1,809 research outputs found
Chief Student Affairs Officerâs Competencies: Perspectives from Community College Presidents in Illinois
Chief Student Affairs Officers (CSAOâs) within single campus community colleges are responsible for providing senior leadership and overall planning for all administrative areas as assigned by the college president. They work collectively to provide leadership for various functional areas to facilitate the development and maintenance of college campus environments and student success. While within single campus community colleges the CSAO are recognized by various administrative titles, but they serve in an executive capacity reporting directly to the college president and are responsible for the overall planning and leadership that supports the collegeâs mission.
The purpose of this study was to identify the essential competencies that Single Campus Community College Presidents in Illinois consider to be important when hiring new Chief Student Affairs Officers. The primary data was collected by semi-structured interviews from four setting community college presidents in Illinois. The participants shared their perspectives on what essential competencies, functions, skills, and abilities, challenges, and leadership potential are needed by aspiring Chief Student Affairs Officers.
Findings indicate the study participants believe that along with a fundamental understanding of student development theory and student engagement it is necessary that candidates convey trustworthiness, problem solving skills, and a good understanding of assessment. Furthermore, the study found that identifying a new CSAO must be intentional. It is not enough to update the current CSAO job descriptions to identify new skills and responsibilities; this process must be direct, time sensitive, and robust
Leaf-inspired microcontact printing vascular patterns.
The vascularization of tissue grafts is critical for maintaining viability of the cells within a transplanted graft. A number of strategies are currently being investigated including very promising microfluidics systems. Here, we explored the potential for generating a vasculature-patterned endothelial cells that could be integrated into distinct layers between sheets of primary cells. Bioinspired from the leaf veins, we generated a reverse mold with a fractal vascular-branching pattern that models the unique spatial arrangement over multiple length scales that precisely mimic branching vasculature. By coating the reverse mold with 50 Όg ml-1 of fibronectin and stamping enabled selective adhesion of the human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) to the patterned adhesive matrix, we show that a vascular-branching pattern can be transferred by microcontact printing. Moreover, this pattern can be maintained and transferred to a 3D hydrogel matrix and remains stable for up to 4 d. After 4 d, HUVECs can be observed migrating and sprouting into Matrigel. These printed vascular branching patterns, especially after transfer to 3D hydrogels, provide a viable alternative strategy to the prevascularization of complex tissues
The Infrared Extinction Law at Extreme Depth in a Dark Cloud Core
We combined sensitive near-infrared data obtained with ground-based imagers
on the ESO NTT and VLT telescopes with space mid-infrared data acquired with
the IRAC imager on the Spitzer Space Telescope to calculate the extinction law
A_\lambda/A_K as a function of \lambda between 1.25 and 7.76 micron to an
unprecedented depth in Barnard 59, a star forming, dense core located in the
Pipe Nebula. The ratios A_\lambda/A_K were calculated from the slopes of the
distributions of sources in color-color diagrams \lambda-K vs. H-K. The
distributions in the color-color diagrams are fit well with single slopes to
extinction levels of A_K ~ 7 (A_V ~ 59 mag). Consequently, there appears to be
no significant variation of the extinction law with depth through the B59 line
of sight. However, when slopes are translated into the relative extinction
coefficients A_\lambda/A_K, we find an extinction law which departs from the
simple extrapolation of the near-infrared power law extinction curve, and
agrees more closely with a dust extinction model for a cloud with a total to
selective absorption R_V=5.5 and a grain size distribution favoring larger
grains than those in the diffuse ISM. Thus, the difference we observe could be
possibly due to the effect of grain growth in denser regions. Finally, the
slopes in our diagrams are somewhat less steep than those from the study of
Indebetouw et al. (2005) for clouds with lower column densities, and this
indicates that the extinction law between 3 and 8 micron might vary slightly as
a function of environment.Comment: 22 pages manuscript, 4 figures (2 multipart), 1 tabl
The Facioscapulohumeral Syndrome: A Report of Two Cases
Two patients developed progressive muscle weakness in adult life. The initial diagnosis of polymyositis was made in both cases, but subsequent studies and the distribution of muscle involvement suggested facioscapulohumeral myopathy. Other investigators have proposed that this syndrome may result from either genetic or acquired causes. In our patients, the disorder was probably a sequela of polymyositis
A computer aided approach for river styles-inspired characterization of large basins: The Magdalena river (Colombia)
This paper addresses the geomorphic characterization and classification of large rivers in a framework of scarce information. This is inspired by the River Styles Framework with some modifications that make the process more straightforward and accessible to practitioners and more applicable to large basins, while reducing the subjective, expert-based inputs, as the process is now more systematic. To this aim, it utilizes innovative criteria and some computer-aided procedures and tools based on GIS, Excel and Python. This approach sheds light on the character and the behavior of rivers, which is key to informing planning, management and restoration. The application to the Magdalena River (Colombia) illustrates the characterization and classification process and the type of results, which ultimately highlight the great geomorphic diversity of that river. The process is applicable to many other rivers worldwide
Rheology of distorted nematic liquid crystals
We use lattice Boltzmann simulations of the Beris--Edwards formulation of
nematodynamics to probe the response of a nematic liquid crystal with
conflicting anchoring at the boundaries under shear and Poiseuille flow. The
geometry we focus on is that of the hybrid aligned nematic (HAN) cell, common
in devices. In the nematic phase, backflow effects resulting from the elastic
distortion in the director field render the velocity profile strongly
non-Newtonian and asymmetric. As the transition to the isotropic phase is
approached, these effects become progressively weaker. If the fluid is heated
just above the transition point, however, another asymmetry appears, in the
dynamics of shear band formation.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in Europhys. Let
Control of RelB during dendritic cell activation integrates canonical and noncanonical NF-ÎșB pathways.
The NF-ÎșB protein RelB controls dendritic cell (DC) maturation and may be targeted therapeutically to manipulate T cell responses in disease. Here we report that RelB promoted DC activation not as the expected RelB-p52 effector of the noncanonical NF-ÎșB pathway, but as a RelB-p50 dimer regulated by canonical IÎșBs, IÎșBα and IÎșBÉ. IÎșB control of RelB minimized spontaneous maturation but enabled rapid pathogen-responsive maturation. Computational modeling of the NF-ÎșB signaling module identified control points of this unexpected cell type-specific regulation. Fibroblasts that we engineered accordingly showed DC-like RelB control. Canonical pathway control of RelB regulated pathogen-responsive gene expression programs. This work illustrates the potential utility of systems analyses in guiding the development of combination therapeutics for modulating DC-dependent T cell responses
Dismantling the Walls: Peer-Facilitated Inter-Race/Ethnic Dialogue Processes and Experiences
Also PCMA Working Paper #49.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/51296/1/532.pd
LO-phonon assisted polariton lasing in a ZnO based microcavity
Polariton relaxation mechanisms are analysed experimentally and theoretically
in a ZnO-based polariton laser. A minimum lasing threshold is obtained when the
energy difference between the exciton reservoir and the bottom of the lower
polariton branch is resonant with the LO phonon energy. Tuning off this
resonance increases the threshold, and exciton-exciton scattering processes
become involved in the polariton relaxation. These observations are
qualitatively reproduced by simulations based on the numerical solution of the
semi-classical Boltzmann equations
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