1,933 research outputs found

    Improving Rural Educational Attainment

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    More often than not, policymakers focus on school-based strategies to spur improvements in the educational progress of students. The 2002 No Child Left Behind Act, which demands greater school accountability for student performance, is a case in point. Yet, what happens in the classroom is only part of the story.In fact, as Lionel J. Beaulieu, Glenn D. Israel and Ronald C. Wimberley show in their chapter in "Challenges for Rural America in the Twenty-First Century", family characteristics have from 5 to 10 times as much impact as school characteristics on reading and math scores of rural U.S. eighth graders.In addition, community characteristics have as much impact as school characteristics on test scores, although both community and chool characteristics tend to be more important in geographically isolated rural areas than those adjacent to metropolitan areas. Clearly, helping rural youth succeed academically is the collective responsibility of families, schools, and communities.This issue brief is a joint product of the Rural Sociological Society and the National Coalition for Rural Entrepreneurship, a collaboration of four Regional Rural Development Centers: The Northeast Regional Center for Rural Development, the Southern Rural Development Center, the North Central Regional Center for Rural Development, and the Western Rural Development Center. Funding was also made available from the Ford Foundation.This brief is part of a policy brief series by the Rural Sociological Society and the Regional Rural Development Centers that stresses the importance of community collective action and developing the capacity of people and organizations to meet the community's needsThe Rural Sociological Society and the Regional Rural Development Centers creates new Public Policy Issue Brief series based on its recent book, "Challenges for Rural America in the Twenty-First Century".The briefs synthesize the context and substance of important issues raised in the book and address alternative policy options, with the goal of bringing important research to the policy community

    De novo Sequencing and Analysis of \u3cem\u3eSalvia hispanica\u3c/em\u3e Transcriptome and Identification of Genes Involved in the Biosynthesis of Secondary Metabolites

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    Salvia hispanica L. (commonly known as chia) is gaining popularity worldwide and specially in US as a healthy oil and food supplement for human and animal consumption due to its favorable oil composition, and high protein, fiber, and antioxidant contents. Despite these benefits and its growing public demand, very limited gene sequence information is currently available in public databases. In this project, we generated 90 million high quality 150 bp paired-end sequences from the chia leaf and root tissues. The sequences were de novo assembled into 103,367 contigs with average length of 1,445 bp. The resulted assembly represented 92.2% transcriptome completeness. Around 69% of the assembled contigs were annotated against the uniprot database and represented a diverse array of functional and biological categories. A total of 14,267 contigs showed significant expression difference between the leaf and root tissues, with 6,151 and 8,116 contigs upregulated in the leaf and root, respectively. The sequence data generated in this project will provide valuable resources for future functional genomic research in chia. With the availability of transcriptome sequences, it would be possible to identify genes involved in the important metabolic pathways that give chia its unique nutritional and medicinal properties. Finally, the generated data will contribute to the genetic improvement efforts of chia to better serve the public demand

    The World Is Still Round, And Sociology Is Still Flat

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    Expanded version of the keynote address for the annual meeting of the Georgia Sociological Association, St. Simon’s Island, October 21, 2005

    Evaluation of cellular interactions with functionalized scaffolds for cardiovascular tissue engineering

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    Introduction: Cardiovascular disease is a leading cause of death worldwide, with heart valve disease in particular becoming a rising problem in developing countries. Tissue engineering offers the next step in heart valve tissue replacement surgery. Synthetic scaffolds used in tissue engineering often do not have sufficient cell adhesion, thus the addition of biosignals is crucial. Surface modifications can be used to improve desired cell adhesion and proliferation. To covalently attach cell adhesion peptides/biosignals, synthetic hydrogel spacers are often used in an interim grafting step. Poly (acrylic acid) (PAA) is a non-toxic, FDA approved hydrogel that has been shown in preliminary studies (previous research and own experience) to improve cell adhesion even without the addition of specific cell-binding compounds. This project aims to show the effect of systematically increasing the concentration of PAA modified 2D and 3D polyurethanes (biodegradable and biostable) on cell adhesion, persistence, and proliferation. Experimental Methods: In Part 1, 2D nondegradable Pellethane® films were surface modified by varying the poly (acrylic acid-co-acrylamide) (P(AA-co-AM)) comonomer feed ratio from 0 to 100 % PAA in 20 % increments, using poly (acrylamide) (PAM) as a copolymer (unmodified and collagen coated controls). Surface properties were analysed using SEM imaging, staining, energy-dispersive X-ray spectrometry (SEM-EDS) and toluidine blue carboxyl assays (TBCA). Endothelial cells were isolated from human saphenous veins using an enzymatic digestion method, and identified by staining with DAPI and Cy3 against CD31. Isolated endothelial cells and human dermal fibroblasts (Cell bank: R039/2016) were seeded onto Pellethane® films (8 000 cells/film). Live/dead staining and XTT cell viability assays were performed over 24 and 72 hrs, respectively. Following this, XTT cell viability assays were performed at 7 and 24 hrs post-seeding on endothelial cells cultured under serum-free conditions (20 000 cells/film; unmodified and 80 % PAA). In Part 2, both Pellethane® and DegraPol® (degradable) 2D films and 3D electrospun scaffolds were used. The polymer samples were surface modified with 0, 40, and 80 % PAA. All samples were imaged using SEM prior to in vitro cell culture evaluation. Endothelial cells were seeded (8 000 cells/film) onto surface modified polymer samples, and XTT cell viability assays were performed over 72 hrs. Three-dimensional scaffolds seeded with endothelial cells (20 000 and 50 000 cells/film; unmodified and 80 % PAA) were immunocytochemically stained (Hoechst and CD31) at Day 1, 3, and 7 post-seeding. Results and discussion: In Part 1, SEM imaging and preliminary staining confirmed the addition of PAA to polymer surfaces. Systematically increasing [AA] in the P(AA-co-AM) comonomer ratio resulted in the expected increase in surface-COOH functional groups (TBCA and SEM-EDS). The number of COOH groups increased as [PAA] increased from 0-40 % (R 2=0.76; P 0.0001) before plateauing (TBCA). This was further confirmed by a decreasing N/O ratio with increasing [AA] monomer (R2=0.70; P< 0.001) (SEM-EDS). An increase in [PAA] resulted in a linear increase in endothelial cell adhesion and persistence (R 2=0.92 (live/dead staining) and 0.96 (XTT cell viability assays); P< 0.05). Endothelial cell viability on surfaces modified with 80 and 100 % PAA was comparable to that achieved on the collagen positive control. High concentrations of PAA also showed improved fibroblast adhesion (R2= 0.71 (live/dead staining) and 0.54 (XTT cell viability assays); P< 0.05) but did not display any persistence or viability close to that obtained on the collagen. Collagen coated surfaces displayed the highest cell adhesion and proliferation for both cell types (XTT cell viability assays and live/dead staining). Endothelial cell adhesion was improved by both the addition of PAA to the polymer surface, and FBS to the cell culture medium (P< 0.05) (cells cultured under serum-free conditions). In Part 2, the improvement of endothelial cell adhesion on PAA modified 2D Pellethane® films was confirmed and additionally shown on 2D DegraPol® (P ≤0.05) (XTT cell viability assays). However, the endothelial cell persistence seen in earlier assays was not observed. The positive effect of increasing [PAA] did not translate to 3D scaffolds, and cell behaviour was improved on unmodified surfaces in comparison to any of the PAA modified groups (XTT cell viability assays and immunocytochemical staining). This discrepancy is proposed to be a difference in grafting efficiency on the degradable materials and the 3D structure of the electrospun scaffolds. Conclusions: An increase in PAA surface modification on polyurethane can improve endothelial cell adhesion and persistence on nondegradable 2D polyurethane scaffolds. These results did not translate to electrospun scaffolds, probably due to the complex 3D cell environment. Further investigation is required for use in TEHV and other applications

    Quality of Life Trends in the Southern Black Belt, 1980-2005: A Research Note

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    Previous research shows that the Southern Black Belt compares badly to the rest of the U.S., in terms of poverty, median incomes, mortality, unemployment rates, and educational levels. This study updates those earlier studies with 2000 and 2005 data to statistically assess these problems’ recent severity, and examines trends since 1980 to assess the Black Belt’s progress or regress relative to the rest of the South and the NonSouth. I used Census and other federal data for the analysis. The Black Belt’s education levels have improved substantially, nearly catching up with other regions. Yet compared with the rest of the U.S., the Black Belt lags on other indicators. This lag is narrowing somewhat for poverty rates, but not for unemployment or median family income. Perhaps most seriously, although the Black Belt’s infant mortality has declined, it remains much worse than in other regions – and that chasm has grown dramatically. Government programs have mitigated such economic, educational, and health problems in the past, and should serve this role again

    AMERICA'S FORGOTTEN PEOPLE AND PLACES: ENDING THE LEGACY OF POVERTY IN THE RURAL SOUTH

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    This study focuses on the longstanding impoverishment of the rural South and three of its subregions-Appalachia, the Mississippi Delta, and the Black Belt. The poor quality of life in rural Appalachia and along the Mississippi Delta has been publically acknowledged by programs and commissions for improving conditions. However, the more comprehensive Black Belt subregion that links parts of Southern Appalachia and the Southern Delta has not received such regional policy attention. While the South as a whole is more rural and impoverished than other U.S. regions, this is largely due to the poor conditions in the Black Belt. In addition to region and rurality, a third feature of the pattern is race. It is in the Black Belt that the South's poor socioeconomic conditions are most concentrated. Policy and program attention are needed for regional solutions that take rurality and race into account along with demographic and other subregional characteristics.Appalachia, Black Belt, Mississippi Delta, policy, poverty, quality of life, rural, South, Community/Rural/Urban Development,

    Impressions of Professional Women as a Function of Clothing Style and Job Title

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    The piirpose of the present study was to examine the relationship of Job Title (Sales Manager, Salesperson) with Clothing Style (Short Skirt, Long Skirt, Pants) on perceptions of power. Seventy-eight participants completed the Perception of Power scale. The Perception of Power scale is a questionnaire that contains six measures of interpersonal power. The subscales were also added for an overall measure of power. Included with the questionnaire was a picture of a female model in one of three styles of business suit, applying for one of two jobs, for a total of six conditions. Results of 2x3 ANOVAs revealed no significant main effects due to Style of Clothing, Job Title, or an interaction of the two for any measure of power. Men and older participants were significantly more likely than women or younger participants to attribute power to the stimulus model. Results support previous studies that the jacket of the businesswoman’s suit is the indicator of power
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