4 resultados para Methods and Techniques
em Instituto Politécnico do Porto, Portugal
Resumo:
Mestrado em Educação e Intervenção Social - Desenvolvimento Comunitário e Educação de Adultos
Resumo:
O presente documento reflete o desenvolvimento de um projeto de Educação e Intervenção Social num agrupamento de Escolas TEIP. Ancorado na metodologia de Investigação-ação participativa, o projeto partiu da auscultação dos sentires, perceções e vivências dos sujeitos que integram esta realidade social e desenvolveu-se passando pela reflexão sobre a relação pedagógica entre a escola, professores e a família e do seu contributo para o sucesso educativo dos jovens. A utilização de vários métodos e técnicas permitiu recolher e analisar a informação de onde emergiram vários problemas e perceber as necessidades subjacentes a esses problemas, para as quais foi delineado um projeto de intervenção social e educativa. No âmbito deste projeto, enquadrado pela Educação Social, procurou-se que os diferentes agentes educativos refletissem sobre os seus problemas e pela via da participação procurassem dar resposta a esses mesmos problemas. O projeto, “A participação: Uma âncora para o sucesso educativo”, fruto de um trabalho conjunto dos vários participantes, possibilitou a melhoria das relações entre os intervenientes educativos (jovens, famílias desses jovens, professores, assistentes operacionais e administrativos e diretor) e a transformação da escola num espaço especialmente mais rico em relações e ações com carácter inovador.
Resumo:
In order to combat a variety of pests, pesticides are widely used in fruits. Several extraction procedures (liquid extraction, single drop microextraction, microwave-assisted extraction, pressurized liquid extraction, supercritical fluid extraction, solid-phase extraction, solid-phase microextraction, matrix solid-phase dispersion, and stir bar sorptive extraction) have been reported to determine pesticide residues in fruits and fruit juices. The significant change in recent years is the introduction of the Quick, Easy, Cheap, Effective, Rugged, and Safe (QuEChERS) methods in these matrices analysis. A combination of techniques reported the use of new extraction methods and chromatography to provide better quantitative recoveries at low levels. The use of mass spectrometric detectors in combination with liquid and gas chromatography has played a vital role to solve many problems related to food safety. The main attention in this review is on the achievements that have been possible because of the progress in extraction methods and the latest advances and novelties in mass spectrometry, and how these progresses have influenced the best control of food, allowing for an increase in the food safety and quality standards.
Resumo:
Total petroleum hydrocarbons (TPH) are important environmental contaminants which are toxic to human and environmental receptors. Several analytical methods have been used to quantify TPH levels in contaminated soils, specifically through infrared spectrometry (IR) and gas chromatography (GC). Despite being two of the most used techniques, some issues remain that have been inadequately studied: a) applicability of both techniques to soils contaminated with two distinct types of fuel (petrol and diesel), b) influence of the soil natural organic matter content on the results achieved by various analytical methods, and c) evaluation of the performance of both techniques in analyses of soils with different levels of contamination (presumably non-contaminated and potentially contaminated). The main objectives of this work were to answer these questions and to provide more complete information about the potentials and limitations of GC and IR techniques. The results led us to the following conclusions: a) IR analysis of soils contaminated with petrol is not suitable due to volatilisation losses, b) there is a significant influence of organic matter in IR analysis, and c) both techniques demonstrated the capacity to accurately quantify TPH in soils, irrespective of their contamination levels.