6 resultados para Equity in Access
em Instituto Polit
Resumo:
A descriminação e a ausência de igualdade de oportunidades no acesso a direitos fundamentais inscritos na constituição portuguesa continuam a ser para as pessoas com deficiência um tema bastante actual e uma das preocupações nucleares de todos aqueles que directa ou indirectamente se interessam por estas questões. O acesso a educação e ao emprego, ainda que incentivado por políticas sociais inclusivas, continua a ser extremamente dificultado pela existência de barreiras, com configurações diversas, mas quase sempre organizadas em torno de representações acerca da deficiência pouco coerentes e coincidentes com o entendimento actual deste fenómeno. O trabalho por nós realizado teve como objectivo contribuir para o estudo das representações sociais relativamente à deficiência em Portugal, perspectivada a análise a partir dos agentes educativos do agrupamento de escolas do distrito de Viana do Castelo, uma das zonas do país com maior número de pessoas com deficiência, de acordo com o Censo de 2001. O inquérito por questionário de auto-administração realizado a uma amostra de 56 agentes educativos foi concordante com muitas das crenças e estereótipos face às pessoas com deficiência encontrados em estudos similares, nomeadamente no que reporta às atitudes negativas de pena e de culpa e à visualização da pessoa com deficiência como incapaz e pouco autónoma. Esta situação sugere a necessidade de se continuar a desenvolver estudos de caracterização destes traços em diferentes micro-culturas, no sentido de se desenvolverem estratégias personalizadas que permitam a sua remissão e o desmantelar das barreiras ainda existentes para a inclusão destes cidadãos na sociedade.
Resumo:
Project LIHE: the Portuguese Case. ESREA Fourth Access Network Conference – “Equity, Access and Participation: Research, Policy and Practice”. Edinburgh (Scotland), 11 – 13 December, 2003.
Resumo:
Consider the problem of sharing a wireless channel between a set of computer nodes. Hidden nodes exist and there is no base station. Each computer node hosts a set of sporadic message streams where a message stream releases messages with real-time deadlines. We propose a collision-free wireless medium access control (MAC) protocol which implements staticpriority scheduling. The MAC protocol allows multiple masters and is fully distributed. It neither relies on synchronized clocks nor out-of-band signaling; it is an adaptation to a wireless channel of the dominance protocol used in the CAN bus. But unlike that protocol, our protocol does not require a node having the ability to receive an incoming bit from the channel while transmitting to the channel. Our protocol has the key feature of not only being prioritized and collision-free but also dealing successfully with hidden nodes. This key feature enables schedulability analysis of sporadic message streams in multihop networks.
Resumo:
We propose a collision-free medium access control (MAC) protocol, which implements static-priority scheduling and works in the presence of hidden nodes. The MAC protocol allows multiple masters and is fully distributed; it is an adaptation to a wireless channel of the dominance protocol used in the CAN bus. But unlike that protocol, our protocol does not require a node having the ability to sense the channel while transmitting to the channel. Our protocol is collision-free even in the presence of hidden nodes and it achieves this without synchronized clocks or out-of-band busy tones. In addition, the protocol is designed to ensure that many non-interfering nodes can transmit in parallel and it functions for both broadcast and unicast transmissions.
Resumo:
This paper describes how to extend the access to remote experiments from mobile devices, aiming to better engage digital native students who expect a more interactive and ubiquitous access mode. The extension is based on features of HTML5 and the jQuery Mobile framework, which allow accessing the experiments from different operating systems via the browser or native applications. As a result, users have a richer interaction mode with the experiments, which includes access from simple hand-held devices such as smartphones and PDAs. Extending the access to remote experiments, from simple devices, enables its use in other educational stages, such as high schools, where teachers struggle to engage students in STEM learning. By enabling students to use their everyday "technological companions", e.g. cellular phones, to access remote experiments, we seek to increase the educational value of this technology-enhanced learning resource.
Resumo:
The aim of this study was to undertake a comparative analysis of the practices and information behaviour of European information users who visit information units specialising in European information in Portugal and Spain. The study used a quantitative methodology based on a questionnaire containing closed questions and one open question. The questions covered the general sociological profile of the respondents and their use of European Document Centres, in addition to analysing aspects associated with information behaviour relating to European themes. The study therefore examined data on the preferred means and sources for accessing European information, types of documents and the subjects investigated most. The use of European databases and the Internet to access material on Europe was also studied, together with the reasons which users considered made it easy or difficult to access European information, and the aspects they valued most in accessing this information. The questionnaire was administered in European Document Centres in 2008 and 2010.