7 results on '"Piscitelli A"'
Search Results
2. 'The best day in my whole entire life' – Young Children, Wellbeing and the Arts.
- Author
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Piscitelli, Barbara
- Subjects
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WELL-being , *ART festivals , *ART & culture , *ARTS , *FESTIVALS , *CHILDREN - Abstract
For more than 25 years, a large percentage of young Australian children has been involved in arts and cultural experiences, but very little systematic information has been gathered to understand what they gain from these encounters. This article investigates young children's cultural engagement and wellbeing within a festival experience – as creators making work for an exhibition at the festival, and as consumers participating in theatre, dance and festival activities. The case study involved 105 children (64 girls and 41 boys, aged 7 years 11 months to 9 years 1 month) and used a mixed methods approach incorporating quantitative surveys, qualitative focus groups and participant observation. Though the surveys did not show any changes in children's views of wellbeing before, during or after the festival, focus group conversations revealed almost unanimous perspectives of positive wellbeing after the festival. The findings indicate that children's wellbeing is a complex phenomenon that may be best explored using composite standpoints of children, teachers, parents and artists for achieving a clearer understanding. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Preschoolers and Parents as Artists and Art Appreciators.
- Author
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Piscitelli, Barbara
- Abstract
Discusses the Australian "Share the Joy" project which promotes art appreciation experiences for young children and adults in a gallery setting. Describes and reflects on the reactions of children to original art works in museums and examines the responses of children and parents to a prepared studio environment. (GEA)
- Published
- 1988
4. The New Extended Family at School: A Report of Provision of After-School Care/Education/Recreation and Playgroup Programs in South Australian and Queensland Schools.
- Author
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Brisbane Coll. of Advanced Education, Kelvin Grove (Australia). School of Early Childhood Studies., Piscitelli, Barbara, and Mobbs, Jenny
- Abstract
This report documents the results of a comprehensive survey of State, Catholic, and independent primary schools in Queensland and South Australia conducted in 1986 to identify the extent to which after-school care, recreation, education programs, and playgroup activities operated in school venues. A total of 1,927 schools were surveyed by mail; approximately 60 percent responded. Formal, funded programs were reported in 63 schools. The data generated from these programs identify details relating to administration, governance, budget, curricula, and participants. Further information was provided by 48 schools regarding informal, voluntary activities which cater to children arriving early and departing late. Innovative projects which have been beneficial to children, parents, and teachers in both urban and rural schools are noted. A small number of schools reported the involvement of playgroups in the school buildings. In response to questions about lack of programs, the majority of schools said they had never considered such a program. In conclusion, emerging questions and some further recommendations for research are suggested. Concluding remarks make particular reference to personnel and staffing of extended day programs. Areas of concern, such as staff-child ratio, contractual arrangements, and personnel evaluation, are discussed with a focus on program improvement. (Author/RH)
- Published
- 1986
5. TRANSFUSION COMPLICATIONS The significance of third-generation HCV RIBA-indeterminate, RNA-negative results in voluntary blood donors screened with sequential third-generation immunoassays.
- Author
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Kiely, Philip, Kay, Deborah, Parker, Susan, and Piscitelli, Lisa
- Subjects
BLOOD transfusion reaction ,BLOOD donors ,IMMUNOASSAY ,RED Cross & Red Crescent - Abstract
One of the problems associated with the use of anti-HCV immunoblot assays is the inter-pretation of indeterminate results without detectable HCV RNA. The purpose of this study was to examine the significance of third-generation RIBA (RIBA-3)-indeterminate, RNA-negative results in voluntary blood donors. Since June 2000 all Australian Red Cross Blood Service testing sites have used an anti-HCV sequential immunoassay testing strategy whereby donors who are reactive on the primary screening immunoassay are tested on a secondary immunoassay and if reactive on both assays, further tested by immunoblot. From the four testing sites that use RIBA-3, the result profiles of donors who were RIBA-3-indeterminate, HCV RNA-negative were analyzed. From 2,661,786 donations screened for anti-HCV during the study period, 102 RIBA-3-indeterminate, RNA-negative donors were identified, most of whom were reactive to either c33p (69.6%) or c22p (27.5%). The RIBA-3-indeterminate, RNA-negative donors showed a significantly higher screening immunoassay signal strength to assay cutoff (S/CO) distribution than those with biologic false-reactive (BFR) results (1.853 vs. 1.524, p < 0.05) but a significantly lower distribution than RIBA-3-positive, RNA-negative (1.853 vs. 4.546, p < 0.05) or RNA-positive (1.853 vs. 6.467, p < 0.05) donors. The RIBA-3-indeterminate, RNA-negative donors showed a similar distribution of c33c and c22p band intensities compared with RIBA-3-positive, RNA-negative donors but significantly lower distribution of band strengths compared to the RIBA-3-positive, RNA-positive group. Compared to the indeterminate donors with previous anti-HCV-negative or BFR results, the indeterminate donors not previously screened for anti-HCV showed higher immunoassay S/CO ratio distributions, a higher proportion with c22p reactivity (16.2% vs. 36.7%), and higher frequency of risk factors (46.4% vs. 75.0%). Our analysis suggests that a combination of indicators can be used to help clarify RIBA-3-indeterminate, RNA-negative results. Specifically, donors with high S/CO ratios on a screening immunoassay, RIBA-3 reactivity to c22p or c33c with band intensity of 2+ or greater, without a previous history of negative or BFR donations and with an identifiable risk factor, have a high probability of representing true anti-HCV rather than nonspecific reactivity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Young Children's Perspectives of Museum Settings and Experiences.
- Author
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Piscitelli, Barbara and Anderson, David
- Subjects
MUSEUM management ,PERSPECTIVE (Art) ,HISTORY of museums ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Research into the museum experiences of young children is extremely limited and hence there is currently limited understanding and appreciation of children's perspectives of such settings. This is quite surprising given that children constitute a significant part of museum visitorship by virtue of their inclusion as part of the family visitor demographic, yet accounts of their experiences are largely ignored. This article reports on children's perspectives and past experiences of museums. Seventy-seven children, from Brisbane, Australia, were surveyed individually using a combination of methods including semi-structured interviews, guided questionnaire, and a free-choice drawing activity. Analysis and interpretation of the children's responses indicated that they had extensive experience of museums and very positive perspectives about the settings they had visited. The children's responses, categorised by the types of museum experiences they encountered, lead us to conclude that their salient recollections centre on experiences which appeared to be non-interactive in nature, and directed towards large-scale exhibits in a natural and social history museum. Furthermore, the data suggest that the children's positive perspectives of museums were correlated with encounters with exhibits with which they could make ready connections with their pre-existing knowledge and understandings. Thus, there is evidence that exhibitions which provide readily accessible links with children's past experiences result in more positive affect than exhibitions which are hands-on, engaging and/or multi-sensory in nature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Addition of the apical oblique projection increases the detection of acute traumatic shoulder abnormalities in adults.
- Author
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Ross, Kimberley J, Tomkinson, Grant R, McGregor, Bonnie F, Ayres, Oliver C, and Piscitelli, Diana
- Subjects
RADIOGRAPHY ,RESEARCH evaluation ,RETROSPECTIVE studies - Abstract
Purpose: Plain radiographic evaluation of acute shoulder trauma in adults requires a minimum of two projections, commonly the anteroposterior (AP) and lateral scapular projections, with additional projections taken for diagnosis. The aim of this retrospective study was to determine whether the addition of the apical oblique (AO) projection to the AP and lateral scapular projections increases the number and/or alters the types of abnormalities detected in the examination of acute shoulder trauma.Methods: Examinations of 56 adults who had undergone three-projection (AP, lateral scapular, AO) radiographic shoulder examination for acute trauma were allocated into two-projection (AP, lateral scapular) and three-projection cases and assessed by a radiologist. The differences in number and types of abnormalities between the two-projection and three-projection cases were quantified using the one-tailed t test and chi-square goodness-of-fit test, respectively.Results: Test-retest reliability was moderate (intra-class correlation coefficient [95%CI], 0.56 [0.15 to 0.80]) for number, and almost perfect (kappa [95%CI], 0.94 [0.85 to 1.00]) for types, of abnormalities detected. There was a significant increase in the number of abnormalities detected across all three-projection versus two-projection cases (difference in means [95%CI], 0.20 [0.01 to 0.39]) and for fractures (difference in means [95%CI], 0.30 [0.11 to 0.49]), but no difference in the types of abnormalities detected (χ 2 = 4.7, p = 0.19).Conclusion: This study suggests that adding the AO projection to two-projection examination of acute shoulder trauma increases the number of abnormalities detected; this has potential implications for patient management. Further research investigating differences in types of abnormalities detected between two-projection and three-projection cases is warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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