2,599 research outputs found

    Longitudinal relations between perceived autonomy and social support from teachers and students' self-regulated learning and achievement

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    Most research investigating the relation between perceived teacher support and self-regulated learning (SRL) is cross-sectional, and little is known about the direction of the effects. This longitudinal study investigated the direction of the effects between students' perceptions of autonomy support and social support from teacher on two behavioural aspects of SRL: delay of gratification and metacognitive strategy use. A second aim was to investigate the extent to which the effects of perceived teacher support on student achievement were mediated by SRL. Students (N = 701, age 12) completed questionnaires five times during their first 2 years in secondary education. Cross-lagged autoregressive models revealed small reciprocal effects in both directions between delay of gratification and perceived autonomy support. Metacognitive strategy use predicted perceived autonomy support and perceived social support from teachers predicted both aspects of SRL. The study revealed a small mediating effects from SRL between perceived teacher support and achievement

    Continuous-flow IRMS technique for determining the 17O excess of CO2 using complete oxygen isotope exchange with cerium oxide

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    This paper presents an analytical system for analysis of all single substituted isotopologues (<sup>12</sup>C<sup>16</sup>O<sup>17</sup>O, <sup>12</sup>C<sup>16</sup>O<sup>18</sup>O, <sup>13</sup>C<sup>16</sup>O<sup>16</sup>O) in nanomolar quantities of CO<sub>2</sub> extracted from stratospheric air samples. CO<sub>2</sub> is separated from bulk air by gas chromatography and CO<sub>2</sub> isotope ratio measurements (ion masses 45 / 44 and 46 / 44) are performed using isotope ratio mass spectrometry (IRMS). The <sup>17</sup>O excess (Δ<sup>17</sup>O) is derived from isotope measurements on two different CO<sub>2</sub> aliquots: unmodified CO<sub>2</sub> and CO<sub>2</sub> after complete oxygen isotope exchange with cerium oxide (CeO<sub>2</sub>) at 700 °C. Thus, a single measurement of Δ<sup>17</sup>O requires two injections of 1 mL of air with a CO<sub>2</sub> mole fraction of 390 μmol mol<sup>−1</sup> at 293 K and 1 bar pressure (corresponding to 16 nmol CO<sub>2</sub> each). The required sample size (including flushing) is 2.7 mL of air. A single analysis (one pair of injections) takes 15 minutes. The analytical system is fully automated for unattended measurements over several days. The standard deviation of the <sup>17</sup>O excess analysis is 1.7&permil;. Multiple measurements on an air sample reduce the measurement uncertainty, as expected for the statistical standard error. Thus, the uncertainty for a group of 10 measurements is 0.58&permil; for &Delta; <sup>17</sup>O in 2.5 h of analysis. 100 repeat analyses of one air sample decrease the standard error to 0.20&permil;. The instrument performance was demonstrated by measuring CO<sub>2</sub> on stratospheric air samples obtained during the EU project RECONCILE with the high-altitude aircraft Geophysica. The precision for RECONCILE data is 0.03&permil; (1&sigma;) for δ<sup>13</sup>C, 0.07&permil; (1&sigma;) for δ<sup>18</sup>O and 0.55&permil; (1&sigma;) for &delta;<sup>17</sup>O for a sample of 10 measurements. This is sufficient to examine stratospheric enrichments, which at altitude 33 km go up to 12&permil; for &delta;<sup>17</sup>O and up to 8&permil; for δ<sup>18</sup>O with respect to tropospheric CO<sub>2</sub> : &delta;<sup>17</sup>O ~ 21&permil; Vienna Standard Mean Ocean Water (VSMOW), δ<sup>18</sup>O ~ 41&permil; VSMOW (Lämmerzahl et al., 2002). The samples measured with our analytical technique agree with available data for stratospheric CO<sub>2</sub>

    Force budget: III, Application to three-dimensional flow of Byrd Glacier, Antarctica

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    This is the published version, also available here: http://dx.doi.org/10.3189/002214389793701554.Stresses at the surface and at depth are calculated for a stretch of Byrd Glacier, Antarctica. The calculations are based on photogrammetrically determined velocities and elevations, and on radio-echo-determined ice thicknesses. The results are maps of drags from each valley wall, of normal forces laterally and longitudinally. and of basal drag. Special challenges in the calculation are the numerical gridding of velocity, ensuring that unreasonable short-wavelength features do not develop in the calculation, and inference of ice thickness where there are no data. The results show important variations in basal drag. For the floating part, basal drag is near zero, as expected. Within the grounded part. longitudinal components of basal drag are very variable, reaching 300 kPa with a dominant wavelength of 13 km. Generally. these drag maxima correlate with maxima in driving stress. Usually the across-glacier component of basal drag is small. An important exception occurs in the center of the grounded part of the glacier where the flow shows major deviations from the axis of the valley. Other results are that side drag is roughly constant at 250 kPa along both margins of the glacier, tension from the ice shelf is about 100 kPa, and tension in the grounded part cycles between 250 and 150 kPa. Calculated deep velocities are too large and this is attributed to deficiencies in the conventional isotropic flow law used
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