2 resultados para high rate deposition

em ReCiL - Repositório Científico Lusófona - Grupo Lusófona, Portugal


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RESUMO: Diversos estudos realizados na área educativa têm demonstrado a importância de escolaridade para a melhoria da qualidade de vida das pessoas. Apesar disso, o alto índice de repetência e evasão escolar está presente em diversas escolas do país. Para tanto, este trabalho tem como tema central o dilema da repetência e da evasão em escolas rurais de um município sergipano. Assim, o trabalho desenvolve uma análise sobre os altos índices de evasão e de repetência em escolas rurais, apoiada numa revisão de literatura que discute essa temática. Participaram dessa pesquisa 10 alunos evadidos da 1° a 4° séries do Ensino Fundamental, no qual, o processo de coleta de dados foi a entrevista semi-estruturada, onde os questionamentos foram formulados através de um roteiro prévio de cinco questões. Através dessas questões, procurou-se discutir e refletir as causas da agravante repetência e evasão com alunos rurais, além da possibilidade de seus retornos às escolas vencendo os obstáculos que a educação local impõe. Trabalhamos também a história de vida de cada entrevistado. Por fim, buscou-se oferecer subsídios para a compreensão das condições em que educação rural se encontra. ABSTRACT: Several studies in the field of education have demonstrated the importance of education to improve the quality of life. Nevertheless, the high rate of grade repetition and dropping out is present in several schools in the country. Therefore, this work is focused on the dilemma of grade repetition and dropping out in rural schools in the municipality of Sergipe. Thus, this paper provides an analysis of the high grade repetition and dropout rates in rural schools, including a literature review which discusses this theme. Ten students who stopped their education after elementary school grades 1st to 4th participated in this study, where the process of data collection was a semi-structured interview with questions formulated from a script of the previous five questions. Through these questions, we sought to discuss and reflect upon the causes of aggravated student grade repetition and dropping out in rural areas, beyond the possibility of their return to the schools by overcoming the obstacles that the local education imposes. We worked also their life story. Finally, we attempted to provide background information on the conditions which constitute a rural education.

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Many aspects of early embryonic development in the horse are unusual or unique; this is of scientific interest and, in some cases, considerable practical significance. During early development the number of different cell types increases rapidly and the organization of these increasingly differentiated cells becomes increasingly intricate as a result of various inter-related processes that occur step-wise or simultaneously in different parts of the conceptus (i.e., the embryo proper and its associated membranes and fluid). Equine conceptus development is of practical interest for many reasons. Most significantly, following a high rate of successful fertilization (71-96%) (Ball, 1988), as many as 30-40% of developing embryos fail to survive beyond the first two weeks of gestation (Ball, 1988), the time at which gastrulation begins. Indeed, despite considerable progress in the development of treatments for common causes of sub-fertility and of assisted reproductive techniques to enhance reproductive efficiency, the need to monitor and rebreed mares that lose a pregnancy or the failure to produce a foal, remain sources of considerable economic loss to the equine breeding industry. Of course, the potential causes of early embryonic death are numerous and varied (e.g. persistent mating induced endometritis, endometrial gland insufficiency, cervical incompetence, corpus luteum (CL) failure, chromosomal, genetic and other unknown factors (LeBlanc, 2004). However, the problem is especially acute in aged mares with a history of poor fertility in which the incidence of embryonic loss between days 2 and 14 after ovulation has been reported to reach 62-73%, and in which embryonic death is due primarily to embryonic defects rather than to uterine pathology (Ball et al., 1989; Carnevale & Ginther, 1995; Ball, 2000).