93 research outputs found

    Adult Education Programs of the New Deal: The Case of Oklahoma, 1933 - 1942

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    The federal Adult Education programs of the Great Depression represented the response of the New Deal to unemployed teachers. Although these programs were essentially relief projects intended to take unemployed teachers off the rolls and hire them as adult educators, they resulted in: 1) establishing adult education as a legitimate field of practice with unique educational needs and methods; 2) introducing the nation to adult education theory as it then existed; and 3) teaching large numbers of adults to read for the first time

    An Analysis Of Self-Efficacy, Welfare Status, And Occupational Choice Among Female Single Parents

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    The concept of self-efficacy has been proposed as a possible explanation why women are deterred from pursuing higher paying, traditionally male occupations. This study sampled 199 women pursuing occupational training in Vocational-Technical Institutes to obtain some measure of occupational self-efficacy and compare those measures by non-traditional occupational training and welfare status

    Cool Water

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    Photograph of The Sons of the Pioneershttps://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/cht-sheet-music/9096/thumbnail.jp

    Smokejumper Magazine, January 2001

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    This issue of the National Smokejumper Association (NSA) Smokejumper Magazine contains the following articles: Dale Longanecker Sets Jump Record, First Jump in the Sequoias (Bob Nolan), Redding-Tall Trees (Bill Yensen), Personal notes from producer of smokejumper documentary (Steve Smith), Analysis of ADFF Final Report (Jim Veitch), Interview with Greg Greenhoe/Chair of ADFF study group, (Jim Veitch). Smokejumper Magazine continues Static Line, which was the original title of the NSA quarterly magazine.https://dc.ewu.edu/smokejumper_mag/1029/thumbnail.jp

    The PCsat Mission and Cubesat Design Notes

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    There are growing opportunities for Universities to gain educational access to Space. The Naval Academy has used the Department of Defense Space Test Program for its PCsat and Sapphire projects and the Stanford Cubesat program offers a unique opportunity to get numerous small student satellite payloads into space. As a spin-off of our PCsat project, we have investigated several off-the-shelf solutions to the Telemetry, Command and control portion of small satellites that can greatly simplify small satellite and CubeSat designs. This permits students to concentrate on the various payloads and other aspects of the project without starting from scratch with a comm. system. This simple comm. System based on AX.25 packet radio is being flown this summer in the Naval Academy’s Personal Communications Satellite (PCsat) which will demonstrate downlinks receivable on Hand Held Transceivers (HT’s) with only a whip antenna. Further these simple downlinks can be easily fed into the Internet for live worldwide distribution of data. These designs are all based on the amateur radio standard on-air AX.25 packet network protocol that is implemented in a number of off-the-shelf modems (called Terminal Node Controllers or TNC’s). The following paragraphs describe three such hardware devices and the remainder of this paper describes how TNC’s and the AX.25 protocol were used on PCsat

    The experience of family carers attending a joint reminiscence group with people with dementia: A thematic analysis

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    Reminiscence therapy has the potential to improve quality of life for people with dementia. In recent years reminiscence groups have extended to include family members, but carers' experience of attending joint sessions is undocumented. This qualitative study explored the experience of 18 family carers attending 'Remembering Yesterday Caring Today' groups. Semi-structured interviews were transcribed and subjected to thematic analysis. Five themes were identified: experiencing carer support; shared experience; expectations (met and unmet), carer perspectives of the person with dementia's experience; and learning and comparing. Family carers' experiences varied, with some experiencing the intervention as entirely positive whereas others had more mixed feelings. Negative aspects included the lack of respite from their relative, the lack of emphasis on their own needs, and experiencing additional stress and guilt through not being able to implement newly acquired skills. These findings may explain the failure of a recent trial of joint reminiscence groups to replicate previous findings of positive benefit. More targeted research within subgroups of carers is required to justify the continued use of joint reminiscence groups in dementia care

    Improving risk prediction model quality in the critically ill:data linkage study

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    Background: A previous National Institute for Health and Care Research study [Harrison DA, Ferrando-Vivas P, Shahin J, Rowan KM. Ensuring comparisons of health-care providers are fair: development and validation of risk prediction models for critically ill patients. Health Serv Deliv Res 2015;3(41)] identified the need for more research to understand risk factors and consequences of critical care and subsequent outcomes. Objectives: First, to improve risk models for adult general critical care by developing models for mortality at fixed time points and time-to-event outcomes, end-stage renal disease, type 2 diabetes, health-care utilisation and costs. Second, to improve risk models for cardiothoracic critical care by enhancing risk factor data and developing models for longer-term mortality. Third, to improve risk models for in-hospital cardiac arrest by enhancing risk factor data and developing models for longer-term mortality and critical care utilisation. Design: Risk modelling study linking existing data. Setting: NHS adult critical care units and acute hospitals in England. Participants: Patients admitted to an adult critical care unit or experiencing an in-hospital cardiac arrest. Interventions: None. Main outcome measures: Mortality at hospital discharge, 30 days, 90 days and 1 year following critical care unit admission; mortality at 1 year following discharge from acute hospital; new diagnosis of end-stage renal disease or type 2 diabetes; hospital resource use and costs; return of spontaneous circulation sustained for > 20 minutes; survival to hospital discharge and 1 year; and length of stay in critical care following in-hospital cardiac arrest. Data sources: Case Mix Programme, National Cardiac Arrest Audit, UK Renal Registry, National Diabetes Audit, National Adult Cardiac Surgery Audit, Hospital Episode Statistics and Office for National Statistics. Results: Data were linked for 965,576 critical care admissions between 1 April 2009 and 31 March 2016, and 83,939 in-hospital cardiac arrests between 1 April 2011 and 31 March 2016. For admissions to adult critical care units, models for 30-day mortality had similar predictors and performance to those for hospital mortality and did not reduce heterogeneity. Models for longer-term outcomes reflected increasing importance of chronic over acute predictors. New models for end-stage renal disease and diabetes will allow benchmarking of critical care units against these important outcomes and identification of patients requiring enhanced follow-up. The strongest predictors of health-care costs were prior hospitalisation, prior dependency and chronic conditions. Adding pre- and intra-operative risk factors to models for cardiothoracic critical care gave little improvement in performance. Adding comorbidities to models for in-hospital cardiac arrest provided modest improvements but were of greater importance for longer-term outcomes. Limitations: Delays in obtaining linked data resulted in the data used being 5 years old at the point of publication: models will already require recalibration. Conclusions: Data linkage provided enhancements to the risk models underpinning national clinical audits in the form of additional predictors and novel outcomes measures. The new models developed in this report may assist in providing objective estimates of potential outcomes to patients and their families. Future work: (1) Develop and test care pathways for recovery following critical illness targeted at those with the greatest need; (2) explore other relevant data sources for longer-term outcomes; (3) widen data linkage for resource use and costs to primary care, outpatient and emergency department data

    The role of stakeholders in creating societal value from coastal and ocean observations

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    The importance of stakeholder engagement in ocean observation and in particular the realization of economic and societal benefits is discussed, introducing a number of overarching principles such as the convergence on common goals, effective communication, co-production of information and knowledge and the need for innovation. A series of case studies examine the role of coordinating frameworks such as the United States’ Interagency Ocean Observing System (IOOS¼), and the European Ocean Observing System (EOOS), public–private partnerships such as Project Azul and the Coastal Data Information Program (CDIP) and finally the role of the “third” or voluntary sector. The paper explores the value that stakeholder engagement can bring as well as making recommendations for the future

    Binary Switching of Calendar Cells in the Pituitary Defines the Phase of the Circannual Cycle in Mammals

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    Persistent free-running circannual (approximately year-long) rhythms have evolved in animals to regulate hormone cycles, drive metabolic rhythms (including hibernation), and time annual reproduction. Recent studies have defined the photoperiodic input to this rhythm, wherein melatonin acts on thyrotroph cells of the pituitary pars tuberalis (PT), leading to seasonal changes in the control of thyroid hormone metabolism in the hypothalamus. However, seasonal rhythms persist in constant conditions in many species in the absence of a changing photoperiod signal, leading to the generation of circannual cycles. It is not known which cells, tissues, and pathways generate these remarkable long-term rhythmic processes. We show that individual PT thyrotrophs can be in one of two binary states reflecting either a long (EYA3+) or short (CHGA+) photoperiod, with the relative proportion in each state defining the phase of the circannual cycle. We also show that a morphogenic cycle driven by the PT leads to extensive re-modeling of the PT and hypothalamus over the circannual cycle. We propose that the PT may employ a recapitulated developmental pathway to drive changes in morphology of tissues and cells. Our data are consistent with the hypothesis that the circannual timer may reside within the PT thyrotroph and is encoded by a binary switch timing mechanism, which may regulate the generation of circannual neuroendocrine rhythms, leading to dynamic re-modeling of the hypothalamic interface. In summary, the PT-ventral hypothalamus now appears to be a prime structure involved in long-term rhythm generation
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