8,007 research outputs found

    Open by Degrees: A Case of Flexibility or Personalization?

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    This chapter focuses on the history, development, and perceived value of The Open University UK’s BA/BSc (Hons) Open degree (hereafter referred to as “OUUK Open degree”) over the past half-century in the context of changing external pressures and addressing debates around the coherence and acceptance of such a personalized program of study. It touches on the changing views of “openness” over time, from the origins of The Open University’s “open entry” policy, through to ideas around flexibility of study, open education, and personalized learning. The chapter concludes with recommendations for other higher education institutions wishing to introduce a multidisciplinary open degree into their portfolio of curriculum

    Nurse Migration and the Effect on Source Country

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    Even though there are some positive effects on source country of nurse migration, nurse migration has led to a severe shortage of nurses in source country which has led to decreased health and wellness in the source country.https://digitalcommons.misericordia.edu/research_posters2020/1022/thumbnail.jp

    Statistical Survey

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    Statistical Survey

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    REPRODUCTIVE AND DEVELOPMENTAL EFFECTS OF SELENOMETHIONINE IN THE FATHEAD MINNOW PIMEPHALES PROMELAS

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    Selenium (Se) is an essential trace element that undergoes maternal transfer to offspring where it has a high degree of teratogenic potential in egg-laying vertebrates because of the narrow range between nutritional benefit and toxicity. Studying this phenomenon of Se maternal transfer and subsequent toxicities in offspring is difficult in many fish species for logistical and biological reasons. For instance, Se contaminated sites are often located in remote locations which can make sampling efforts problematic, and certain fish species of concern commonly have long reproductive cycles and/or complex life histories which can be difficult to monitor. Thus, there is a need for improved methods to assess the toxicity of Se across diverse species of embryo-larval fish which could potentially aid site-specific risk assessment of Se contamination. Microinjection methodology is a potential surrogate for simulating the maternal transfer of Se and could be utilized to study this phenomena in non-model species which are unable to be spawned in the laboratory, or are difficult to sample from an Se contaminated site when spawning. Therefore, the overall objective of my research was to compare two potential in ovo Se exposure routes, maternal transfer and microinjection, in the fathead minnow Pimephales promelas to determine if early life stage toxicities are comparable between these different exposure routes in a freshwater fish. My thesis research fulfilled this objective by characterizing the effects of dietary Se exposure in P. promelas on fecundity and the maternal transfer of Se to embryos, the subsequent toxicities in embryo-larval offspring, and then used this information to inform a microinjection study with P. promelas embryos to allow for a comparison between the two different in ovo exposure routes. First, a 28-day short-term reproductive assay with P. promelas was performed to determine the dynamics of dietary selenomethionine (SeMet) exposure on maternal transfer and its effects on the F1 generation. Sexually mature P. promelas breeding groups (2 females:3 males) were fed a diet of either control (unspiked) or SeMet-spiked food (Low: 3.88 µg Se/g food dry mass [dm]; Medium: 8.75 µg Se/g food dm; High: 29.6 µg Se/g food dm) and allowed to breed. Fecundity did not decrease in female fish exposed to elevated levels of dietary SeMet and the low treatment (3.88 µg Se/g food dm) produced on average the most embryos per female, suggesting a possible supra-nutritional benefit of SeMet on reproduction. Dietary exposure with SeMet-spiked food rapidly induced the maternal transfer of excess Se and embryo concentrations increased daily until reaching steady-state after approximately 14 days of exposure. In ovo exposure to elevated Se did not affect hatchability of embryos or survival until swim-up in early life stage P. promelas. However, a dose-dependent increase in the frequency of larval fish with any type of morphological abnormality (e.g. edema, skeletal, finfold, craniofacial) present at swim-up was observed at embryo Se concentrations of 28.4 µg Se/g embryo dm. In the ancillary embryo microinjection study, embryos were injected with three doses of SeMet (Low: 9.73 µg Se/g embryo dm; Medium: 13.5 µg Se/g embryo dm; High: 18.9 µg Se/g embryo dm) to simulate maternal transfer and provide a point of comparison for the hatchability, survival and deformity endpoints measured in the preceding maternal transfer study. There were no effects of SeMet microinjection on hatchability up to a concentration of 18.9 µg Se/g embryo dm, however this same embryo Se concentration decreased survival until swim-up. Furthermore, this embryo Se concentration caused a greater increase in the frequency of deformed fathead minnow at swim-up in comparison to the highest embryo Se concentration in the maternal transfer study (28.4 µg Se/g embryo dm), suggesting a more toxic response when the dosage is primarily free SeMet rather than maternally transferred Se which is mainly SeMet incorporated into proteins. With this said, the frequency and type of deformities at embryo Se concentrations in the range of 9.73 – 13.5 µg Se/g embryo dm were similar between the two different exposure routes. The deformities observed in P. promelas as a response to SeMet exposure through both maternal transfer and microinjection followed a dose-dependent trend, and the most common deformities observed were spinal and finfold abnormalities, which were approximately two-fold more common than edema or craniofacial defects. Overall, this thesis research highlights the utility of embryo microinjection as a proxy for studying the maternal transfer of Se and provides an additional line of evidence for potentially extending this methodology to less commonly studied freshwater fish species of concern

    Statistical Survey

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    Examining Incidents of Sexual Misconduct Reported to Title IX Coordinators: Results from New York’s Institutions of Higher Education

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    A paucity of studies has examined incidents of sexual misconduct reported to Title IX coordinators at institutions of higher education (IHEs) or examined differences across types of IHEs. We used 2018 data from incidents of sexual misconduct (N = 3,829) reported to Title IX coordinators at IHEs in New York (N = 209) to examine the context, processes, and outcomes of reported incidents. Findings show that most incidents reported to Title IX coordinators did not prompt the IHE’s conduct process; “other” disciplinary sanctions were the favored response for responsible students, while suspensions and/or expulsions were rarely used. Further data collection and analysis is needed to understand victim and IHE decision-making regarding reported incidents of sexual misconduct and specific processes at community colleges and independent IHEs

    A new approach for performing contamination control bakeouts in JPL thermal vacuum test chambers

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    Contamination control requirements for the Wide Field/Planetary Camera II (WF/PC II) are necessarily stringent to protect against post-launch contamination of the sensitive optical surfaces, particularly the cold charge coupled device (CCD) imaging surfaces. Typically, thermal vacuum test chambers have employed a liquid nitrogen (LN2) cold trap to collect outgassed contaminants. This approach has the disadvantage of risking recontamination of the test article from shroud offgassing during post-test warmup of the chamber or from any shroud warming of even a few degrees during the bakeout process. By using an enclave, essentially a chamber within a chamber, configured concentrically and internally within an LN2 shroud, a method was developed, based on a design concept by Taylor, for preventing recontamination of test articles during bakeouts and subsequent post-test warmup of the vacuum chamber. Enclaves for testing WF/PC II components were designed and fabricated, then installed in three of JPL's Environmental Test Lab chambers. The design concepts, operating procedures, and test results of this development are discussed
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