1,559 research outputs found

    Use Of Video-Based Cases As A Medium To Develop Critical Thinking Skills In Health Science Students

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    One learning strategy that, at present, has not been widely used in graduate Physical Therapy education is “video based cases”. The use of visually unfolding case-based experience provides students a unique opportunity to experience real patient scenarios in their classroom environment. The purpose of this paper is to provide data on student perceptions of usefulness of the video based case experience in promoting their ability to organize, prioritize, and integrate content knowledge for the development of effective critical thinking skills

    Development of dry reagent chemistry for the clinical laboratory

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    Sport for development with 'at risk' girls in St. Lucia

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    While sport for development programming has flourished, the complex social and economic environment in the postcolonial Eastern Caribbean is often overlooked by researchers. This case study examines sport for development with ‘at risk’ adolescent girls in St. Lucia (n = 16). These young women, who have been removed from mainstream public schools due to behavioural issues, participated in focus group discussions regarding their experiences and perspectives on sport. Their sport participation included single-sex, organised programming at the Upton Gardens Girls Centre and mixed-sex, unsupervised football play. Results of the study indicate that these sporting activities contributed towards the capability development of the participants,  with limitations toward challenging gender stereotypes and encouraging kinetically focused body image. While the female-only sport participation encouraged a positive sense of self-efficacy and fostered peer/mentor relationships, engagement in co-educational football supported girls’ empowerment and the challenging of gender stereotypes. However, outcome towards progressive perspectives on sport and body image gleaned mixed results. As a whole, these results point to larger concerns within the sport for development field and the need for more in-depth and comprehensive critical research to better understand how sport impacts development initiatives

    Integration of fisheries ecology with the assessment of microplastic consumption in black bass in the upper Ohio River drainage

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    This thesis explores the dynamics of microplastic consumption of black bass (smallmouth, Micropterus salmoides, largemouth, M. dolomieu, and spotted bass, M. punctulatus) in the Monongahela and Kanawha River and explores dietary characteristics in the Ohio, Monongahela, and Kanawha River. The first chapter serves as an introduction and synthesis of microplastic consumption, fisheries ecology, and regional information. The second chapter quantifies microplastic consumption in the Monongahela River and explores spatial variation within and between species by pool and seasonal effects. The third chapter consists of exploratory Quasi Poisson modeling of total microplastics in the Point Marion pool, Monongahela River, WV using microplastic shape characteristics, fish population characteristics and dietary metrics. The fourth chapter quantifies microplastic consumption in the Kanawha River and explores annual variation. Comparisons are made between the Monongahela River and the Kanawha River to determine how consumption changes throughout the landscape. The final chapter assesses black bass diet in the Monongahela, Kanawha, and Ohio Rivers. Microplastic consumption has been noted in a wide array of ecosystems but remained unquantified and understudied in freshwater riverine environments and consumption has not been previously explored in the Upper Ohio River drainage. This study is the first to quantify microplastic consumption of black bass in the Monongahela and Kanawha Rivers. Quasi Poisson general linearized models and contrasts were used to determine significant variation within and between species in each river system as well as temporally and spatially. All individuals examined contained microplastic. In the Monongahela River the maximum count was 281 pieces, accumulations that are similar in scale to what has been noted in Great Lake fish. Across pools within species variation expressed few significant differences, but interspecies differences demonstrated a higher number of significant relationships potentially due to differences in behavior aspects (diet and habitat residency) and habitat within pools. Significant changes in seasonal consumption may be linked to changes in availability within the system or behavior and should be further explored. In the Kanawha River, black bass consumed microplastic in lower quantities. Between years intraspecies significant variation was minimal but interspecies variation displayed a higher number of significant relationships. The Monongahela River and Kanawha River displayed a high number of significantly different relationships in microplastic consumption in the three species demonstrating that patterns of consumption can vary within species between river systems. Exploratory modeling of microplastic consumption demonstrated the significance of population characteristics as well as dietary information to understanding consumption. Comparative dietary analysis of the three black bass species in the Ohio, Kanawha and Monongahela River determined that the three black bass species display diet characteristics of the system, potentially influenced by the high turbidity within that environment

    Sport for development and body image for girls

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    First paragraph: Sport participation is often thought to provide positive benefits on education attainment, gender equality, self-efficacy and health in developed and developing societies (Levermore and Beacom, 2009). The United Nations Office of Sport for Development and Peace (UNOSDP) recognizes that sport participation can have dramatic effects on young peoples’ lives and support development initiatives. Sport also has the capacity to reduce gender-based stereotyping and discrimination by challenging gender expectations and empowering females to independence and success (Darnell, 2011; Saavedra, 2009; Brady, 2005; Meir, 2005; Hartmann-Tews and Pfister, 2003). In sum, sport often serves as a “social good” or tool for social and economic development
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