasma BZN concentrations from 39 patients were included in the analysis. A one-compartment-PK-model characterized by clearance(CL/F) and apparent volume of distribution(V/F) with first order absorption(Ka) and elimination, adequately described the data (CL/F:1.73 L/h; V/F:89.6 L; Ka:1.15 h-1). No covariates were found to be significant for CL/F and V/F. Internal and external validation of the final model showed adequate results. Data from simulations revealed that a dose of 2.5mg/kg/12h might lead to overexposure in the most of the patients. A lower dose (2.5mg/kg/24h) was able to achieve trough BNZ plasma concentrations within the accepted therapeutic range of 3-6 mg/L. CONCLUSION: A population PK model for BNZ in adults with chronic Chagas disease has been developed. Dosing simulations showed that a BNZ dose of 2.5 mg/kg/24h would adequately keep BNZ trough plasma concentrations within the recommended target range concentrations for the majority of patients
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Informal formative assessment in inquiry-based science lessons
This paper is focused on the characterization of informal formative assessment conversations (i.e., interactions on-the-fly) from a methodological perspective. Interactions on-the-fly are unexpected teachable moments in which the teacher tries to probe students’ understanding and use that information to support their inquiry process. One of the coding systems used (ESRU framework) was adopted from the research literature (Ruiz-Primo & Furtak, 2007). Two other systems described here were developed and previously reported in two papers written by the authors (Correia, Nieminen, Serret, Hähkiöniemi, Viiri, & Harrison, in press; Nieminen, Hähkiöniemi, Leskinen, & Viiri, 2016). This paper presents these three coding systems together and discusses their features to characterize interactions on-the-fly. Examples for coding interactions on-the-fly from Finnish and English physics lessons are presented. For example, on the one hand, on-the-fly discussion proceeds as follows: The teacher initiates an on-the-fly episode by eliciting information using an open-ended (divergent) question, as the discussion progresses the teacher starts narrowing down the discussion using a closed-ended question (convergent), and closes the discussion by giving a short mini lecture. On the other hand, when guiding students’ inquiry, the teacher can collect information rapidly (quick interpretation) or he/she can use series of probing questions (further probing). In the former, the guidance is more authoritative as it is based on correspondence of the students’ and the teacher’s ideas. In the latter, guidance is based more on the student’s ideas representing more dialogic way to support learning
What to expect and when: benznidazole toxicity in chronic Chagas' disease treatment
Background: Benznidazole is one of the two most effective
antiparasitic drugs for Chagas' disease treatment. However,
knowledge about its toxicity profile is mostly based on
post-marketing observational studies. Objectives: Our study
combines data from two prospective clinical trials designed to
assess the safety of the drug newly produced by ELEA
Laboratories (Abarax(R)). Methods: Eligible participants were
selected using a consecutive sampling strategy in the CINEBENZ
and BIOMARCHA studies between 2013 and 2016 (EUDRACT
2011-002900-34 and 2012-002645-38, respectively, and
clinicaltrials.gov NCT01755403 and NCT01755377, respectively).
Enrolled subjects received treatment with 5 mg/kg/day
benznidazole orally in two divided doses for 8 weeks and were
followed up fortnightly. Results: We observed 305 adverse
reactions in 85 of 99 participants (85.9%). Each patient had a
median of three adverse reactions, 89.5% were mild and the
median duration was 12 days. Most adverse reactions appeared in
the first month of treatment except arthritis and peripheral
neuropathy. Twenty-six patients did not complete treatment: 2
were withdrawn, 1 for ectopic pregnancy and 1 for epilepsy
relapse due to cysticercosis; 2 were lost to follow-up; and 22
were owing to adverse reactions, two of them severe. We observed
some unexpected adverse reactions that have not been described
previously, such as psychiatric symptoms, erectile dysfunction,
menstrual cycle alterations and lung infiltration. Conclusions:
There is a very high frequency of adverse reactions to
benznidazole. Most adverse reactions are mild, but the treatment
burden is significant and unexpected reactions are not rare.
Severe reactions are uncommon, but they can be life-threatening.
Further studies are necessary to optimize treatment
Learning to Teach About Ideas and Evidence in Science : The Student Teacher as Change Agent
A collaborative curriculum development project was set up to address the lack of good examples of teaching about ideas and evidence and the nature of science encountered by student teachers training to teach in the age range 11-16 in schools in England. Student and teacher-mentor pairs devised, taught and evaluated novel lessons and approaches. The project design required increasing levels of critique through cycles of teaching, evaluation and revision of lessons. Data were gathered from interviews and students' reports to assess the impact of the project on student teachers and to what extent any influences survived when they gained their first teaching posts. A significant outcome was the perception of teaching shifting from the delivery of standard lessons in prescribed ways to endeavours demanding creativity and decision-making. Although school-based factors limited newly qualified teachers' chances to use new lessons and approaches and therefore act as change-agents in schools, the ability to critique curriculum materials and the recognition of the need to create space for professional dialogue were durable gains
Temperature dependence of planktonic metabolism in the subtropical North Atlantic Ocean
The temperature dependence of planktonic metabolism in the subtropical North Atlantic Ocean was assessed on the basis of measurements of gross primary production (GPP), community respiration (CR) and net community production (NCP), as well as experimental assessments of the response of CR to temperature manipulations. Metabolic rates were measured at 68 stations along three consecutive longitudinal transects completed during the Malaspina 2010 Expedition, in three different seasons. Temperature gradients were observed in depth and at basin and seasonal scale. The results showed seasonal variability in the metabolic rates, the highest rates being observed during the spring transect. The overall mean integrated GPP / CR ratio was 1.39 ± 0.27 decreasing from winter to summer, and the NCP for the subtropical North Atlantic Ocean during the cruises exhibits net autotrophy (NCP > 0) in about two-thirds (66%) of the total sampled communities. Also, we reported the activation energies describing the temperature dependence of planktonic community metabolism, which was generally higher for CR than for GPP in the subtropical North Atlantic Ocean, as the metabolic theory of ecology predicts. Furthermore, we made a comparison of activation energies describing the responses to in situ temperature in the field (EaCR = 1.64 ± 0.36 eV) and those derived experimentally by temperature manipulations (EaCR = 1.45 ± 0.6 eV), which showed great consistency
International Analysis of Electronic Health Records of Children and Youth Hospitalized With COVID-19 Infection in 6 Countries
Question What are international trends in hospitalizations for children and youth with SARS-CoV-2, and what are the epidemiological and clinical features of these patients?
Findings This cohort study of 671 children and youth found discrete surges in hospitalizations with variable trends and timing across countries. Common complications included cardiac arrhythmias and viral pneumonia, and laboratory findings included elevations in markers of inflammation and abnormalities of coagulation; few children and youth were treated with medications directed specifically at SARS-CoV-2.
Meaning These findings suggest large-scale informatics-based approaches used to incorporate electronic health record data across health care systems can provide an efficient source of information to monitor disease activity and define epidemiological and clinical features of pediatric patients hospitalized with SARS-CoV-2 infections
Pro-apoptotic and antiproliferative activity of human KCNRG, a putative tumor suppressor in 13q14 region
Deletion of 13q14.3 and a candidate gene KCNRG (potassium channel regulating gene) is the most frequent chromosomal abnormality in B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia and is a common finding in multiple myeloma (MM). KCNRG protein may interfere with the normal assembly of the K+ channel proteins causing the suppression of Kv currents. We aimed to examine possible role of KCNRG haploinsufficiency in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) and MM cells. We performed detailed genomic analysis of the KCNRG locus; studied effects of the stable overexpression of KCNRG isoforms in RPMI-8226, HL-60, and LnCaP cells; and evaluated relative expression of its transcripts in various human lymphomas. Three MM cell lines and 35 CLL PBL samples were screened for KCNRG mutations. KCNRG exerts growth suppressive and pro-apoptotic effects in HL-60, LnCaP, and RPMI-8226 cells. Direct sequencing of KCNRG exons revealed point mutation delT in RPMI-8226 cell line. Levels of major isoform of KCNRG mRNA are lower in DLBL lymphomas compared to normal PBL samples, while levels of its minor mRNA are decreased across the broad range of the lymphoma types. The haploinsufficiency of KCNRG might be relevant to the progression of CLL and MM at least in a subset of patients
The allometry of the smallest: superlinear scaling of microbial metabolic rates in the Atlantic Ocean
Prokaryotic planktonic organisms are small in size but largely relevant in marine biogeochemical cycles. Due to their reduced size range (0.2 to 1 mu m in diameter), the effects of cell size on their metabolism have been hardly considered and are usually not examined in field studies. Here, we show the results of size-fractionated experiments of marine microbial respiration rate along a latitudinal transect in the Atlantic Ocean. The scaling exponents obtained from the power relationship between respiration rate and size were significantly higher than one. This superlinearity was ubiquitous across the latitudinal transect but its value was not universal revealing a strong albeit heterogeneous effect of cell size on microbial metabolism. Our results suggest that the latitudinal differences observed are the combined result of changes in cell size and composition between functional groups within prokaryotes. Communities where the largest size fraction was dominated by prokaryotic cyanobacteria, especially Prochlorococcus, have lower allometric exponents. We hypothesize that these larger, more complex prokaryotes fall close to the evolutionary transition between prokaryotes and protists, in a range where surface area starts to constrain metabolism and, hence, are expected to follow a scaling closer to linearity.Versión del editor8,951
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