5,770 research outputs found
Lyophilized spore dispenser
A lyophilized spore dispenser is provided which produces a finely divided, monoparticulate cloud of bacterial spores. The spores are contained within a tightly sealed chamber, and a turbulator orifice connected to an air supply source provides a jet of air which stirs up the spores and causes the spores to be suspended in eddy currents within the chamber. This air jet also produces a positive pressure within the chamber which forces the spores out of an injection orifice
Gender Observations and Study Abroad: How Students Reconcile Cross-Cultural Differences Related to Gender
The purpose of the current study was to gain a better understanding of how gender was observed by a group of students participating in a 3-week study abroad program entitled, Food, Environment and Social Systems, which took place in Australia and New Zealand in May 2006. I examined the messages students received about gender in Australia and New Zealand, whether the students were cognizant of these messages, and how they made meaning of the messages in light of their own gender identity
Examining How Residential Colleges Inspire the Life of the Mind
Residential colleges in large, public research universities purport to create a small liberal arts environment with the resources of a major university, but little empirical attention has been paid to their claims of effectiveness. This study examined one facet of the liberal arts ideal, the development of lifelong learners. Hierarchical Linear Modeling was utilized to examine student characteristics, residential college environments, and cross-level interactions. Findings illustrate that students’ motivations, coupled with an ethos of academic challenge and faculty/student interaction in their residential college environment, were associated with developing lifelong learners. Findings and implications are discussed in the context of existing research
Free Torus Actions and Two-Stage Spaces
We prove the toral rank conjecture of Halperin in some new cases. Our results
apply to certain elliptic spaces that have a two-stage Sullivan minimal model,
and are obtained by combining new lower bounds for the dimension of the
cohomology and new upper bounds for the toral rank. The paper concludes with
examples and suggestions for future work.Comment: 17 pages, to appear in Math. Proc. Camb. Philos. So
What’s the Point?: An Exploration of Students’ Motivation to Learn in a First-Year Seminar
This qualitative case study explores how undergraduate students and their instructor made meaning of students’ motivation to learn in a one-credit, pass/fail first-year seminar. The findings point to the importance of addressing structural motivational barriers and ensuring that instructors possess the instructional, motivational, and developmental strategies necessary to foster motivation
Theoretical Foundations of Learning Communities
This chapter describes the historical and contemporary theoretical underpinnings of learning communities and argues that there is a need for more complex models in conceptualizing and assessing their effectiveness
AUPLOT 2 - A system of data handling and plot instruction subroutines for computer graphics
AUPLOT 2, set of callable subroutines for computer graphic
Students’ Peer Interactions Within a Cohort and in Host Countries During a Short-Term Study Abroad
In this qualitative case study, we explored students’ peer interactions within their cohort and in the host countries during a short-term study abroad. Framed by Bronfenbrenner’s (1993) ecological systems theory, findings revealed that students spent considerable energy reflecting on interactions with peers. The students considered themselves loners, mediators, messengers, and learners. Findings illustrate the need to attend to students’ differing personal attributes and relationships with peers, as these affect their overall experiences
Building Bridges: Using the Office Consultation Project to Connect Students to Theory and Practice
The Office Consultation Project is an innovative capstone project that partners graduate students in student affairs preparation programs with academic and student affairs practitioners. It provides an opportunity for students to apply research and scholarship to practical settings, while giving practitioners new insight into their units, additional work support, and expanded professional networks. The project benefits graduate preparation programs by cultivating cross-divisional networking and increasing campus awareness about the student affairs profession that could generate new practicum and assistantship opportunities
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