3,804 research outputs found
Moving Margins: Using Marginalia as a Tool for Critical Reflection
Marginalia is the practice of writing notes in the margins of texts as a way to capture ones\u27 thoughts and feelings about the text during reading. It is giving in to the impulse, based on what was read, to stop and record a comment. In this manuscript, we make the connection between marginalia and the visceral responses to text felt by one doctoral student (the second author) taking a course examining language as a place of struggle (hooks, 2004, p. 153). We also demonstrate how marginalia can be used as a qualitative method to document and investigate the way textual interaction facilitates learning. A found poem developed from the marginalia compiled throughout the semester is shared exemplifying the way a critical analysis of personal marginalia can facilitate awareness of transformative processes and highlighting the margins as a transformative space
It's OK not to be OK: Shared Reflections from two PhD Parents in a Time of Pandemic
Adopting an intersectional feminist lens, we explore our identities as single and coāparents thrust into the new reality of the UK COVIDā19 lockdown. As two PhD students, we present shared reflections on our intersectional and divergent experiences of parenting and our attempts to protect our work and families during a pandemic. We reflect on the social constructions of āmasculinitiesā and āemphasized femininitiesā as complicated influence on our roles as parents. Finally, we highlight the importance of time and selfācare as ways of managing our shared realities during this uncertain period. Through sharing reflections, we became closer friends in mutual appreciation and solidarity as we learned about each otherās struggles and vulnerabilities
Faculty members engaging in transformative PETE: a feminist perspective
The purpose of this study was to describe sport pedagogy faculty membersā (FMs) efforts at engaging in transformative physical education teacher education (T-PETE). T-PETE stresses the importance of FMs creating social change through their pedagogical approach and begins by asking preservice teachers (PTs) to reflect on their perspectives and practices (Tinning, 2017 Tinning, R. (2017). Transformative pedagogies and physical education. In C. Ennis (Ed.), The Routledge handbook of physical education pedagogies (pp. 295ā306). New York: Taylor & Francis. [Google Scholar]. Transformative pedagogies and physical education. In C. Ennis (Ed.), The Routledge handbook of physical education pedagogies (pp. 295ā306). New York: Taylor & Francis; Ukpokodu, 2009. The practice of transformative pedagogy. Journal on Excellence in College Teaching, 20(2), 43ā67.). Participants were three white, female, able-bodied, lesbian/gay sport pedagogy FMs. The study was conducted in the United States. Feminist theory and feminist pedagogy drove data collection and analysis. Data were collected by employing a series of qualitative methods. An inductive and deductive analysis revealed that FMs had specific T-PETE goals, content, and pedagogies. Furthermore, several factors served to facilitate and limit the FMsā effectiveness when engaging in T-PETE. The findings suggest that program-wide PETE reform is necessary in the United States for creating social change, and influencing PTs perspectives and practices. In addition, they suggest that American PETE programs might benefit from greater diversity among the FMs who staff them
Gas gun shock experiments with single-pulse x-ray phase contrast imaging and diffraction at the Advanced Photon Source
The highly transient nature of shock loading and pronounced microstructure
effects on dynamic materials response call for {\it in situ}, temporally and
spatially resolved, x-ray-based diagnostics. Third-generation synchrotron x-ray
sources are advantageous for x-ray phase contrast imaging (PCI) and diffraction
under dynamic loading, due to their high photon energy, high photon fluxes,
high coherency, and high pulse repetition rates. The feasibility of bulk-scale
gas gun shock experiments with dynamic x-ray PCI and diffraction measurements
was investigated at the beamline 32ID-B of the Advanced Photon Source. The
x-ray beam characteristics, experimental setup, x-ray diagnostics, and static
and dynamic test results are described. We demonstrate ultrafast, multiframe,
single-pulse PCI measurements with unprecedented temporal (100 ps) and
spatial (2 m) resolutions for bulk-scale shock experiments, as well
as single-pulse dynamic Laue diffraction. The results not only substantiate the
potential of synchrotron-based experiments for addressing a variety of shock
physics problems, but also allow us to identify the technical challenges
related to image detection, x-ray source, and dynamic loading
Ferrite attenuator modulation improves antenna performance
Ferrite attenuator inserted into appropriate waveguide reduces the gain of the antenna element which is causing interference. Modulating the ferrite attenuator to change the antenna gain at the receive frequency permits ground tracking until the antenna is no longer needed
Changing the Support of a Spatial Covariate: A Simulation Study
Researchers are increasingly able to capture spatially referenced data on both a response and a covariate more frequently and in more detail. A combination of geostatisical models and analysis of covariance methods may be used to analyze such data. However, very basic questions regarding the effects of using a covariate whose support differs from that of the response variable must be addressed to utilize these methods most efficiently. In this experiment, a simulation study was conducted to assess the following: (i) the gain in efficiency when geostatistical models are used, (ii) the gain in efficiency when analysis of covariance methods are used, and (iii) the effects of including a covariate whose support differs from that of the response variable in the analysis. This study suggests that analyses which both account for spatial structure and exploit information from a covariate are most powerful. Also, the results indicate that the support of the covariate should be as close as possible to the support of the response variable to obtain the most accurate experimental results
Three-Dimensional Mechanics of Yakutat Convergence in the Southern Alaskan Plate Corner
Three-dimensional numerical models are used to investigate the mechanical evolution of the southern Alaskan plate corner where the Yakutat and the Pacific plates converge on the North American plate. The evolving model plate boundary consists of Convergent, Lateral, and Subduction subboundaries with flow separation of incoming material into upward or downward trajectories forming dual, nonlinear advective thermal/mechanical anomalies that fix the position of major subaerial mountain belts. The model convergent subboundary evolves into two teleconnected orogens: Inlet and Outlet orogens form at locations that correspond with the St. Elias and the Central Alaska Range, respectively, linked to the East by the Lateral boundary. Basins form parallel to the orogens in response to the downward component of velocity associated with subduction. Strain along the Lateral subboundary varies as a function of orogen rheology and magnitude and distribution of erosion. Strain-dependent shear resistance of the plate boundary associated with the shallow subduction zone controls the position of the Inlet orogen. The linkages among these plate boundaries display maximum shear strain rates in the horizontal and vertical planes where the Lateral subboundary joins the Inlet and Outlet orogens. The location of the strain maxima shifts with time as the separation of the Inlet and Outlet orogens increases. The spatiotemporal predictions of the model are consistent with observed exhumation histories deduced from thermochronology, as well as stratigraphic studies of synorogenic deposits. In addition, the complex structural evolution of the St Elias region is broadly consistent with the predicted strain field evolution. Citation: Koons, P. O., B. P. Hooks, T. Pavlis, P. Upton, and A. D. Barker (2010), Three-dimensional mechanics of Yakutat convergence in the southern Alaskan plate corner, Tectonics, 29, TC4008, doi: 10.1029/2009TC002463
Negotiating the Coaching Landscape: Experiences of Black men and women coaches in the United Kingdom
The current article provides a critical examination of the racialised and gendered processes that reinforce disparities in sport coaching by exploring the experiences of Black men and women coaches in the United Kingdom. The findings are based on in-depth qualitative interviews with coaches from two national governing bodies of sport. Using a Critical Race Theory approach and Black feminist lens, the coachesā narratives illuminate the complex, multifaceted and dynamic ways in which āraceā, ethnicity and gender are experienced and negotiated by sport coaches. The coachesā reflections are discussed under three themes: negotiating identities; privilege and blind spots; and systemic discrimination. The narratives from the coachesā experiences emphasise the need for key stakeholders in sport to recognise the intersectional, structural and relational experiences that facilitate, as well as constrain, the progression of Black coaches in order to challenge racialised and gendered inequalities
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