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2. Annual Proceedings of Selected Papers on the Practice of Education Communications and Technology Presented at the Annual Convention of the Association for Educational Communications and Technology (38th, Indianapolis, Indiana, 2015). Volume 2
- Author
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Association for Educational Communications and Technology and Simonson, Michael
- Abstract
For the thirty-eighth time, the Research and Theory Division of the Association for Educational Communications and Technology (AECT) is sponsoring the publication of these Proceedings. Papers published in this volume were presented at the annual AECT Convention in Indianapolis, Indiana. The Proceedings of AECT's Convention are published in two volumes. Volume 1 contains 29 papers dealing primarily with research and development topics. Twenty-three papers dealing with the practice of instructional technology including instruction and training issues are contained in Volume 2. The 23 papers in this volume include: (1) Acculturation into a Collaborative Online Learning Environment (Iryna V. Ashby and Victoria L. Walker); (2) TriviaPrep: Inside the Research, Design, Development, and Implementation of an Educational Competitive-Trivia Mobile Application (Sean D. Bailey); (3) Social Network Analysis as a Design-Based Research Tool in Deploying University-Wide Online Quality Course Standards (John Cowan, Aline Click, Stephanie Richter, Jason Rhode, and Jason Underwood); (4) A Revision to the "Revised" Bloom's Taxonomy (Afnan N. Darwazeh and Robert Maribe Branch); (5) ElevatEd: An Innovative Web-Based Solution for Strategic Planning and Continuous Improvement in Schools (Ioan G. Ionas, Matthew A. Easter, and Blake A. Naughton); (6) Using a Backchannel to Build a Community of Practice in a Professional Development (Lenora Jean Justice); (7) Learning to Lose: Using Gaming Concepts to Teach Failure as Part of the Learning Process (Lenora Jean Justice); (8) Active Learning in Online Learning Environments for Adult Learners (Yu-Chun Kuo and Yu-Tung Kuo); (9) Assessment Strategies for Competency-Based Learning--Lessons Learned (Darci Lammers and Stephen Beers); (10) Peer-Led Hackathon: An Intense Learning Experience (Miguel Lara, Kate Lockwood, and Eric Tao); (11) Fostering Interaction In Distance Learning through Purposeful Technology Integration in Support of Learning Goals (Wei Li and Jennifer. M. Brill); (12) Collaborative Communications in the Classroom (Patrice C. Nyatuame); (13) A Mixed-Methods Study: Student Evaluation Response Rates of Teacher Performance in Higher Education Online Classes (Kelli R. Paquette, Frank Corbett, Jr., and Melissa M. Casses); (14) Creating Effective Instructional Design: Feedback Loops And Habitus (Ardelle Pate and Jeffrey L. Hunt); (15) Efficiency in the Online Environment: Digital Tools That Streamline the Research Paper Process (Kelly Paynter and Jimmy Barnes); (16) An Online Social Constructivist Course: Toward a Framework for Usability Evaluations (Alana S. Phillips, Anneliese Sheffield, Michelle Moore, and Heather Robinson); (17) Games and Simulations: A Potential Future for Assessment (DeAnna L. Proctor and Lenora Jean Justice); (18) An Analysis of Technological Issues Emanating from Faculty Transition to a New Learning Management System (Mapopa William Sanga); (19) AuthorIT & TutorIT: An Intelligent Tutor Authoring & Delivery System You Can Use (Joseph M. Scandura); (20) Design of Instructional Modeling Language and Learning Objects Repository (Altaf Siddiqui); (21) Training Instructional Designers: Engaging Novices in ID Process through a Progressive Case (Lina Souid and Tiffany A. Koszalka); (22) How Human Agency Contributes to Thinking about E-learning (Brent G. Wilson and Andrea Gregg); and (23) Issues in Activity to Improve Subjects and Methods in University Lesson through Active Learning Using Media (Morio Yoshie). (Individual papers contain references.) [For Volume 1, see ED570117.]
- Published
- 2015
3. TOPOGRAPHIC MAP INTERPRETATION TECHNIQUES USED TO DETERMINE CASSELMAN RIVER DRAINAGE BASIN HISTORY, MARYLAND AND PENNSYLVANIA: A NEW PARADIGM DEMONSTRATION PAPER.
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Clausen, Eric
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TOPOGRAPHIC maps , *MOUNTAIN meadows , *CHANNEL flow , *SYSTEMS development , *STREAMFLOW - Abstract
Topographic map evidence for previously unexplained Casselman River direction changes (including where it joins the Youghiogheny River) indicates prolonged and massive volumes of south-oriented water once flowed across the Conemaugh-Casselman River drainage divide and formed diverging southwest- and southeast-oriented channels with the southwest-oriented flow joining south-oriented flow on today’s north-oriented Youghiogheny River alignment. The southeast-oriented channel eroded a water gap across an emerging Negro Mountain and then a diverging southwest-oriented channel followed the northeast-oriented Casselman River alignment to reach south-oriented flow on the now north-oriented Youghiogheny River alignment while the southeast-oriented channel and a southeast-oriented channel which diverged from the southwest-oriented channel eroded the Flaughtery and Piney Creek water gaps into an emerging Meadow Mountain. Conemaugh River drainage system development ended south-oriented flow into the Casselman River drainage basin while regional uplift caused drainage reversals to create today’s northeast-, northwest-, and southwest-oriented Casselman River. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
4. Through the Looking Glass: Viewing First-Year Composition through the Lens of Information Literacy
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Chisholm, Alexandria and Spencer, Brett
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This paper presents a case study of how librarians can situate themselves as pedagogical partners by bringing their unique information literacy perspective and expertise to the programmatic assessment process. This report resulted from the Thun Library and the Penn State Berks Composition Program's collaboration to assess the institution's first-year composition (FYC) course. From previous programmatic assessments of their students' work, the faculty knew that students struggled with source use in their rhetoric but found it difficult to pinpoint students' exact source issues. By adapting a rubric theoretically-grounded in the ACRL "Framework" to deconstruct the concept of source use into four categories, librarians developed a rubric that illuminated source engagement problems on a more granular level than the programmatic assessments conducted without librarian involvement, leading to specific suggestions for addressing issues with student source engagement
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- 2019
5. KICKING THE CAN DOWN THE ROAD: WHY FULTON V. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA "MIGHT AS WELL REWRITTEN ON THE DISSOLVING PAPER SOLD IN MAGIC SHOPS".
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SCHAEFBAUER, LOGAN
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FREE exercise clause (Constitutional law) ,FREEDOM of religion ,JURISPRUDENCE ,RELIGION - Abstract
With several fiesh.faces on the bench, lawstlits have been testing the waters on a variety of issues m deternline the direction of this new Supreme Court. One of these issues is religion, which has been a lively issue®r centuries, and remains a contentious legal issue today. In 2021, the Court granted certiorari to Fulton v. City of Philadelphia, providing it the opportunity to clean up decades of.free exercise precedent gone awry. The Court ruled unanimously in.favor of the petitioners but fuiled to fix the recurring issue.s of the modern free exercise jurisprudence. A majority of the court declined to overturn Employment Division Department of Human Resources of Oregon v. Smith, a controversial decision from its inception that has been rebulled by Congress and widely criticized fur running atind of the Free Exercise Clause. In Fulton, the Court of fired a narrow holding and did not address the core issues at the heart of the case. Because of the Court's shortcomings, the problems of Smith remain and leave the Free Exercise Clause in a precarious state. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
6. Interactive Poster Survey Study of ACS Members' Knowledge and Needs on Research Ethics
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Mabrouk, Patricia Ann and Schelble, Susan M.
- Abstract
An interactive poster exhibited at two poster sessions at the Fall 2016 American Chemical Society (ACS) National Meeting was used as a vehicle to learn about ACS members' concerns and needs related to research ethics and to identify opportunities for engagement of the Society by the Committee on Ethics (ETHX) and others in terms of ethics awareness, education, and meeting programming. The poster which leveraged color-coded sticky notes engaged 92 poster session attendees representing a wide array of shareholders from academe and industry. 15% of the participants returned to the poster to learn what other conferees had posted. The study identified a number of critical gaps in knowledge that represent opportunities for ACS, educators, and others to engage members in the vital area of research ethics education and training. These include a lack of awareness of existing resources on research ethics, an interest among members for materials for student training, and concerns about ethical issues in the areas of publications, plagiarism, data-handling, teaching ethics, and ethical decision-making.
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- 2018
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7. Using HeLa Cell Stress Response to Introduce First Year Students to the Scientific Method, Laboratory Techniques, Primary Literature, and Scientific Writing
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Resendes, Karen K.
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Incorporating scientific literacy into inquiry driven research is one of the most effective mechanisms for developing an undergraduate student's strength in writing. Additionally, discovery-based laboratories help develop students who approach science as critical thinkers. Thus, a three-week laboratory module for an introductory cell and molecular biology course that couples inquiry-based experimental design with extensive scientific writing was designed at Westminster College to expose first year students to these concepts early in their undergraduate career. In the module students used scientific literature to design and then implement an experiment on the effect of cellular stress on protein expression in HeLa cells. In parallel the students developed a research paper in the style of the undergraduate journal "BIOS" to report their results. HeLa cells were used to integrate the research experience with the Westminster College "Next Chapter" first year program, in which the students explored the historical relevance of HeLa cells from a sociological perspective through reading "The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks" by Rebecca Skloot. In this report I detail the design, delivery, student learning outcomes, and assessment of this module, and while this exercise was designed for an introductory course at a small primarily undergraduate institution, suggestions for modifications at larger universities or for upper division courses are included. Finally, based on student outcomes suggestions are provided for improving the module to enhance the link between teaching students skills in experimental design and execution with developing student skills in information literacy and writing.
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- 2015
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8. 'Transgressive' Instruction as Cultural Production: Teaching Strategies to Disrupt the 'Dirty Gossips' about Sub-Saharan 'Africa'
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Mfum-Mensah, Ob
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There exists a power asymmetry between instructors and students in the physical classroom and other learning spaces which symbolizes the distribution of power in social spaces. Because of the structured power asymmetry in most learning spaces, promoting effective classroom teaching sometimes requires instructors to replace existing hierarchical power relations and with fluid, organic, and transgressive classroom dynamics in their relationships with their students. This approach has the potential to empower students to become their own agency for interrogating the assumptions and ideologies that they bring to the classroom. This paper outlines the instructional strategies that I incorporate in my "nonwestern" course that aims to introduce students in my university to the sub-Saharan African region. The course uses the interdisciplinary approach to explore the complicated ways history and social changes (including globalization) intersect to shape education reforms, and economic and social development in sub-Saharan Africa. Students bring a plethora of assumptions about sub-Saharan "Africa" to this course and my goal as an instructor is to help students interrogate their own assumptions and deconstruct the myths and distortions about the "Africa" in a broader term. The paper outlines the way I deliberately select course materials, and sequence course contents and themes to scaffold and promote incremental knowledge about the region for students during the semester. Furthermore, the paper outlines the strategies that help nudge students' critical thinking and restructure the power relations in the classroom. While these strategies may not automatically change students' assumptions about sub-Saharan "Africa", they nonetheless become opportunities for my students and I to reposition for effective discussions about the region with the goal to interrogating students' prior assumptions and views about the region. [For the complete Volume 21 proceedings, see ED629259.]
- Published
- 2023
9. Global overview of anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction in children and adolescents over the past 20 years: a bibliometric analysis.
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Liang, Jiamin, Luo, Yuxin, Yang, Yingzhen, Xie, Huanyu, Huang, Zirong, Zhong, Mingjin, and Zhu, Weimin
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SPORTS medicine ,SERIAL publications ,ANTERIOR cruciate ligament surgery ,RESEARCH funding ,CHILDREN'S hospitals ,FUNCTIONAL status ,SPORTS re-entry ,MEDICAL research ,BIBLIOMETRICS ,RESEARCH methodology ,PUBLISHING ,CONVALESCENCE ,DATA analysis software ,DISEASE relapse ,TIME ,ADOLESCENCE ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Objectives: The objectives of this paper is to conduct a bibliometric analysis to examine the research status and development trend of anterior cruciate ligament injury and reconstruction in children and adolescents over the past 20 years. Design: Descriptive Research. Methods: This study obtained information regarding studies on Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction in Children and Adolescents from the Web of Science Core Collection database. Visual and bibliometric analysis were conducted using VOSviewer, Origin 2022, Pajek64 5.18and Excel 2019. These analytic tools facilitated the analysis of various aspects, including countries/regions, institutions, authors, journals and keywords related to the research. Results: From 2003 to 2023, a total of 1328 articles were retrieved in WOS, and 637 articles were selected by two authors. The most productive institutions are Childrens Hosp Philadelphia, Kocher, ms. Their articles have the highest number of publications and citations. The American journal of sports medicine is the most frequently cited journal for articles on anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction in children and adolescents. The most common keywords used in these articles were "anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction", "injury, children, adolescent", and "skeletally immature patients". Conclusions: This study provides valuable insights into the research focus of anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction in children and adolescents. In recent years, there has been significant attention paid to areas of "the return to sport, re-repture rate and functional recovery after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction" in this specific population. These aspects have emerged as key directions for future research in this field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. Human Exposure Influence Analysis for Wireless Electric Vehicle Battery Charging.
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El-Shahat, Adel, Danjuma, Joshua, Abdelaziz, Almoataz Y., and Abdel Aleem, Shady H. E.
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ELECTRIC vehicle batteries ,MAGNETIC flux leakage ,MAGNETIC flux density ,WIRELESS power transmission ,MUTUAL inductance ,NONIONIZING radiation ,ELECTRIC vehicles - Abstract
Wireless charging schemes aim to counter some drawbacks of electric vehicles' wired charging, such as the fact that it does not encourage mobility, leads to safety issues regarding high voltage cables, power adapters high cost, and has more battery waste by companies. In this paper, a comparative study of wireless power transfer multiple coil geometries is performed to analyze the efficiency, coupling coefficient, mutual inductance, and magnetic flux density production for each geometry. Results show that coil geometry, current excitation, and shielding techniques within the Wireless Electric Vehicle Charging (WEVC) system substantially influence magnetic flux leakage. In addition, the paper proposes an analytical framework for a WEVC scheme via electromagnetic resonance coupling. Safety considerations of the WEVC system, including the effects on humans, are investigated in several scenarios based on the relative location of the human while EV charging is conducted as the leading paper's goal. The exposure measurements are performed across various radial distances from the coils using 3-D FEA ANSYS Maxwell Software (American technology company, Pennsylvania, United States). The analysis shows that WEVC systems can achieve high power transfer, resulting in increased magnetic flux leakage around the coils. The safe distance for humans and animals during the charging sequence is attained from research results. For instance, in the 120 mm spiral coil, 120 mm square coil, and 600 mm spiral coil operating at 1 A, excitation, the SAR levels are under the threshold of 700 mm away from the coils. For the 600 mm spiral coil excited at 8 A, the SAR levels fall under the threshold at 900 mm away from the coils. When shielding is utilized, the safe distance is improved by up to 350 mm. Considering the regulations of the Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection (ICNIRP) standards, 600 mm is a safe distance away from the coils, and, vertically, anywhere past 300 mm is safe for humans. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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11. Philadelphia Department of Health Doula Support Program: Early Successes and Challenges of a Program Serving Birthing People Affected by Substance Use Disorder.
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Haerizadeh-Yazdi, Nadia, Huynh, My-Phuong, Narva, Arielle, Grasty, Amirah, Lemon, MaryNissi, Claxton, Nick, Gillespie, Kelly, and Kallem, Stacey
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INSTITUTIONAL cooperation ,MATERNAL health services ,MOTHERS ,EVALUATION of human services programs ,SOCIAL support ,SUBSTANCE abuse in pregnancy ,RESEARCH methodology ,OPIOID epidemic ,DRUG overdose ,INTERVIEWING ,PUBLIC health ,EMPLOYEE recruitment ,PREGNANT women ,GOVERNMENT programs ,HUMAN services programs ,COMMUNITY-based social services ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,CHILD health services ,THEMATIC analysis ,POSTNATAL care ,PATIENT compliance ,EMPLOYEE retention ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Purpose: Maternal substance use and deaths due to overdoses are increasing nationwide. Evidence suggests that the rate of resumed substance use, and fatal and non-fatal overdose is greatest in the first year after birth, particularly around six months postpartum, compared to other parts of the perinatal period. Doula care has been linked to improvements in perinatal health and outcomes. Description: In response to the opioid epidemic, the Philadelphia Department of Public Health developed and implemented the Doula Support Program (DSP), with a focus on one year of postpartum care for birthing people with a substance use disorder (SUD). In this paper, we describe the program and its formation and report on the early challenges and successes of the program implementation, based on information we received from program founders and managers in a group interview. Assessment: Early successes of the program include partnering with local community-based programs to recruit and retain doulas, supplementing traditional doula education with perinatal SUD-specific trainings, and maximizing client referrals by collaborating with local organizations and treatment centers that serve birthing people with SUD. Client retention, however, has proven to be challenging, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic. Conclusion: The DSP continues to grow, and lessons learned will facilitate program improvements. The goal of this paper is to outline the development and launch of the DSP and to act as a model for other state and local health departments interested in providing doula care for birthing people with SUD. Significance: Maternal substance use and fatal overdoses are increasing in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. In response to this crisis, the Philadelphia Department of Public Health's Division of Maternal, Child and Family Health developed the Doula Support Program (DSP), offering doula care to pregnant people with a current or past SUD history up to one-year postpartum. To our knowledge, this is the only doula program in Pennsylvania offering one-year postpartum support to birthing people affected by SUD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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12. Measuring Performance on the ABCDEF Bundle During Interprofessional Rounds via a Nurse-Based Assessment Tool.
- Author
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King, Andrew J., Potter, Kelly M., Seaman, Jennifer B., Chiyka, Elizabeth A., Hileman, Bethany A., Cooper, Gregory F., Mowery, Danielle L., Angus, Derek C., and Kahn, Jeremy M.
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MEDICAL quality control ,INTENSIVE care units ,NURSING ,PAIN ,CONTINUING education units ,AGITATION (Psychology) ,FAMILIES ,CRITICAL care nurses ,QUALITY assurance ,HEALTH care teams ,RESEARCH funding ,DELIRIUM ,PHYSICAL mobility ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,HOSPITAL rounds ,EVIDENCE-based nursing ,EVALUATION - Abstract
Background: Nurse-led rounding checklists are a common strategy for facilitating evidence-based practice in the intensive care unit (ICU). To streamline checklist workflow, some ICUs have the nurse or another individual listen to the conversation and customize the checklist for each patient. Such customizations assume that individuals can reliably assess whether checklist items have been addressed. Objective: To evaluate whether 1 critical care nurse can reliably assess checklist items on rounds. Methods: Two nurses performed in-person observation of multidisciplinary ICU rounds. Using a standardized paper-based assessment tool, each nurse indicated whether 17 items related to the ABCDEF bundle were discussed during rounds. For each item, generalizability coefficients were used as a measure of reliability, with a single-rater value of 0.70 or greater considered sufficient to support its assessment by 1 nurse. Results: The nurse observers assessed 118 patient discussions across 15 observation days. For 11 of 17 items (65%), the generalizability coefficient for a single rater met or exceeded the 0.70 threshold. The generalizability coefficients (95% CIs) of a single rater for key items were as follows: pain, 0.86 (0.74-0.97); delirium score, 0.74 (0.64-0.83); agitation score, 0.72 (0.33-1.00); spontaneous awakening trial, 0.67 (0.49-0.83); spontaneous breathing trial, 0.80 (0.70-0.89); mobility, 0.79 (0.69-0.87); and family (future/past) engagement, 0.82 (0.73-0.90). Conclusion: Using a paper-based assessment tool, a single trained critical care nurse can reliably assess the discussion of elements of the ABCDEF bundle during multidisciplinary rounds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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13. The state of nursing research from 2000 to 2019: A global analysis.
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Yanbing, Su, Hua, Liu, Chao, Liu, Fenglan, Wang, and Zhiguang, Duan
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BIBLIOMETRICS ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,LONGITUDINAL method ,NURSING research ,PUBLISHING ,RESEARCH funding ,SERIAL publications ,DEVELOPED countries ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MIDDLE-income countries ,LOW-income countries - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Advanced Nursing (John Wiley & Sons, Inc.) is the property of John Wiley & Sons, Inc. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
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14. Towards Generalizable Detection of Urgency of Discussion Forum Posts
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Švábenský, Valdemar, Baker, Ryan S., Zambrano, Andrés, Zou, Yishan, and Slater, Stefan
- Abstract
Students who take an online course, such as a MOOC, use the course's discussion forum to ask questions or reach out to instructors when encountering an issue. However, reading and responding to students' questions is difficult to scale because of the time needed to consider each message. As a result, critical issues may be left unresolved, and students may lose the motivation to continue in the course. To help address this problem, we build predictive models that automatically determine the urgency of each forum post, so that these posts can be brought to instructors' attention. This paper goes beyond previous work by predicting not just a binary decision cut-off but a post's level of urgency on a 7-point scale. First, we train and cross-validate several models on an original data set of 3,503 posts from MOOCs at University of Pennsylvania. Second, to determine the generalizability of our models, we test their performance on a separate, previously published data set of 29,604 posts from MOOCs at Stanford University. While the previous work on post urgency used only one data set, we evaluated the prediction across different data sets and courses. The best-performing model was a support vector regressor trained on the Universal Sentence Encoder embeddings of the posts, achieving an RMSE of 1.1 on the training set and 1.4 on the test set. Understanding the urgency of forum posts enables instructors to focus their time more effectively and, as a result, better support student learning. [For the complete proceedings, see ED630829.]
- Published
- 2023
15. Survey of the use of beef semen in dairy herds in Pennsylvania and nearby states.
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Felix, T L, Emenheiser, J C, Govoni, K E, Zinn, S A, and Reed, S A
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ANIMAL herds ,DAIRY farms ,HYPERLINKS ,DAIRY farm management ,INTERNET surveys ,CATTLE crossbreeding ,CATTLE marketing ,SEMEN ,CATTLE prices - Abstract
Because dairies across the United States have rapidly adopted breeding to beef breed sires, the use of beef semen has increased dramatically in recent years. The objective of this survey was to gather information about the use of beef semen by dairy producers in the Northeast United States to generate beef × dairy cattle for beef markets. The survey was conducted using the services of the Center for Survey Research at the Pennsylvania State University—Harrisburg campus. Respondents had two options for returning their responses: 1) mail the paper survey to CSR in the postage-paid business-reply envelope included in the mailing, or 2) complete the survey online via an open-access web survey link. A total of 669 surveys were received and a final number of 617 surveys were included in the responses based on completeness and validity of the responses. Because of the broad electronic distribution, a true response rate cannot be calculated. Of these, 463 (75.0%) were completed via returned paper survey, and 154 (25.0%) were completed via web, between November 9, 2021 and February 16, 2022. Of the 617 respondents, 539 were from Pennsylvania. Due to the large variations in returned survey copies by state, results are reported without state separation. Across all respondents, 69.7% reported milking 100 or fewer cows and over 90% of collected responses reported Holsteins as the predominant dairy breed in the Northeast. Only 18.8% of the respondents did not currently, nor plan to, breed with beef semen. Deciding which beef bulls to use on Northeast dairy farms was primarily based on the recommendation of the semen sales representative (54.5%) and the price of the semen purchased (42.3%). In addition, 89.7% of respondents cited using Angus genetics in their beef bull selections. However, there was no difference in reported profitability of crossbreeding between respondents who indicated using other beef breeds vs. those who indicated just using Angus (P ≥ 0.19). In conclusion, using beef sires on dairy females, regardless of the breed of beef sire, adds value to the resulting progeny from dairy farms in the Northeast. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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16. Research on the Declining Trend of Shale Gas Production Based on Transfer Learning Methods.
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Ni, Mingcheng, Xin, Xiankang, Yu, Gaoming, Gong, Yugang, Liu, Yu, and Xu, Peifu
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SHALE gas ,OIL shales ,TRANSFER of training ,GAS wells ,INTERPOLATION algorithms ,PREDICTION models - Abstract
With the development of artificial intelligence technology, machine learning-based production forecasting models can achieve the rapid prediction and analysis of production. However, these models need to be built on a large dataset, and having only a small amount of data may result in a decrease in prediction accuracy. Therefore, this paper proposes a transfer learning prediction method based on the hierarchical interpolation model. It uses data from over 2000 shale gas wells in 22 blocks of the Marcellus Shale formation in Pennsylvania to train the transfer learning model. The knowledge obtained from blocks with sufficient sample data is transferred and applied to adjacent blocks with limited sample data. Compared to classical production decline models and mainstream time-series prediction models, the proposed method can achieve an accurate production decline trend prediction in blocks with limited sample data, providing new ideas and methods for studying the declining production trends in shale gas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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17. Development and Preliminary Validation of the Accommodations & Impact Scale for Developmental Disabilities.
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Udhnani, Manisha D., Miller, Judith S., and Lecavalier, Luc
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EMOTION regulation ,PEARSON correlation (Statistics) ,STATISTICAL models ,CHILDREN with disabilities ,CRONBACH'S alpha ,T-test (Statistics) ,DATA analysis ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,RESEARCH evaluation ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,KRUSKAL-Wallis Test ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,SERVICES for caregivers ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,AGE distribution ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,BURDEN of care ,DEVELOPMENTAL disabilities ,RESEARCH methodology ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,STATISTICAL reliability ,INTRACLASS correlation ,STATISTICS ,PSYCHOLOGY of caregivers ,FACTOR analysis ,CHILD behavior - Abstract
The lives of caregivers can be deeply impacted by having a child with a developmental disability (DD). To offset those impacts, caregivers may engage in accommodations, or strategies to bolster everyday functioning. The nature and extent of these accommodations can provide insight into how the family is doing and what supports are needed from a family-centered perspective. This paper presents the development and preliminary validation of the Accommodations & Impact Scale for Developmental Disabilities (AISDD). The AISDD is a rating scale that measures day-to-day accommodations and impacts of raising a child with a DD. A sample of 407 caregivers of youth with DDs (M
age = 11.7 years; 63% males) completed the AISDD, along with measures of caregiver strain, daily challenges, child adaptive behavior, and behavior and emotional regulation. The AISDD is a unidimensional, 19-item scale with excellent internal consistency (ordinal alpha =.93) and test–retest (ICC =.95) reliability. Scores were normally distributed and sensitive to age (r = −.19), diagnosis (ASD + ID > ASD > ID), adaptive functioning (r = −.35), and challenging behaviors (r =.57). Finally, the AISDD showed excellent convergent validity with similar measures of accommodations and impacts. These findings support the use of the AISDD as a valid and reliable tool for measuring accommodations among caregivers of individuals with DDs. This measure shows promise in its ability to identify which families may need additional support for their children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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18. Spatial-temporal Bayesian accelerated failure time models for survival endpoints with applications to prostate cancer registry data.
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Wang, Ming, Li, Zheng, Lu, Jun, Zhang, Lijun, Li, Yimei, and Zhang, Liangliang
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SKIN cancer ,PROSTATE cancer ,PROPORTIONAL hazards models ,MARKOV chain Monte Carlo ,LARGE space structures (Astronautics) ,FLEXIBLE structures - Abstract
Prostate cancer is the most common cancer after non-melanoma skin cancer and the second leading cause of cancer deaths in US men. Its incidence and mortality rates vary substantially across geographical regions and over time, with large disparities by race, geographic regions (i.e., Appalachia), among others. The widely used Cox proportional hazards model is usually not applicable in such scenarios owing to the violation of the proportional hazards assumption. In this paper, we fit Bayesian accelerated failure time models for the analysis of prostate cancer survival and take dependent spatial structures and temporal information into account by incorporating random effects with multivariate conditional autoregressive priors. In particular, we relax the proportional hazards assumption, consider flexible frailty structures in space and time, and also explore strategies for handling the temporal variable. The parameter estimation and inference are based on a Monte Carlo Markov chain technique under a Bayesian framework. The deviance information criterion is used to check goodness of fit and to select the best candidate model. Extensive simulations are performed to examine and compare the performances of models in different contexts. Finally, we illustrate our approach by using the 2004-2014 Pennsylvania Prostate Cancer Registry data to explore spatial-temporal heterogeneity in overall survival and identify significant risk factors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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19. Real-time evaluation and adaptation to facilitate rapid recruitment in a large, prospective cohort study.
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Honushefsky, Ashley, Wagner, Eric S., Sheridan, Kathleen, Spickard, Kathleen M., LeMasters, William R., Walter, Carroll N., Beaver, Taryn, Lennon, Anne Marie, Papadopoulos, Nickolas, Rahm, Alanna Kulchak, and Buchanan, Adam H.
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PHYSIOLOGICAL adaptation ,CLIENT satisfaction ,COHORT analysis ,PATIENT selection ,ELECTRONIC health records ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Background: Recruiting large cohorts efficiently can speed the translation of findings into care across a range of scientific disciplines and medical specialties. Recruitment can be hampered by factors such as financial barriers, logistical concerns, and lack of resources for patients and clinicians. These and other challenges can lead to underrepresentation in groups such as rural residents and racial and ethnic minorities. Here we discuss the implementation of various recruitment strategies for enrolling participants into a large, prospective cohort study, assessing the need for adaptations and making them in real-time, while maintaining high adherence to the protocol and high participant satisfaction. Methods: While conducting a large, prospective trial of a multi-cancer early detection blood test at Geisinger, an integrated health system in central Pennsylvania, we monitored recruitment progress, adherence to the protocol, and participants' satisfaction. Tracking mechanisms such as paper records, electronic health records, research databases, dashboards, and electronic files were utilized to measure each outcome. We then reviewed study procedures and timelines to list the implementation strategies that were used to address barriers to recruitment, protocol adherence and participant satisfaction. Results: Adaptations to methods that contributed to achieving the enrollment goal included offering multiple recruitment options, adopting group consenting, improving visit convenience, increasing the use of electronic capture and the tracking of data and source documents, staffing optimization via leveraging resources external to the study team when appropriate, and integrating the disclosure of study results into routine clinical care without adding unfunded work for clinicians. We maintained high protocol adherence and positive participant experience as exhibited by a very low rate of protocol deviations and participant complaints. Conclusion: Recruiting rapidly for large studies – and thereby facilitating clinical translation – requires a nimble, creative approach that marshals available resources and changes course according to data. Planning a rigorous assessment of a study's implementation outcomes prior to study recruitment can further ground study adaptations and facilitate translation into practice. This can be accomplished by proactively and continuously assessing and revising implementation strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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20. Virtual INSIGHT: Improving natural social interaction: Group reHabilitation after traumatic brain injury.
- Author
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Keegan, Louise C., Reilley, Kelly, Stover, Molly, and Togher, Leanne
- Subjects
- *
REHABILITATION for brain injury patients , *COGNITIVE testing , *DATA analysis , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *PILOT projects , *GOAL (Psychology) , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *TELEREHABILITATION , *COMMUNICATIVE disorders , *COGNITION disorders , *COMMUNICATION , *NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *STATISTICS , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *DATA analysis software , *GROUP process , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *SPEECH therapy , *EVALUATION - Abstract
Background: There is a growing body of literature that indicates positive outcomes of group treatment approaches to intervention for communication difficulties in chronic traumatic brain injury (TBI). The published research to date examines face‐to‐face group intervention. Aim: This study draws on one of these approaches, 'Improving Natural Social Interaction: Group reHabilitation after Traumatic brain injury' (INSIGHT), and examines the adaptation of this program to a virtual setting. The principles underlying the program, which involved providing an authentic contextualised and natural environment for group interactions and enhancing opportunities for identity expression, were maintained. Methods & Procedures: Six participants with mild to severe TBI and cognitive communication difficulties participated in an 8‐week pilot program of the virtual INSIGHT program. Goal Attainment Scaling (GAS) scores completed over the course of the intervention served as the primary outcome measure. Secondary outcomes measures included The Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neuropsychological Status Update, The Awareness of Social Inference Test‐Revised, the La Trobe Communication Questionnaire and the Satisfaction with Life Scale. Outcomes & Results: A mixed multilevel analysis revealed significant improvement in GAS scores. A Wilcoxon signed rank test revealed no significant changes in secondary measures. Conclusions & Implications: There is a growing potential for this group treatment approach, in an online medium, and progress towards individualised goals was clear. The data have implications for examining the assessment measures typically used to document functional outcomes in clinical intervention. Future directions indicate a need to pursue more ecologically valid assessment methods. What this paper adds: What is already known on the subject: Recent literature has focused on the benefits of group intervention for cognitive communication diffuclties after traumatic brain injury (TBI). However, research to date examines only face‐to‐face group rehabilitation. As there has been a demand for a shift in the way we communicate worldwide, we must make adaptations to current intervention procedures to continue to serve individuals with diverse communication needs. What this paper adds to existing knowledge: This study contributes new information about the feasibility of a virtual communication skills group for individuals with TBI. This virtual INSIGHT (Improving Natural Social Interaction: Group ehabilitation after Traumatic brain injury) group intervention facilitates progress towards collaboratively set communication goals and the online setting has the potential to increase the accessibility of these services. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: Progress towards cognitive and social communication goals can be facilitated by an online group intervention. However, this progress was not correlated with scores on standard assessments of cognitive communication, social communication and quality of life. This has implications for the evaluation of the assessments typically used and their ecological validity and applicability to the communication context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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21. Use of Community Engagement Studios to Adapt a Hybrid Effectiveness-Implementation Study of Social Incentives and Physical Activity for the STEP Together Study.
- Author
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Scheffey, Krista, Avelis, Jade, Patel, Mitesh, Oon, Ai Leen, Evans, Chalanda, and Glanz, Karen
- Subjects
COMMUNITY support ,MEETINGS ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,FAMILIES ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,TELEMEDICINE ,CHARITY ,HEALTH behavior ,HEALTH promotion ,PHYSICAL activity ,COVID-19 pandemic ,GAMIFICATION ,PATIENT participation - Abstract
Physical activity is known to contribute to good health, but most adults in the United States do not meet recommended physical activity guidelines. Social incentive interventions that leverage insights from behavioral economics have increased physical activity in short-term trials, but there is limited evidence of their effectiveness in community settings or their long-term effectiveness. The STEP Together study is a Hybrid Type 1 effectiveness-implementation study to address these evidence and implementation gaps. This paper describes the process of adapting study procedures prior to the effectiveness trial using Community Engagement (CE) Studios, facilitated meetings during which community members provide feedback on research projects. Six CE Studios were held with community members from the priority population. They were conducted remotely because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Fifteen liaisons representing 13 community organizations and 21 community members from different neighborhoods in Philadelphia participated. Three elements of the study design were modified based on feedback from the CE Studios: lowering the age requirement for an 'older adult', clarifying the definition of family members to include second-degree relatives, and adding a 6-month survey. These adaptations will improve the fit of the effectiveness trial to the local context and improve participant engagement and retention. CE Studios can be used to adapt intervention strategies and other aspects of study design during hybrid implementation-effectiveness trials. This approach was successfully used with remote online participation due to the COVID-19 pandemic and serves as a model for future community-engaged implementation research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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22. A Call to Action: Diversifying theTeacher Education Workforce, a Look at One State’s Efforts.
- Author
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Norris, Katherine E. L., Cole-Malot, Donna-Marie, and Whitaker II, Ronald W.
- Subjects
TEACHER education ,BEGINNING teachers ,SUPPLY & demand of teachers ,LABOR supply ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges - Abstract
Over the last few years, much attention has been focused on the nationwide teacher shortage. As teachers begin to retire in record numbers, and the number of students entering teacher education majors continues to decline, concern around the teacher shortage heightens (US Dept. of Ed., 2016). The numbers are even more dire when looking at Teachers of Color entering the profession (US Dept. of Ed., 2016). To address this TOC shortage, Pennsylvania’s Department of Education called for Institutions of Higher Education to create programs aimed at attracting and retaining students of color in their teacher education programs. The Aspiring to Educate (A2E) program was Pennsylvania’s intentional attempt to diversify the teacher workforce. This paper describes the work of three Black educators, as they examine their positionality and work independently and collectively to answer PA’s call to action through the implementation of start-up Grow Your Own programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
23. "This Thing Is a Joke": How Working-Class Young Americans Make Meaning out of Politics in an Era of Distrust and Isolation.
- Author
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Silva, Jennifer M.
- Subjects
WORKING class ,YOUNG adults ,FAMILY structure ,GENDER identity ,GROUP identity ,OPPRESSION ,DESPAIR - Abstract
Copyright of Kölner Zeitschrift für Soziologie und Sozialpsychologie ( KZfSS) is the property of Springer Nature and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
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24. Finding, distinguishing, and understanding overlooked policy entrepreneurs.
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Arnold, Gwen, Klasic, Meghan, Wu, Changtong, Schomburg, Madeline, and York, Abigail
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BUSINESSPEOPLE ,SCHOLARS ,POLICY sciences ,EMPIRICAL research ,PRESS ,GAS well drilling - Abstract
Scholars have spent decades arguing that policy entrepreneurs, change agents who work individually and in groups to influence the policy process, can be crucial in introducing policy innovation and spurring policy change. How to identify policy entrepreneurs empirically has received less attention. This oversight is consequential because scholars trying to understand when policy entrepreneurs emerge, and why, and what makes them more or less successful, need to be able to identify these change agents reliably and accurately. This paper explores the ways policy entrepreneurs are currently identified and highlights issues with current approaches. We introduce a new technique for eliciting and distinguishing policy entrepreneurs, coupling automated and manual analysis of local news media and a survey of policy entrepreneur candidates. We apply this technique to the empirical case of unconventional oil and gas drilling in Pennsylvania and derive some tentative results concerning factors which increase entrepreneurial efficacy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
25. Living by the Symbolic River: Landscape Effects of Post-Industrial Water Narratives of the Susquehanna River.
- Author
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Marsh, Ben
- Subjects
CULTURAL landscapes ,LANDSCAPES ,SYSTEMS theory ,ECONOMIC systems ,NARRATIVES - Abstract
This paper examines ways in which human values toward surface water, especially large rivers, are relevant to land-use decisions in the watersheds. The study's focus is the symbolic riverscape constructed by residents local to the Susquehanna River at the confluence of its branches in central Pennsylvania. The main analytical tool is the cultural landscape, a conceptualization of the ways in which alteration of the physical world is the product of human value systems. The paper traces the symbolic weights apparent in discourses about the Susquehanna River with regard to environmental use and abuse in the watershed, through qualitative analysis of public expressions of meaning and valuation. The conclusions emphasize an evolution of the meaning of the river toward a central role as an integral and intricate part of the human experience on the landscape, rather than its earlier role as one functional part of the economic system. Land-use actions consonant with that new value are now favored. This work is offered to suggest that land system science, which is highly effective in understanding altered natural systems and their consequences, can benefit from a fuller engagement with more-intimate human aspects of landscape such as symbols, meaning, and narrative. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Before-and-After Portraiture: Photography and Time at the Carlisle Indian Industrial School.
- Author
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Carrión, María Beatriz H.
- Subjects
VOCATIONAL schools ,COLONIES ,PHOTOGRAPHY ,PORTRAIT painting - Abstract
This paper examines the before-and-after portraits of the Diné student Tom Torlino, which were produced by American photographer John N. Choate at the Carlisle Indian Industrial School in Pennsylvania between 1882 and 1885. Unlike previous analyses that have focused on the colonial and racial politics of the images, the present study centers the temporality of the portraits and their portrayal of Torlino's dislocation from a Native to a Western regime of time. Specifically, the paper examines three aspects of the imagery. First, it studies how before-and-after photographs reduce multi-year processes to two contrasting images and, second, it analyzes how the pictures portray a dislocation from the non-conventional, non-linear temporality that Torlino experienced as a child to Western time. Finally, it also establishes that the sitter's possession of a watch can be interpreted as a reassertion of agency and individuality amidst an oppressive context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
27. Unsubscribed and undemanding: Partisanship and the minimal effects of a field experiment encouraging local news consumption.
- Author
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Hopkins, Daniel J. and Gorton, Tori
- Subjects
NEWSPAPERS ,SUBNATIONAL governments ,PARTISANSHIP ,NEWSPAPER subscriptions - Abstract
Local newspapers convey extensive subnational political information but have dwindling audiences. In a nationalized and polarized information environment, can online interventions increase state/local news consumption and with what effects? We explore this question via a preregistered experiment randomizing Pennsylvania residents (n = 5059) to staggered interventions encouraging news consumption from leading state newspapers. A total of 2529 individuals were offered free online subscriptions, but only 44 subscribed; we find little evidence of treatment effects on knowledge, engagement, or attitudes. We then administered a second treatment element—promoting subnational news directly via Facebook feeds—with a higher application rate but similarly limited impacts. Observational analyses of these respondents and separate national samples show that Democratic political partisanship has come to predict local newspaper subscriptions. Contemporary local newspapers may face a demand‐side dilemma: The engaged citizens who formerly read them now prefer national, partisan content. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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28. A raciolinguistic perspective on career readiness standards in career and technical education: Professionalism and communication skills as white linguistic practices.
- Author
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Emerick, Mark R. and LeMaster, Pauline E.
- Subjects
TECHNICAL education ,CAREER academies ,IDEOLOGY ,PROFESSIONALISM ,COMMUNICATIVE competence - Abstract
In this paper, we draw on raciolinguistic ideologies and chronotopes to critique career readiness, a race-evasive educational policy discourse that purportedly benefits all students, as grounded in white linguistic ideologies. Drawing on critical discourse analysis, we analyze state-level career readiness policy documents from Pennsylvania and interviews with teachers and administrators from an ethnographic study at a career and technical education center. Findings show how educators reproduce notions of career readiness as an implicit endorsement of white linguistic norms, informed by standard language ideology, which delegitimizes the linguistic practices of racialized speakers. We conclude with a discussion of the implications for school systems to move toward more inclusive and equitable educational policies and practices for English learners in U.S. schools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
29. From the Holocaust to the Tree of Life Shooting: An Oral History Conversation with Judah Samet.
- Author
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Miller, Eric D.
- Subjects
HOLOCAUST, 1939-1945 ,CONVERSATION ,PRISONERS ,DISASTERS ,MASS casualties - Abstract
This paper features an oral history conversation and interview that the author had with Judah Samet who survived imprisonment in the Bergen-Belsen Concentration Camp during the Holocaust. Samet also survived a near brush with death as he was arriving to attend services at the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania as the deadliest anti-Semitic attack in American history was underway. Samet would later be a featured guest during the 2019 State of the Union Address. This paper is predominantly focused on some select larger questions posed by the author to Samet that considered aspects of these facets of Samet's life history. Some larger reflections on the interview and The Tree of Life shooting, in particular, are also discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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30. The Cosmology of Evidence: Suffering, Science, and Biological Witness After Three Mile Island.
- Author
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Mitchell, M. X.
- Subjects
PHYSICAL cosmology ,NUCLEAR reactors ,NUCLEAR accidents ,ENVIRONMENTAL justice ,ISLANDS - Abstract
The 1979 partial nuclear reactor meltdown at Three Mile Island was simultaneously hyper-visible and hidden from public view. It was the subject of non-stop media attention, but its causes and consequences required expert explanation. No fire or explosion marked the moment when insensible radionuclides escaped the facility. Yet, residents recalled a variety of troubling sights, sounds, odors, tastes, and sensations. Public distrust percolated in the interstices between government assertions that little radiation had escaped the facility and residents' sense memories of the incident. This article traces intertwined networks of activists from Japan and Pennsylvania as they mobilized legally, politically, and scientifically to develop evidence about the offsite effects of Three Mile Island. Exploring the distinct cosmology of evidence that activists marshaled, the article shows how they placed the messy, contingent, dynamic living world at the center of inquiries about the meltdown's consequences. Activists developed new practices of biological witness that reconfigured the interplay between scientific, legal, and moral authority, while concurrently reformulating sufferers' subjectivities and notions of scientific objectivity. In the process, they suggested that environmental justice entailed epistemic justice. Their cosmology of evidence served as an argument and a material proof that the beloved but suffering living world, and the sciences used to understand it, could and should frame the governance of industrial society's invisible harms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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31. Generating Actionable Evidence for School-Based Mental Health Service Delivery: Public-Academic Partnership Based Evaluations.
- Author
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Kang-Yi, Christina D., Kuriyan, Aparajita, Kinkler, Grace, Pisciella, Aelesia E., Williams, Tamra, and Wolk, Courtney Benjamin
- Subjects
SCHOOL mental health services ,PUBLIC relations ,EVALUATION of human services programs ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,MATHEMATICAL models ,BEHAVIORAL sciences ,MEDICAL care ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,MEDICAL care costs ,HUMAN services programs ,HEALTH insurance reimbursement ,THEORY ,RESEARCH funding ,POLICY sciences ,MEDICAID ,HEALTH promotion - Abstract
Public-academic partnership-based program evaluations can generate actionable evidence for policymaking, program design and implementation in improving school-based mental health service delivery. The University of Pennsylvania Center for Mental Health and public behavioral health care agencies in Philadelphia in the United States have evaluated Philadelphia's school mental health programs reimbursable through Medicaid billing since 2008. The variety of evaluations include (1) examining acute mental health service use of children receiving school-based mental health care and Medicaid expenditure, (2) examining children's externalizing and internalizing behaviors to measure school mental health providers' performance, and (3) examining effects of different types of school mental health programs on children's behavioral health functioning, school outcomes, and other out-of-school service use. This paper reports key findings of these evaluations, discusses how programs have been refined based on evaluation results, and shares lessons learned for successful public-academic partnership-based evaluations to promote use of actionable evidence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. The Long Run Impact of Pennsylvania’s Fracking Boom on Local Residents’ Income.
- Author
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Latzko, David A.
- Subjects
HYDRAULIC fracturing ,INCOME ,RURAL geography ,RESIDENTS - Abstract
This paper presents a case study investigation into the effects of the Pennsylvania fracking boom on the incomes of local residents. Per capita income is 11 to 19 percent higher in counties with a high level of fracking activity compared to a comparable synthetic control without fracking activity. In the long run the component of residents’ income most impacted by fracking is royalties received by the landowners of drilling sites. Fracking has had a far more modest, fleeting effect on the economies of rural areas of Pennsylvania with small or moderate numbers of wells drilled. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
33. Designing for Ab Initio Blended Learning Environments: Identifying Systemic Contradictions
- Author
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Ó Doinn, Oisín
- Abstract
In recent years, Computer Assisted Language Learning (CALL) has become more accessible than ever before. This is largely due to the proliferation of mobile computing devices and the growth of open online language-learning resources. Additionally, since the beginning of the millennium there has been massive growth in the number of students studying a foreign language in the European Union (Eurostat, 2012). Unfortunately, according to the Education and Training Monitor 20162 , within formal education at all levels, there is a lack of guidance regarding the integration of CALL tools with face-to-face classroom instruction. This is particularly in relation to lower-level language instruction. This paper presents some preliminary findings of the author's doctoral research project that addresses the question: what contradictions and tensions emerge in ab initio blended language learning courses? Capturing the development of human activity in complex learning environments and the difficulties that manifest themselves therein is a challenging methodological task. This paper proposes that Cultural-Historical Activity Theory (CHAT) is a useful conceptual tool for Blended Learning (BL) researchers in identifying emerging contradictions with complex learning environments. [For the complete volume, see ED578177.]
- Published
- 2017
34. Vices in autonomous paternalism: The case of advance directives and persons living with dementia1.
- Subjects
PATERNALISM ,PATIENT autonomy ,CAPACITY (Law) ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,SELF-perception ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,DEMENTIA patients ,ADVANCE directives (Medical care) ,LIFE ,PHILOSOPHY ,BIOETHICS - Abstract
Advance directives are intended to extend patient autonomy by enabling patients to prospectively direct the care of their future incapacitated selves. There has been much discussion about issues such as whether the future incompetent self is identical to the agent who issues the advance directive or whether advance directives can legitimately secure patient autonomy. However, there is another important question to ask: to what extent and in what conditions is it ethically appropriate for one to limit the liberty or agency of one's future incompetent self by issuing an advance directive? In this paper, I use a virtue‐ethical approach to explore this question, focusing on the case of an advance directive for the future self with moderate dementia. First, I examine virtuous attitudes with regard to autonomy and argue that one can manifest vices or ethically undesirable character traits in trying to intervene in the future self's life. In particular, I argue that this case can manifest vices such as disdainfulness, intellectual arrogance, and self‐dictatorship, which is the vice of trying to control one's life to an excessive degree, and that a self‐dictator fails to give due moral consideration to the future self's liberty or agency. I then introduce the Daoist idea of wu‐wei, which recommends embracement of what happens in one's life, as one of the possible remedies for the overemphasis on the value of autonomy and control. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Seed-Fill-Shift-Repair: A redistricting heuristic for civic deliberation.
- Author
-
Haas, Christian, Hachadoorian, Lee, Kimbrough, Steven O., Miller, Peter, and Murphy, Frederic
- Subjects
AMERICAN Community Survey ,DELIBERATION ,CONSTRAINT satisfaction ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ALGORITHMS ,MOTIVATIONAL interviewing - Abstract
Political redistricting is the redrawing of electoral district boundaries. It is normally undertaken to reflect population changes. The process can be abused, in what is called gerrymandering, to favor one party or interest group over another, resulting thereby in broadly undemocratic outcomes that misrepresent the views of the voters. Gerrymandering is especially vexing in the United States. This paper introduces an algorithm, with an implementation, for creating districting plans (whether for political redistricting or for other districting applications). The algorithm, Seed-Fill-Shift-Repair (SFSR), is demonstrated for Congressional redistricting in American states. SFSR is able to create thousands of valid redistricting plans, which may then be used as points of departure for public deliberation regarding how best to redistrict a given polity. The main objectives of this paper are: (i) to present SFSR in a broadly accessible form, including code that implements it and test data, so that it may be used for both civic deliberations by the public and for research purposes. (ii) to make the case for what SFSR essays to do, which is to approach redistricting, and districting generally, from a constraint satisfaction perspective and from the perspective of producing a plurality of feasible solutions that may then serve in subsequent deliberations. To further these goals, we make the code publicly available. The paper presents, for illustration purposes, a corpus of 11,206 valid redistricting plans for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania (produced by SFSR), using the 2017 American Community Survey, along with descriptive statistics. Also, the paper presents 1,000 plans for each of the states of Arizona, Michigan, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin, using the 2018 American Community Survey, along with descriptive statistics on these plans and the computations involved in their creation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Iterative Feature Engineering through Text Replays of Model Errors
- Author
-
Slater, Stefan, Baker, Ryan S., and Wang, Yeyu
- Abstract
Feature engineering, the construction of contextual and relevant features from system log data, is a crucial component of developing robust and interpretable models in educational data mining contexts. The practice of feature engineering depends on domain experts and system developers working in tandem in order to creatively identify actions and behaviors of interest. In this paper we outline a method of iterative feature engineering using the misclassifications of earlier models. By selecting cases where earlier models and ground truth disagree, we can focus attention on specific behaviors, or patterns of behavior, that a model is not using in its predictions. We show that iterative feature engineering on cases of false positives and false negatives improved a model predicting quitting in an educational video game by 15%. We close by discussing applications of this method for addressing model performance gaps across different classes of learners, as well as precautions against model overfitting with using this method of feature engineering. [For the full proceedings, see ED607784.]
- Published
- 2020
37. Navigating Federal and State HDD Guidelines for Interstate Natural Gas Pipeline Crossings.
- Author
-
Winston, David and Ariaratnam, Samuel T.
- Subjects
NATURAL gas pipelines ,TRENCHLESS construction ,ENGINEERING mathematics ,GOVERNMENT agencies ,INDEPENDENT regulatory commissions ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection - Abstract
Feasibility and suitability assessments have become increasingly important for trenchless projects, as some Federal and State permitting agencies have released guidance on the information required to complete their environmental review. The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) released guidance in October 2019, and the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (PADEP) released a draft Trenchless Technology Technical Guidance Document for use by project applicants when considering trenchless crossing methods in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. For complex trenchless installations and those that involve multiple permitting agencies with different guidelines, adherence to these guidelines has become increasingly important in avoiding or minimizing potential permitting and project delays. This paper reviews the requirements established by FERC and PADEP as a case study that may be indicative of the regulatory trend emerging in various jurisdictions across the nation. Public data research, geohazards evaluation, geophysical evaluation, and geotechnical investigation are describe, while following both the FERC and PADEP trenchless technology guidelines. Finally, this paper demonstrates the consolidation of data gathering and engineering analysis to select the most practical and least impacting trenchless alternative. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. From going on vacation to falling off a benefits cliff: understanding the range of low-wage workers' perceptions of a union-negotiated wage increase.
- Author
-
Ballentine, Kess L., Goodkind, Sara, Waton, Adela, Thyberg, Christopher T., Schleitwiler, Tess, and Shook, Jeffrey J.
- Subjects
- *
EMPLOYEE rights , *RESEARCH funding , *LABOR unions , *NEGOTIATION , *INTERVIEWING , *WAGES , *HOSPITALS , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *LONGITUDINAL method , *SOUND recordings , *RACE , *SOCIAL case work , *RESEARCH methodology , *QUALITY of life , *FAMILY structure , *DATA analysis software , *EMPLOYEE attitudes - Abstract
Social workers have long been active in social and political organizing to ensure a living wage. Yet recent social work research largely neglects efforts to raise wages and effective means for organizing to do so. This paper draws on in-depth interviews from a longitudinal study of low-wage hospital workers who formed a union and negotiated annual, incremental wage increases to achieve a $15 minimum wage floor to understand their perceptions of the effects of the initial wage increase. Results show workers have a wide spectrum of perceptions, with many feeling no effect or even a negative effect due to losses in public benefits. A visualization used to aid interpretation of results identifies race and family structure as salient factors, pointing to the role of structural discrimination in experiences and perceptions of wage increases. Given that this workplace, like many other employers and localities, has implemented a $15 minimum wage through incremental raises across time, it is important that social workers be aware of the experiences of workers at each stage of this process. This study examines the impact of the first raise, establishing a framework from which future research can examine how individuals' perceptions and experiences develop over time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Cyber versus Brick and Mortar: Achievement, Attainment, and Postsecondary Outcomes in Pennsylvania Charter High Schools.
- Author
-
Cordes, Sarah A.
- Subjects
CHARTER schools ,LOW-income students ,HIGH schools ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,ONLINE education ,HIGH school students - Abstract
The charter school sector has expanded beyond brick-and-mortar schools to cyber schools, where enrollment grew almost tenfold between 2015 and 2020. While a large literature documents the effects of charter schools on test scores, fewer studies explore impacts on attainment or postsecondary outcomes and there is almost no work exploring the consequences of cyber charter enrollment for these outcomes. In this paper, I examine the impacts of Pennsylvania's charter high schools on student attendance, achievement, graduation, and postsecondary enrollment, distinguishing the impacts of brick-and-mortar from cyber schools. I find that brick-and-mortar charters have no or positive effects across outcomes, and that effects are concentrated in urban districts and among Black and economically disadvantaged students. By contrast, attending a cyber charter is associated with almost universally worse outcomes, with little evidence of heterogeneity. Students who enroll in a cyber charter at the beginning of ninth grade are 9.5 percentage points (pp) less likely to graduate, 16.8 pp less likely to enroll in college, and 15.2 pp less likely to persist in a postsecondary institution beyond one semester. These results suggest that additional regulation and oversight of cyber charter schools is warranted and also bring into question the efficacy of online education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. A Cross-Sectional Analysis of Community Perceptions of Flu and COVID-19 Vaccines at Turtle Creek Primary Care Center.
- Author
-
Murali, Anjana, Sojati, Jorna, Levochkina, Marina, Pressimone, Catherine, Griffith, Kobi, Fan, Erica, and Dakroub, Allie
- Subjects
CROSS-sectional method ,IMMUNIZATION ,HEALTH services accessibility ,PATIENT safety ,PRIMARY health care ,VACCINATION ,INFLUENZA vaccines ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,PARAMETERS (Statistics) ,KRUSKAL-Wallis Test ,FISHER exact test ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,COVID-19 vaccines ,MANN Whitney U Test ,CHI-squared test ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,MATHEMATICAL statistics ,ODDS ratio ,VACCINE hesitancy ,STATISTICS ,RESEARCH methodology ,MINORITIES ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,DATA analysis software ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,MEDICAL mistrust ,PATIENTS' attitudes - Abstract
Background: Influenza (flu) and COVID-19 vaccination rates are subpar across the US, especially in racial and/or socioeconomic minority groups who are understudied in public health literature. Objective: The objective of this mixed-methods study was to elucidate attitudes of patients at the Turtle Creek Primary Care Center, a clinic that cares for ∼70% non-white patients, towards flu and COVID-19 vaccines, with the goal of establishing vaccine education gaps and increasing vaccine uptake in minority communities. Design/Patients: This study was conducted as a cross-sectional analysis. Authors completed 123 patient phone surveys of patients cared for at the Turtle Creek clinic inquiring about flu and COVID-19 infection status and vaccination uptake (August 26–October 10, 2021). Approach/Key Results: We found that rates of vaccination were subpar in the Turtle Creek community, with only 54% having received the COVID-19 vaccine and only 44% receiving the flu vaccine regularly. There was a strong association between COVID-19 and flu vaccine acceptance and a notable correlation between vaccine acceptance and age. When assessing how vaccine acceptance was influenced by trusted sources of information, those who cited trusting "medical professionals" and "word of mouth" had higher odds of COVID-19 vaccine acceptance but those who cited trusting "social media" had decreased odds of acceptance. Finally, we uncovered 14 common factors for either vaccine acceptance or refusal that clustered into four overarching themes of trust, need, safety, and availability. Conclusion: These data highlight the necessity of improved vaccine education and reveal targetable populations and approaches for disseminating vaccine information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. The Impact of COVID-19 on Sentencing Practices.
- Author
-
Zvonkovich, Jordan, Kleiman, Matthew, Hester, Rhys, and Strange, C. Clare
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,COVID-19 ,RACIAL inequality ,COURT system ,MULTIVARIATE analysis - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic significantly impacted court operations across the country. In March and April of 2020 "business-as-usual" was upended and the entire court system was forced to respond in an unprecedented way. Using Pennsylvania Commission on Sentencing data, we explore the impact that COVID-19 had on sentencing outcomes. Three distinct periods: pre-COVID-19, the onset of COVID-19 during which an emergency judicial order limited court operations, and a period after the order was lifted are defined to compare trends and assess differences. Utilizing the natural experiment created by the pandemic we present a descriptive and multivariate analysis of sentencing practices focused on racial disparities. The paper employs two theoretical frameworks (focal concerns and the liberation hypothesis) to motivate competing expectations regarding sentencing behavior and disparities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Cycles‐L: A Coupled, 3‐D, Land Surface, Hydrologic, and Agroecosystem Landscape Model.
- Author
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Shi, Yuning, Montes, Felipe, and Kemanian, Armen R.
- Subjects
ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,CROP yields ,STANDARD deviations ,ENVIRONMENTAL management ,DECISION support systems ,WATERSHED management ,PRECISION farming - Abstract
Managing landscapes to increase agricultural productivity and environmental stewardship can be informed by spatially‐distributed models that operate at spatial and temporal scales that are intervention‐relevant. This paper presents Cycles‐L, a landscape‐scale agroecosystem and hydrologic modeling system, using as a test case a watershed in Pennsylvania. Cycles‐L emerges from melding the landscape and hydrology structure of Flux‐PIHM, a 3‐D land surface hydrologic model, with the agroecosystem processes in the Cycles model. Consequently, Cycles‐L can simulate processes affected by topography, soil heterogeneity, and management practices, owing to its physically‐based hydrology that can simulate horizontal and vertical transport of solutes with water. The model was tested at a 730‐ha experimental watershed within the Mahantango Creek watershed. Cycles‐L simulated well stream water and mineral nitrogen discharge (Nash‐Sutcliffe coefficient 0.55 and 0.60, respectively) and grain yield (root mean square error 1.2 Mg ha−1). Cycles‐L outputs are as good or better than those obtained with the uncoupled Flux‐PIHM (water discharge) and Cycles (grain yield) models. Modeled spatial patterns of nitrogen fluxes like denitrification illustrate the combined control of crop management and topography. For example, denitrification is almost twice as high when simulated with Cycles‐L than when simulated with Cycles 1‐D. Due to its spatial and temporal resolution, Cycles‐L fills a gap in the availability of models that operate at a scale relevant to evaluate interventions in the landscape. Cycles‐L can become a central component in tools for climate change scenario analysis, precision agriculture, precision conservation, and artificial intelligence‐based decision support systems. Key Points: Cycles‐L is a coupled agroecosystem hydrologic modeling system that couples an agroecosystem model with a 3‐D land surface hydrologic modelCycles‐L simulated well stream discharge, grain crops yield, and nitrogen exports in the stream at a 730‐ha agricultural experimental watershedCycles‐L can simulate landscape level processes affected by climate, topography, soil heterogeneity, and management practices [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. COVID‐19 vaccination and decreased death rates: A county‐level study in Pennsylvania.
- Author
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Ramunno, Maria and Savitz, Ryan
- Subjects
COVID-19 vaccines ,DEATH rate ,COVID-19 pandemic ,VACCINE effectiveness ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission - Abstract
In this paper we examine the relationship between vaccination against COVID‐19 and both the death rate from COVID‐19 and the rate of COVID‐19 spread. Our goal is determine if vaccination is associated with reduced death and/or spread of disease at the local level. This analysis was conducted at the county level in the state of Pennsylvania, United States of America, with data that were collected during the first half of 2022 from the state of Pennsylvania's Covid Dashboard (COVID‐19 Data for Pennsylvania (pa.gov). This study finds the vaccines to be highly effective in preventing death from Corona virus, even at a time when there was a mismatch between the vaccines and the prevalent variants. Specifically, a 1% increase in vaccination rate was found to correspond to a 0.751% decrease in death rate (95% confidence interval [0.236%, 1.266%]). Given that, during this time period, the vaccines being used were not geared specifically toward the common variants at that time, we found no statistically significant relationship between disease spread and vaccination rate at the county level. These results support previous findings from across the world that Covid vaccination is highly efficacious in preventing death from the disease. Even during a time when vaccine design was not optimally matched with the prevailing strains, vaccination was found to reduce death rate. Hence, improving global vaccine availability is vitally important, to achieve necessary outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Methane Concentration Forecasting Based on Sentinel-5P Products and Recurrent Neural Networks.
- Author
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Psomouli, Theofani, Kansizoglou, Ioannis, and Gasteratos, Antonios
- Subjects
RECURRENT neural networks ,ARTIFICIAL neural networks ,GREENHOUSE gas mitigation ,ATMOSPHERE ,CLIMATE change ,ATMOSPHERIC methane ,ENGINEERING geology - Abstract
The increase in the concentration of geological gas emissions in the atmosphere and particularly the increase of methane is considered by the majority of the scientific community as the main cause of global climate change. The main reasons that place methane at the center of interest, lie in its high global warming potential (GWP) and its lifetime in the atmosphere. Anthropogenic processes, like engineering geology ones, highly affect the daily profile of gasses in the atmosphere. Should direct measures be taken to reduce emissions of methane, immediate global warming mitigation could be achieved. Due to its significance, methane has been monitored by many space missions over the years and as of 2017 by the Sentinel-5P mission. Considering the above, we conclude that monitoring and predicting future methane concentration based on past data is of vital importance for the course of climate change over the next decades. To that end, we introduce a method exploiting state-of-the-art recurrent neural networks (RNNs), which have been proven particularly effective in regression problems, such as time-series forecasting. Aligned with the green artificial intelligence (AI) initiative, the paper at hand investigates the ability of different RNN architectures to predict future methane concentration in the most active regions of Texas, Pennsylvania and West Virginia, by using Sentinel-5P methane data and focusing on computational and complexity efficiency. We conduct several empirical studies and utilize the obtained results to conclude the most effective architecture for the specific use case, establishing a competitive prediction performance that reaches up to a 0.7578 mean squared error on the evaluation set. Yet, taking into consideration the overall efficiency of the investigated models, we conclude that the exploitation of RNN architectures with less number of layers and a restricted number of units, i.e., one recurrent layer with 8 neurons, is able to better compensate for competitive prediction performance, meanwhile sustaining lower computational complexity and execution time. Finally, we compare RNN models against deep neural networks along with the well-established support vector regression, clearly highlighting the supremacy of the recurrent ones, as well as discuss future extensions of the introduced work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. A solar radiation and biosand filtration system for cooking and water treatment.
- Author
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Shollenberger, H., Mathews IV, G., Young, M., Clark, S., and Chen, Y.
- Subjects
WATER purification ,WATER filtration ,SOLAR radiation ,DRINKING water standards ,WELLHEAD protection ,FOOD pasteurization ,WATER use - Abstract
A significant portion of the world's rural population does not have access to adequate sources of electricity and fuel to produce healthy food and clean water. Many rural areas, however, have an abundance of solar radiation which can be harnessed for cooking and water treatment. This paper presents the design and testing of a solar radiation and biosand filtration system that can provide cooking and water treatment capabilities. The proposed system addresses a need for a solar cooker that is durable, theft resistant, and efficient for use by an entire village. Thermal pasteurization is used for water treatment in the proposed system, and a built prototype is analyzed for heat transfer and water treatment efficiency. Water treatment is assessed through turbidity testing and Escherichia coli + other coliform counts. Given proper sunlight exposure, the proposed system reaches adequate temperatures to pasteurize water as documented with thermocouples, but testing in central Pennsylvania is difficult because of relatively low direct normal irradiance. A decrease in Escherichia coli and other coliform counts has been observed for post-treatment versus pretreatment water samples, but the counts are not sufficient to meet the Environmental Protection Agency drinking water standards. This correlates with the inability to maintain the warmer temperatures in central Pennsylvania during the cooler nights. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Practising feminist politics in legal geographic research.
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LEGAL research ,LEGAL professions ,DOMESTIC violence ,SEXUAL assault ,GEOGRAPHERS - Abstract
In this paper, I reflect on my experiences conducting legal geographic research within a Central Pennsylvania courtroom. This research builds on my former professional experience as a legal advocate where I worked for five years providing advocacy services to over 800 survivors of domestic violence and sexual assault. I discuss how I incorporated two common advocacy practices – accompaniment and institutional advocacy – into my research praxis as a means to fulfil my commitment to conduct activist research as a feminist legal geographer. I argue that the advocacy skills I learned outside of academia helped me navigate the tensions of studying power with legal actors in the privileged space of the courtroom. This paper contributes to recent interest in the methodological practices that legal geographers utilise within courtroom spaces, while also encouraging legal geographers to consider what knowledge and skills – beyond academic methodologies and methods – might serve to support activist research within spaces of power. In this paper, I reflect on my experiences conducting legal geographic research within a Central Pennsylvania courtroom. I argue that the advocacy skills I learned outside of academia helped me navigate the tensions of studying power with legal actors in the privileged space of the courtroom. This paper contributes to recent interest in the methodological practices that legal geographers utilise within courtroom spaces, while also encouraging legal geographers to consider what knowledge and skills – beyond academic methodologies and methods – might serve to support activist research within spaces of power. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The Problems with Color-Blind Leadership Revealed: A Call for Race-Conscious Leaders
- Author
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Flores, Osly and Gunzenhauser, Michael G.
- Abstract
This paper draws from data tied to a larger year-long interview study with 22 school leaders focused on how school leaders define and respond to the issue of "achievement gap." For this paper, we examine how school leaders employ the practice of colorblind ideology, standpoint, or perspective. We explore three emergent findings of how a colorblind perspective influences school leadership practices: (1) non-reflective position, (2) recognition without action, and (3) the existence of what we are calling "multiple lacks." This study attempts to make known the complexity of colorblindness as a phenomenon and explain not only its tenacity, but also potential breaks in its hold on leadership practice.
- Published
- 2017
48. The Ends Against the Middle: The Case of Municipal Golf.
- Author
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Li, Xiaoxiao, Mao, Wen, Zaleski, Peter A., and Kenny, Catherine
- Subjects
GOLF ,GOLF courses ,PUBLIC spending ,CITIES & towns - Abstract
The theory and empirical analysis of the public provision of private goods have primarily considered the provision of education and healthcare. In this paper, we extend the application of the theories presented in Epple and Romano (1996a, 1996b) to the provision of a more private good—a golf course. While there may be some public social benefits of recreation including golf, for the most part, golf is a private good. We analyze golf course ownership in Pennsylvania, a state with a diversity of municipalities. Our main findings support the ends-against-the-middle hypothesis in which municipalities with a majority of low-income voters and high-income voters are less likely to own a municipal golf course. Municipalities with a majority of middle-income voters are more likely to own a municipal golf course. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. PointedSDMs: An R package to help facilitate the construction of integrated species distribution models.
- Author
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Mostert, Philip S. and O'Hara, Robert B.
- Subjects
SPECIES distribution ,GENERAL practitioners ,SOFTWARE development tools ,STATISTICAL models - Abstract
Ecological data are being collected at a large scale from a multitude of different sources, each with their own sampling protocols and assumptions. As a result, the integration of disparate datasets is a rapidly growing area in quantitative ecology, and is subsequently becoming a major asset in understanding the shifts and trends in species' distributions.However, the tools and software available to construct statistical models to integrate these disparate datasets into a unified framework is lacking. This has made these methods inaccessible to general practitioners and has stagnated the growth of data integration in more applied settings.We therefore present PointedSDMs: an easy to use R package used to construct integrated species distribution models. It provides functions to easily format the data, fit the models in a computationally efficient way and presents the output in a format that is convenient for additional work.This paper illustrates the different uses and functions available in the package, which are designed to simplify the modelling of integrated models. A case study using the package is also presented: combining three datasets coming from different sampling protocols, all containing records of Setophaga caerulescens across Pennsylvania state. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Considerations for updating programming courses.
- Author
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Ali, Azad, Chaudhary, Pankaj, and Wibowo, Kustim
- Subjects
COMPUTER programming ,EDUCATORS - Abstract
Educators in computing-related degree programs (CS, IT, and IS) may need to regularly update their courses and programs to keep them relevant to the in-demand industry skills. Continuous and rapid changes require regular revisions in computing programs and curricula. Courses that teach computer programming, especially introductory programming language courses, need to be updated to reflect the languages in demand in the industry. Not being current with curriculum updates for these courses will likely put the programs behind due to outdated curricula. This is the case for the computer science (CS) program at a university located in Western Pennsylvania. The syllabi for the programming courses have not been updated for some time. In the process of updating the programming courses, an important question to address is the critical factors to consider when updating the syllabi of the programming course(s). This paper reviews the relevant literature and discusses the factors to be taken into consideration when updating computer programming courses. A set of recommendations for course updates are provided toward the end of the paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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