142 research outputs found
Workplace Resilience and Performance: Workload and Organizational Constraints
Resilience is a key construct in the performance of targeted behaviors for solving problems and taking action in the face of adversity. Yet, not much is known about the outcomes of resilience in the workplace. A structural equation model was conducted to explore the relationships between four factors of workplace resilience as measured by the Workplace Resilience Instrument and barriers to performance as measured by the Organizational Constraints Scale and the Qualitative Workload Inventory. Results suggest higher levels of workplace resilience are correlated with the ability to handle greater workloads and organizational constraints. In particular, sense-making emerged as critical to workplace resilience
Diet Of Peary Caribou, Banks Island, N.W.T.
The results of analyses of rumen contents from 101 Peary caribou (Rangifer tarandus pearyi J. A. Allen 1902) collected on Banks Island are presented. Peary caribou on Banks Island were found to be versatile, broad spectrum grazers specializing on upland monocots, to ingest few lichens, and to exhibit significant seasonal and/or regional differences in diet
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NEPC Review: Charter Management Organizations 2017 (CREDO, June 2017)
The Center for Research on Education Outcomes (CREDO) assessed the impact of different types of charter school-operating organizations on student outcomes in 24 states, plus New York City and Washington, D.C. The study finds that students in charter schools display slightly greater gains in performance than their peers in traditional public schools, especially students in charter schools operated by certain types of organizations. CREDO’s distinctions between organization types are, however, arbitrary and unsupported by other research in the field. This raises concerns about the practical utility of the CREDO findings. In addition, CREDO researchers made several dubious methodological decisions that threaten the validity of the study. A number of the problems flagged by the reviewers of this study have been raised in reviews of prior CREDO studies. Specifically, CREDO studies tend to over-interpret small effect sizes; fail to justify the statistical assumptions underlying the group comparisons made; and not take into account or acknowledge either the large body of charter school research beyond their own work or the limitations inherent in the research approach they have taken. Because these problems have gone unaddressed in the present study, and because the CREDO researchers have compounded them by creating a confusing and illogical charter organization classification system, the report is of limited if any value in policymaking. Readers should review the report with care.</p
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