910 research outputs found
Education of children with disabilities in India and Pakistan: Critical analysis of developments in the last 15 years
This article presents an analysis of key developments in educational policies and strategies, since 2000, in relation to the education of children with disabilities in India and Pakistan. It responds to a set of specific questions focused on factors that have shaped the increased emphasis on education of children with disabilities, how current national policies and programmes address their educational needs, and their current educational status. The article is based on an analysis of official policies, programme documents, and research evidence from the field. It concludes by reflecting on the two main foci for future work in the field.This is the final version of the article. It first appeared from Springer via https://doi.org/10.1007/s11125-016-9383-
Education of women with disabilities in Pakistan: Enhanced agency, unfulfilled aspirations
This paper examines the extent to which the capability approach captures the complexity of the lives of young women with disabilities in Pakistan, particularly in relation to their education. Focusing on their educational experiences and outcomes, we examine the ways in which education shaped what these young women were able to achieve â what they wanted to do and be. In undertaking this research, we adopted a collaborative, qualitative approach involving in-depth interviews with six young women with disabilities. All these women were interesting and exemplary cases, given their very high levels of education. Our findings suggest that the capability approach provides a framework that is able to capture the educational experiencesâoutcomes journey of the young women. However, also interesting to note is how the expansion of their capabilities is bounded, primarily because their freedoms are intrinsically linked to their sociocultural positioning and largely negative perceptions of disability in the wider society.This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis at http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13603116.2015.104396
Mailed Outreach Invitations Significantly Improve HCC Surveillance Rates in Patients With Cirrhosis: A Randomized Clinical Trial
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/147207/1/hep30129-sup-0001-Appendix.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/147207/2/hep30129_am.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/147207/3/hep30129.pd
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The impact of education in shaping lives: reflections of young people with disabilities in Ghana
There is increasing recognition on the importance of focusing on people with disabilities in international efforts aimed at poverty alleviation. While universal education has been central to these efforts, the specific and additional needs of children with disabilities are often overlooked in policies and programmes. In order to gain a nuanced appreciation of the lives of young people with disabilities in a Ghanaian context, this paper draws on research conducted with young people with disabilities and their significant others in order to understand their educational journeys, employment prospects and perceptions of those around them. In addition to collecting primary data, the latest policy documents related to disability, education and employment are reviewed and statistical analysis undertaken based on the Housing and Population Census 2010. Our research highlights the barriers facing those with disability in accessing quality education. While education was recognised as paramount to leading a better life and participants noted benefits beyond employment such as gaining self-sufficiency and social benefits, unequal educational opportunities underpin some of the reasons for the widening of gaps between those with disabilities and their non-disabled counterparts. Furthermore, while education was seen as important for gaining employment, this was not the case in reality, as young people faced difficulties due to both physical and attitudinal barriers limiting their opportunities for economic and social participation in their communities. The paper concludes by noting that systematic changes in the policy arena are needed to enable youth with disabilities to take their rightful place in mainstream society.This is the accepted author manuscript. The final version is available at http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/13603116.2015.1018343
Insights from within activity based learning (ABL) classrooms in Tamil Nadu, India: Teachers perspectives and practices
Quality has been an Education for All (EFA) goal since the 2000 Dakar framework positioned it âat the heart of educationâ as a fundamental determinant of student enrolment, retention and achievement. Over the years, classroom pedagogy has been consistently regarded as âthe crucial variable for improving learning outcomesâ (e.g., Hattie, 2009) and is thus seen as critical to reforms aimed at improving educational quality (UNESCO, 2005 p.152). The quality of teacherâpupil classroom interaction remains of central importance, rather research evidence (e.g., Borich, 1996) suggests that it is the single most important factor accounting for wide variation in the learning attainments of students who have used the same curriculum materials and purportedly experienced similar teaching methods. Other more recent studies (e.g., Aslam and Kingdon, 2011) have also reported that teacher âprocessâ variables have a more significant impact on student achievement than standard background characteristics. In the current era of the âglobal learning crisisâ (UNESCO, 2014) many developing economies have embarked on major pedagogical reforms. In India, the notion of energising schools and transforming classrooms has received unprecedented attention in the last 15 years. A number of programmes have been introduced in various states to provide meaningful access (Jandhyala and Ramachandran, 2007). The Activity Based Learning (ABL) Programme is one such effort to change the nature of teaching and learning in mainstream classrooms. In a national context, where there are innumerable on-going efforts aimed at pedagogical reform, ABL is hailed as a success story in terms of replication of a small model to a grand scale. From modest beginnings in 2003 in 13 Chennai (the capital city of Tamil Nadu) schools, ABL was rolled out in a phased manner across the entire state of Tamil Nadu for all children in classes 1â4, in all government and aided schools. The last few years have witnessed its adaptation under various guises in several other Indian states, such as Ekalavya in Madhya Pradesh, Digantar in Rajasthan and Nali Kali in Karnataka. Efforts to promote it internationally in other parts of the developing world, such as Ghana, Bangladesh, Ethiopia and Mozambique (Fennell and Shanmugam, 2016)have also been made. Though as Nudzor et al., 2015 note it has been met with mixed success in the case of Ghana. Nonetheless, ABL is an interesting programme to examine given its rapid growth and international outreach.The project was funded by Department for International Development (DFID, India)
Editorial: ultrasound surveillance of hepatocellular carcinoma in the 21st century â authorsâ reply
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/136042/1/apt13910.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/136042/2/apt13910_am.pd
Superconducting-coil--resistor circuit with electric field quadratic in the current
It is shown for the first time that the observed [Phys. Lett. A 162 (1992)
105] potential difference Phi_t between the resistor and the screen surrounding
the circuit is caused by polarization of the resistor because of the kinetic
energy of the electrons of the superconducting coil. The proportionality of
Phi_t to the square of the current and to the length of the superconducting
wire is explained. It is pointed out that measuring Phi_t makes it possible to
determine the Fermi quasimomentum of the electrons of a metal resistor.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figur
Thermal Emission as a Test for Hidden Nuclei in Nearby Radio Galaxies
The clear sign of a hidden quasar inside a radio galaxy is the appearance of
quasar spectral features in its polarized (scattered) light. However that
observational test requires suitably placed scattering material to act as a
mirror, allowing us to see the nuclear light. A rather robust and more general
test for a hidden quasar is to look for the predicted high mid-IR luminosity
from the nuclear obscuring matter. The nuclear waste heat is detected and well
isolated in the nearest narrow line radio galaxy, Cen A. This confirms other
indications that Cen A does contain a modest quasar-like nucleus. However we
show here that M87 does not: at high spatial resolution, the mid-IR nucleus is
seen to be very weak, and consistent with simple synchrotron emission from the
base of the radio jet. This fairly robustly establishes that there are "real"
narrow line radio galaxies, without the putative accretion power, and with
essentially all the luminosity in kinetic form. Next we show the intriguing
mid-IR morphology of Cygnus A, reported previously by us and later discussed in
detail by Radomski et al. (2002). All of this mid-IR emission is consistent
with reprocessing by a hidden quasar, known to exist from spectropolarimetry by
Ogle et al. (1997) and other evidence.Comment: 21 pages, 5 figure
Validating a novel score based on interaction between ACLF grade and MELD score to predict waitlist mortality
Background and Aim:
Among candidates listed for liver transplant (LT), MELD score may not capture acute on chronic liver failure (ACLF) severity. Data on interaction between ACLF and MELD score in predicting waitlist (WL) mortality are scanty. /
Methods:
UNOS database (01/2002 to 06/2018) on LT listings for adults with cirrhosis and ACLF (without HCC) was analyzed. ACLF grades 1, 2, 3a, and 3b- were defined using modified EASL-CLIF criteria. /
Results:
Of 18,416 candidates with ACLF at listing (mean age 54 years, 69% males, 63% Caucasians), 90-d WL mortality (patient death or being too sick for LT) was 21.6% (18%, 20%, 25%, and 39% for ACLF grades 1, 2, 3a, and 3b respectively). Fine and Gray regression model identified interaction between MELD and ACLF grade, with higher impact of ACLF at lower MELD score. Other variables included candidateâs age, gender, liver disease etiology, listing MELD, ACLF grade, obesity, and performance status. A score developed using parameter estimates from the interaction model on the derivation cohort (N=9181) stratified the validation cohort (N=9235) to four quartiles Q1 (score 15.50). WL mortality increased with each quartile from 13%, 18%, 23%, and 36% respectively. Observed versus expected deciles on WL mortality in validation cohort showed good calibration (goodness of fit P=0.98) and correlation (R=0.99). /
Conclusion:
Among selected candidates who are in ACLF at listing, MELD score and ACLF interact in predicting cumulative risk of 90-d WL mortality, with higher impact of ACLF grade at lower listing MELD score. Validating these findings in large prospective studies will support to factor in both MELD and ACLF in prioritizing transplant candidates and allocation of liver grafts
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