516 research outputs found
Expanding Economic Opportunity: Lessons From the East Baltimore Revitalization Initiative
This report reviews the economic inclusion efforts, achievements and challenges from the East Baltimore Revitalization Initiative. It examines the placement of local residents in construction jobs and the workforce pipeline that has trained and placed East Baltimore residents in jobs generated by the new development or elsewhere in the city, while also noting the complexity of creating project-related employment. It also reviews how East Baltimore Development, Inc. (EBDI) and its partners connected minority-owned businesses to the project and supported their growth. For context and comparison, this report cites examples of similar initiatives around the country. Finally, it offers various lessons learned over the course of the project to date. This report serves to inform and assist a range of people and institutions, including government leaders, businesses and nonprofits interested in economic inclusion
Advancing Well-Being by Transcending the Barriers of Whiteness
PolicyLink, in partnership with Well Being Trust, developed Advancing Well-Being by Transcending the Barriers of Whiteness to identify "centering whiteness" as a social and institutional framework that prevents meaningful movement toward racial equity, describe specific social and economic inequities that have been exacerbated by this framework, and make clear new narratives that will be necessary for systemic and policy change. This paper, along with the companion Community Dialogue Guide, serve as the starting point for critical dialogues that deepen and build shared understanding across communities
High School Career Academies: A Pathway to Education Reform in Urban School Districts?
Maxwell and Rubin examine the capacity of career academies to address academic reform in terms of increased education and workplace skills. They accomplish this on two levels. First, they assess academies\u27 development and implementation within an urban school district. Then they assess academies\u27 potential to promote postsecondary success among academy students as compared to nonacademy students. Their findings will help educators and policymakers better understand the strengths and limitations of this method of reform.https://research.upjohn.org/up_press/1061/thumbnail.jp
Comparing Features of Fabricated and Legitimate Political News in Digital Environments (2016-2017)
With the problem of ‘fake news’ in the digital media, there are efforts at creation of awareness, automation of ‘fake news’ detection and news literacy. This research is descriptive as it pulls evidence from the content of online fabricated news for the features that distinguish fabrications from the legitimate political news around the time of the U.S. Presidential Elections (276 articles in total, from November 2016 - June 2017). Certain stylistic and psycho-linguistic features of fabrications may be apparent to the news readers: fewer words and paragraphs but longer paragraphs, more slangs, swear words and affective words in the stories. Such features could be used for educational information literacy campaigns for spotting so-called ‘fake news’. Other informative features may require specialized analytical tools (or further training) to notice the presence of more words, punctuation marks, demonstratives and emotiveness in fabrications but fewer verifiable facts (or named entities) in their headlines
Designed for Disease: The Link Between Local Food Environments and Obesity and Diabetes
Examines the link between a community's retail food environment -- the ratio of fast-food outlets and convenience stores to grocery stores and produce vendors, with income level as a factor -- and the prevalence of adult obesity and diabetes
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The Influence of Mindfulness on Tourists’ Emotions, Satisfaction and Destination Loyalty in Fiji
Positive tourist experiences are crucial for the continued success of tourist destinations around the world. In the literature, mindfulness theory has emerged as a vehicle for studying the factors that influence tourist experiences (e.g. Moscardo, 1996). The purpose of this study is to test an adapted mindfulness model using data from a survey of tourists in Fiji. Hypothesized relationships were examined between: (1) the antecedent concepts to mindfulness (novelty seeking motivation and mindful oriented services) and mindfulness, (2) mindfulness and tourists’ emotions, and (3) the influence of tourists’ emotions on tourists’ satisfaction and destination loyalty. The results indicate a good fit of survey results with the adapted model. In addition to furthering the literature on mindfulness theory, the results of this study have implications for tourism development and marketing. Future researchers should seek to replicate the model in other unique destinations and settings
Ariel - Volume 9 Number 2
Executive Editor
Emily Wofford
Business Manager
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University News
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World News
George Robert Coar
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Steve Levine
Features
Mark Rubin
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Circulation
Victor Onufreiczuk
Lee Wugofsk
Ariel - Volume 9 Number 3
Executive Editor
Emily Wofford
Business Manager
Fredric Jay Matlin
University News
John Patrick Welch
World News
George Robert Coar
Editorials Editor
Steve Levine
Features
Mark Rubin
Brad Feldstein
Photo
Rick Spaide
Circulation
Victor Onufreiczuk
Lee Wugofski
Graphics and Art
Steve Hulkower
Commons Editor
Brenda Peterso
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