767 resultados para Indian Educational practices in Science
Resumo:
This chapter examines distributed sounding art by focusing on three key aspects that we consider essentially tied to the notion of distribution: assignment, transport and sharing. These aspects aid us in navigating through a number of nodes in a history of sounding art practices where sound becomes assigned, transported and shared between places and people. Sound or data become distributed, and in the process of distribution, meanings become assigned and altered through differing socio-cultural contexts of places and people. We have selected several works, commencing in the 1960’s as we consider this period as having produced some of the seminal works that address distribution.
We draw on works by composers, performers and sound artists and thus present a history of sounding art, which is amongst the many histories of sounding art in the 20th and 21st century.
Resumo:
Background
The power of the randomised controlled trial depends upon its capacity to operate in a closed system whereby the intervention is the only causal force acting upon the experimental group and absent in the control group, permitting a valid assessment of intervention efficacy. Conversely, clinical arenas are open systems where factors relating to context, resources, interpretation and actions of individuals will affect implementation and effectiveness of interventions. Consequently, the comparator (usual care) can be difficult to define and variable in multi-centre trials. Hence outcomes cannot be understood without considering usual care and factors that may affect implementation and impact on the intervention.
Methods
Using a fieldwork approach, we describe PICU context, ‘usual’ practice in sedation and weaning from mechanical ventilation, and factors affecting implementation prior to designing a trial involving a sedation and ventilation weaning intervention. We collected data from 23 UK PICUs between June and November 2014 using observation, individual and multi-disciplinary group interviews with staff.
Results
Pain and sedation practices were broadly similar in terms of drug usage and assessment tools. Sedation protocols linking assessment to appropriate titration of sedatives and sedation holds were rarely used (9 % and 4 % of PICUs respectively). Ventilator weaning was primarily a medical-led process with 39 % of PICUs engaging senior nurses in the process: weaning protocols were rarely used (9 % of PICUs). Weaning methods were variably based on clinician preference. No formal criteria or use of spontaneous breathing trials were used to test weaning readiness. Seventeen PICUs (74 %) had prior engagement in multi-centre trials, but limited research nurse availability. Barriers to previous trial implementation were intervention complexity, lack of belief in the evidence and inadequate training. Facilitating factors were senior staff buy-in and dedicated research nurse provision.
Conclusions
We examined and identified contextual and organisational factors that may impact on the implementation of our intervention. We found usual practice relating to sedation, analgesia and ventilator weaning broadly similar, yet distinctively different from our proposed intervention, providing assurance in our ability to evaluate intervention effects. The data will enable us to develop an implementation plan; considering these factors we can more fully understand their impact on study outcomes.
Sedation and weaning practices in paediatric intensive care units (PICUS) in the United Kingdom (UK)
Resumo:
We pursue a comparative analysis of employers’ age management practices in Britain and Germany, asking how valid ‘convergence’ and ‘Varieties of Capitalism’ theories are. After rejecting the convergence verdict, we proceed to ask how far ‘path dependence’ helps explain inter-country differences. Through 19 interviews with British and German experts, we find that firms have reacted in different ways to promptings from the EU and the two states. Change has been modest and a rhetoric-reality gap exists in firms as they seek to hedge. We point to continuities in German institutional methods of developing new initiatives, and the emerging role of British NGOs in helping firms and the state develop new options. We argue that ‘path dependence’ offers insight into the national comparison, but also advance the idea of national modes of firm optionexploration as an important way of conceptualizing the processes involved.
Resumo:
Objective: To assess the effect of provision of free glasses on academic performance in rural Chinese children with myopia. Design: Cluster randomized, investigator masked, controlled trial.Setting 252 primary schools in two prefectures in western China, 2012-13. Participants: 3177 of 19 934 children in fourth and fifth grades (mean age 10.5 years) with visual acuity <6/12 in either eye without glasses correctable to >6/12 with glasses. 3052 (96.0%) completed the study.Interventions Children were randomized by school (84 schools per arm) to one of three interventions at the beginning of the school year: prescription for glasses only (control group), vouchers for free glasses at a local facility, or free glasses provided in class. Main outcome measures: Spectacle wear at endline examination and end of year score on a specially designed mathematics test, adjusted for baseline score and expressed in standard deviations. Results: Among 3177 eligible children, 1036 (32.6%) were randomized to control, 988 (31.1%) to vouchers, and 1153 (36.3%) to free glasses in class. All eligible children would benefit from glasses, but only 15% wore them at baseline. At closeout glasses wear was 41% (observed) and 68% (self reported) in the free glasses group, and 26% (observed) and 37% (self reported) in the controls. Effect on test score was 0.11 SD (95% confidence interval 0.01 to 0.21) when the free glasses group was compared with the control group. The adjusted effect of providing free glasses (0.10, 0.002 to 0.19) was greater than parental education (0.03, −0.04 to 0.09) or family wealth (0.01, −0.06 to 0.08). This difference between groups was significant, but was smaller than the prespecified 0.20 SD difference that the study was powered to detect. Conclusions: The provision of free glasses to Chinese children with myopia improves children’s performance on mathematics testing to a statistically significant degree, despite imperfect compliance, although the observed difference between groups was smaller than the study was originally designed to detect. Myopia is common and rarely corrected in this setting. Trial Registration: Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN03252665.
Resumo:
With the maturation of strategic human resource management scholarship, there appears to be a greater call to move from monolithic workforce management to a more strategic and differentiated emphasis on employees with the greatest capacity to enhance competitive advantage. There has been little consideration in the literature as to whether organizations formally identify key groups of employees based on their impact on organizational learning and core competences. Using survey evidence from 260 multinational companies (MNCs), this paper explores the extent to which key groups of employees are formally recognized and whether they are subject to differential compensation practices. The results demonstrate that just in excess of half of these MNCs identify a key group. There was considerable differentiation in the compensation practices between these key groups, managers and the largest occupational group in the workforce. The results give rise to questions worthy of future investigation, namely whether the differentiated approaches used lead to improved performance outcomes.
Resumo:
Existe um crescente reconhecimento nacional e internacional do papel da Educação Pré-Escolar (EPE) no desenvolvimento e aprendizagem das crianças dos 3 aos 6 anos. As mais recentes orientações curriculares de diversos países para este nível de educação definem linhas de orientação para as aprendizagens das crianças que contemplam uma área das ciências. Em Portugal as Orientações Curriculares para a Educação Pré-Escolar (OCEPE) constituem-se como eixo estruturante das práticas didático-pedagógicas dos educadores. Este documento integra várias áreas de conteúdo, sendo a sensibilização às ciências considerada na área de Conhecimento do Mundo. A perspetiva que defende a educação em ciências (EC) desde os primeiros anos de escolaridade tem vindo a consolidar-se, dados os resultados alcançados em diversas investigações que demonstram que esta tem tido um impacte positivo relevante na promoção da literacia científica (LC), bem como no desenvolvimento de atitudes positivas face à ciência e à aprendizagem das ciências. Várias investigações, um pouco por todo o mundo, conferiram uma nova abrangência e profundidade à EC, tendo-se vindo a consolidar a ideia de que as crianças conseguem fazer construções cognitivas, ainda que elementares, acerca de fenómenos e conceitos alegadamente difíceis pela sua abstração e que também são muito competentes em processos de descoberta científica. O conceito de competência tem vindo a conquistar uma relevância cada vez mais acentuada nos contextos educativos, constituindo um pilar central em documentos curriculares de diversos níveis de ensino. Tem-se revelado vital na caracterização da interação dos indivíduos nas suas esferas pessoal, social e profissional. Concomitantemente, o caráter eminentemente científico e tecnológico das sociedades atuais exige cidadãos competentes e cientificamente literados, capazes de interagir com o mundo, sendo essa LC imprescindível para que as sociedades continuem a evoluir. Assumindo-se que a EC se implementa através de atividades práticas, importa conhecer formas específicas de abordar os conceitos e explorar os fenómenos com as crianças, em contexto de EPE. Os educadores devem ter acesso a estratégias didáticas (ED) especialmente concebidas para este nível de escolaridade, que suportem práticas inovadoras neste domínio e promovam a mobilização de competências científicas pelas crianças, contribuindo para a promoção da LC. A presente investigação pretende ser um contributo para a operacionalização da EC em contexto pré-escolar. O percurso de investigação desenvolvido, de natureza qualitativa, incidiu em dois focos estruturais que se consubstanciam nas suas duas grandes finalidades: (1) o desenvolvimento de ED para operacionalizar a EC, e (2) o desenvolvimento do quadro teórico referente à mobilização de competências pelas crianças e relativo ao processo de conceção de ED. Assim, o percurso investigativo suportou-se numa metodologia de Investigação Baseada em Design que integrou 15 fases multicontextuais articuladas entre si, envolvendo especialistas da área educativa e científica em processos cíclicos de design, produção, validação, revisão e avaliação das ED. A avaliação dos processos e produtos desta investigação efetuou-se tendo por base a análise dos dados recolhidos e o seu tratamento através de diversos métodos, técnicas e instrumentos, tendo possibilitado: (1) identificar as limitações das OCEPE nas suas linhas de orientação para a EC; (2) desenvolver um conjunto de ED validadas como instrumentos de inovação curricular e como instrumentos de mobilização e desenvolvimento de competências pelas crianças; (3) definir um Quadro de referência conceptual que permite clarificar as interações das crianças em termos de mobilização de capacidades e atitudes/valores e construção de conhecimento; (4) definir Princípios de conceção de estratégias didáticas que permitem replicar o seu processo de desenvolvimento, e (5) clarificar orientações para uma perspetiva integrada de EC. Assumindo-se como um contributo para impulsionar a educação em ciências em contexto pré-escolar, esta investigação fundamenta a necessidade de nela se investir de forma intencional, sistemática e contextualizada neste nível educativo.