900 research outputs found

    Evaluating the implementation of the AVID program at Pemberton Township High School

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    Pemberton Township High School started AVID for the 2003-2004 school year. The AVID program is designed to prepare students for a college bound curriculum. The purpose of this study was to describe and evaluate the implementation of the AVID program at Pemberton Township High School. The population of the study consisted of the entire ninth grade class of 21 AVID students from Pemberton Township High School. The data was collected through the use of a six question, Likert-type survey and algebra first and second marking period grades. The survey was used to rate the AVID students\u27 satisfaction of the five components of the AVID program. The students\u27 algebra grades provided data on how successful the students were at completing their course work. The findings of the study show that the students are not satisfied with the AVID mentoring program and family workshops. The students\u27 Algebra I grades are not acceptable. Based on the data collected, it is recommended that the AVID site team concentrate most of their efforts on the family workshops and the mentoring component of AVID. The AVID site team should seek more training on developing a successful AVID program

    Risk, Uncertainty, and the Perceived Threat of Terrorist Attacks: Evidence of Flight-to-Quality

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    Information provided by the US Department of Homeland Security regarding potential terrorist attacks significantly affects US Treasury securities markets. When the government announces heightened terror alert levels, investors\u27 perceptions of risk increase and investors purchase 1-month and 1-year Treasury bills and 3-year, 5-year, 7-year, and 10-year US Treasuries in a flight-to-quality episode. Partial anticipation of increased threat level announcements is stronger than the anticipation of announcements regarding the federal funds rate during the 10 days prior to an announcement

    Abstract appeals to free speech won’t solve the debate surrounding Confederate monuments—it’s a political question

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    This month has seen the most recent push to remove Confederate statues in cities across the Southern US. Nathan T. Carrington and Logan Strother unpack the argument made by some who support the statues that their removal flies in the face of freedom of speech. They argue that questions over the fate of Confederate monuments are by their nature, political

    Megapolitan Political Ecology and Urban Metabolism in Southern Appalachia

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    Drawing on megapolitan geographies, urban political ecology, and urban metabolism as theoretical frameworks, this article theoretically and empirically explores megapolitan political ecology. First, we elucidate a theoretical framework in the context of southern Appalachia and, in particular, the Piedmont megapolitan region, suggesting that the megapolitan region is a useful scale through which to understand urban metabolic connections that constitute this rapidly urbanizing area. We also push the environmental history and geography literature of the U.S. South and southern Appalachia to consider the central role urban metabolic connections play in the region's pressing social and environmental crises. Second, we empirically illuminate these human and nonhuman urban metabolisms across the Piedmont megapolitan region using data from the Coweeta Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) program, especially highlighting a growing “ring of asphalt” that epitomizes several developing changes to patterns of metabolism. The conclusion suggests that changing urban metabolisms indicated by Coweeta LTER data, ranging from flows of people to flows of water, pose a complicated problem for regional governance and vitality in the future

    By Shepherd, et all, posted on November 29th, 2013 in Articles, Climate

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    Earth is increasingly an “urbanized ” planet. The “World Population Clock ” registered a Population of 7,175,309,538 at 8:30 pm (LST) on Oct. 6, 2013. Current and future trends suggest that this population will increasingly reside in cities. Currently, 52 percent of the world population is urban, which means we are a majority “urbanized ” society. Figure 1 indicates this trend will continue, wit

    Parallelization of Kinetic Theory Simulations

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    Numerical studies of shock waves in large scale systems via kinetic simulations with millions of particles are too computationally demanding to be processed in serial. In this work we focus on optimizing the parallel performance of a kinetic Monte Carlo code for astrophysical simulations such as core-collapse supernovae. Our goal is to attain a flexible program that scales well with the architecture of modern supercomputers. This approach requires a hybrid model of programming that combines a message passing interface (MPI) with a multithreading model (OpenMP) in C++. We report on our approach to implement the hybrid design into the kinetic code and show first results which demonstrate a significant gain in performance when many processors are applied.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, conference proceeding

    New observations of Ambient Inclusion Trails (AITs) and pyrite framboids in the Ediacaran Doushantuo Formation, South China

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    Ambient Inclusion Trails (AITs) are intriguing microtubular structures that commonly occur in association with pyrite in Precambrian organic-rich cherts and phosphorites. They are thought to be created by the migration of pyrite or other crystal grains through a lithified substrate driven by pressure solution from the in situ thermal decomposition of organic matter. New phosphorite samples of the Ediacaran Doushantuo Formation (South China) contain abundant AITs exhibiting diverse morphotypes, which may be distinguished from filamentous microfossils and endolithic microborings with a suite of morphological criteria based on optical microscopy and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Black shales of the Baizhu section contains abundant pyrite framboids whose size distributions reveal significant temporal variations of redox conditions in shallow marine waters that probably promoted the formation of the Doushantuo phosphorites. AITs in the phosphorites are categorized into three types and further into five subtypes (I-a, I-b, II-a, II-b, and III) based on their morphologies and observed or interpreted associations with various kinds of terminal pyrite crystals. Among these, subtype II-a, single striated microtubes 2–10 ÎŒm wide, are interpreted to have resulted from migration of intact pyrite framboids. Those of subtype II-b, dense clusters of outward radiating microtubes with consistent widths and inward-facing cuspate ridges, likely have formed by explosive disintegration and propulsion of pyrite framboids due to highly concentrated carbon dioxide gas during the oxidation of organic matter. During early diagenesis, formation of euhedral and framboidal pyrites involve a suite of biogeochemical and physical processes including non-biological oxidation of organic matter and reduction of sulfate in the presence of ferrous iron. Following the burial of pyrites, further oxidative degradation of organic matter produced abundant CO2 gas, which drives the pyrites to move through the solid, but not yet fully lithified phosphatic gel composing granules. This model explains the formation of previously reported but unexplained star-burst type AITs and it may be tested by experimental studies. Our new observations provide evidence for the widespread occurrence of AITs in the Doushantuo phosphorites and urge careful petrographic examinations and differentiation between AITs and morphologically similar biogenic microstructures

    High potential for weathering and climate effects of non-vascular vegetation in the Late Ordovician

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    It has been hypothesized that predecessors of today’s bryophytes significantly increased global chemical weathering in the Late Ordovician, thus reducing atmospheric CO2 concentration and contributing to climate cooling and an interval of glaciations. Studies that try to quantify the enhancement of weathering by non-vascular vegetation, however, are usually limited to small areas and low numbers of species, which hampers extrapolating to the global scale and to past climatic conditions. Here we present a spatially explicit modelling approach to simulate global weathering by non-vascular vegetation in the Late Ordovician. We estimate a potential global weathering flux of 2.8 (km3 rock) yr−1, defined here as volume of primary minerals affected by chemical transformation. This is around three times larger than today’s global chemical weathering flux. Moreover, we find that simulated weathering is highly sensitive to atmospheric CO2 concentration. This implies a strong negative feedback between weathering by non-vascular vegetation and Ordovician climate

    LiFtEr: Language to Encode Induction Heuristics for Isabelle/HOL

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    Proof assistants, such as Isabelle/HOL, offer tools to facilitate inductive theorem proving. Isabelle experts know how to use these tools effectively; however, there is a little tool support for transferring this expert knowledge to a wider user audience. To address this problem, we present our domain-specific language, LiFtEr. LiFtEr allows experienced Isabelle users to encode their induction heuristics in a style independent of any problem domain. LiFtEr's interpreter mechanically checks if a given application of induction tool matches the heuristics, thus automating the knowledge transfer loop.Comment: This is the pre-print of our paper of the same title accepted at APLAS2019 (https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-34175-6_14). We updated the draft after fixing the errata found by Kenji Miyamot
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