989 resultados para Cape verdean students
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Case study on the DigiDesk helpdesk service at Barnet and Southgate College that helps meet FELTAG recommendations for greater participation in digital leadership activities and schemes.
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Case study about how East Berkshire College is engaging student and staff in online activities to develop digital literacy skills.
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A guide by Birmingham City University to raise staff awareness
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The Cape Canaveral, Florida, marine ecosystem is unique. There are complex current and temperature regimes that form a faunal transition zone between Atlantic tropical and subtropical waters. This zone is rich faunistically and supports large commercial fISheries for fish, scallops, and shrimp. Canaveral is also unique because it has large numbers of sea turtles year-round, this turtle aggregation exhibiting patterned seasonal changes in numbers, size frequency, and sex ratio. Additionally, a significant portion of this turtle aggregation hibernates in the Canaveral ship channel, a phenomenon rare in marine turtle populations. The Cape Canaveral area has the largest year-round concentration of sea turtles in the United States. However, the ship channel is periodically dredged by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in order to keep Port Canaveral open to U.S. Navy vessels, and preliminary surveys showed that many sea turtles were incidentally killed during dredging operations. In order for the Corps of Engineers to fulfill its defense dredging responsibilities, and comply with the Endangered Species Act of 1973, an interagency Sea Turtle Task Force was formed to investigate methods of reducing turtle mortalities. This Task Force promptly implemented a sea turtle research plan to determine seasonal abundance, movement patterns, sex ratios, size frequencies, and other biological parameters necessary to help mitigate dredging conflicts in the channel. The Cape Canaveral Sea Turtle Workshop is a cooperative effort to comprehensively present research results of these important studies. I gratefully acknowledge the support of everyone involved in this Workshop, particularly the anonymous team of referees who painstakingly reviewed the manuscripts. The cover illustration was drawn by Jack C. Javech. (PDF file contains 86 pages.)
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The Alliance for Coastal Technologies (ACT) Workshop "Applications of in situ Fluorometers in Nearshore Waters" was held in Cape Elizabeth, Maine, February 2-4,2005, with sponsorship by the Gulf of Maine Ocean Observing System (GoMOOS), one of the ACT partner organization. The purpose of the workshop was to explore recent trends in fluorometry as it relates to resource management applications in nearshore environments. Participants included representatives from state and federal environmental management agencies as well as research institutions, many of whom are currently using this technology in their research and management applications. Manufacturers and developers of fluorometric measuring systems also attended the meeting. The Workshop attendees discussed the historical and present uses of fluorometry technology and identified the great potential for its use by coastal managers to fulfill their regulatory and management objectives. Participants also identified some of the challenges associated with the correct use of Fluorometers to estimate biomass and the rate of primary productivity. The Workshop concluded that in order to expand the existing use of fluorometers in both academic and resource management disciplines, several issues concerning data collection, instrument calibration, and data interpretation needed to be addressed. Participants identified twelve recommendations, the top five of which are listed below: Recommendations 1) Develop a "Guide" that describes the most important aspects of fluorescence measurements. This guide should be written by an expert party, with both research and industry input, and should be distributed by all manufacturers with their instrumentation. The guide should also be made available on the ACT website as well as those of other relevant organizations. The guide should include discussions on the following topics: The benefits of using fluorometers in research and resource management applications; What fluorometers can and cannot provide in terms of measurements; The necessary assumptions required before applying fluorometry; Characterization and calibration of fluorometers; (pdf contains 32 pages)
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This presentation will describe the use of online forums in Moodle, a course management system, to teach students to evaluate both print and electronic reference sources. For two semesters I have created an online forum called the Fishing Hole Scouting Report for an in-class exercise. Students are given 2-3 background questions and told to find the answers using both a library-approved reference source and Wikipedia. Students then evaluate the reference source for effectiveness and ease of use, compared to Wikipedia, and post their comments in the forum to share with the class. I will highlight the educational benefits of using Moodle forums for this purpose and discuss best practices for selecting the most effective sources and questions.
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In traditional teaching, the fundamental concepts of electromagnetic induction are usually quickly analyzed, spending most of the time solving problems in a more or less rote manner. However, physics education research has shown that the fundamental concepts of the electromagnetic induction theory are barely understood by students. This article proposes an interactive teaching sequence introducing the topic of electromagnetic induction. The sequence has been designed based on contributions from physics education research. Particular attention is paid to the relationship between experimental findings (macroscopic level) and theoretical interpretation (microscopic level). An example of the activities that have been designed will also be presented, describing the implementation context and the corresponding findings. Since implementing the sequence, a considerable number of students have a more satisfactory grasp of the electromagnetic induction explicative model. However, difficulties are manifested in aspects that require a multilevel explanation, referring to deep structures where the system description is better defined.
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A presente pesquisa que ora se apresenta trata das representações sociais da comunidade cabo-verdiana residente no Rio de Janeiro sobre diversos objetos que estão implicados no processo de construção de suas identidades, no entrecruzamento das culturas e identidades cabo-verdianas e brasileiras. Nesse sentido, realizou-se um estudo comparativo entre três grupos de cabo-verdianos residentes no Rio de Janeiro. As entrevistas realizadas com 20 estudantes, 20 imigrantes e 10 brasileiros filhos de cabo-verdianos residentes no Brasil permitiram identificar conteúdos mais específicos, diversificados e detalhados das representações formadas por eles acerca do Brasil e do povo brasileiro, bem como das suas próprias relações com os países de origem e de acolhimento, bem como com os seus respectivos povos, o que, em última análise, consubstancia as identidades sociais próprias que terão reconstruído durante a sua permanência aquém do ou melhor, de parte do Oceano Atlântico. A teoria das Representações Sociais, desenvolvida por Serge Moscovici (1961) se constituiu em uma valiosa sustentação teórica para o presente estudo. Por meio da pesquisa comparativa das representações sociais dos distintos grupos de cabo-verdianos no Rio de Janeiro acerca de variados aspectos dos seus contextos sócio-culturais de origem e de acolhimento, foi possível compreender o complexo processo de construção, reconstrução e atualização das suas respectivas identidades. É isso que se acredita ter aqui demonstrado no que se refere às trajetórias dos estudantes e imigrantes cabo-verdianos, bem como às histórias de vida dos filhos destes, no Brasil e, em especial, no Rio de Janeiro. É nessa perspectiva que os cabo-verdianos no Rio de Janeiro tomados tanto como sujeitos quanto como objetos de representação, na presente pesquisa têm construído um conhecimento ao mesmo tempo, prático e reflexivo da sua inserção nos contextos brasileiro e carioca, através do contato face a face com a sociedade receptora e, no caso de dois desses grupos (estudantes e imigrantes), a partir das representações que já haviam elaborado no país de origem, sob a influência dos meios de comunicação de massa. Assim, com base na hibridização cultural e identitária dos cabo-verdianos, procurou-se compreender de forma mais ampla e circunstanciada o processo de (re) construção das identidades dos estudantes, imigrantes e dos descendentes destes no Rio de Janeiro. Tais mudanças mostraram-se mais visíveis nos convívios sociais em que os grupos cabo-verdianos participam em diferentes espaços sociais desta cidade, nas próprias residências, nas sedes de associações, as quais participam, não só cabo-verdianos, mas, também, alguns brasileiros e outros africanos. Nestes convívios, notam-se diferenças de relacionamento entre eles, estruturam-se em pequenos grupos, ocorrendo uma intensificação das aproximações identitárias e representacionais. As mudanças que foram observadas superficialmente entre os estudantes são, por conseguinte, mais intensas entre os cabo-verdianos imigrantes, em virtude do maior tempo e freqüência cotidiana da comunicação e da troca de experiências com mais variados estratos da população brasileira, o que se aproxima a uma autêntica fusão cultural. Não obstante, constatou-se que, nesse processo, a comunidade imigrante perdeu alguns elementos importantes da cultura cabo-verdiana, o principal dos quais foi a língua crioula. A perda do crioulo representa uma descontinuidade na reprodução da identidade cabo-verdiana pelos imigrantes no Brasil. Nesse sentido, os brasileiros filhos de pais cabo-verdianos não tiveram acesso a esse poderoso instrumento de comunicação e de preservação da cultura cabo-verdiana. Esses cabo-verdianos imigrantes consideram-se bem sucedidos e avaliam positivamente a sua trajetória de vida enquanto imigrantes no Brasil. De igual modo, os estudantes se consideram realizados, devido à oportunidade de estudar no Brasil, o que representa a concretização de um desejo coletivo, uma vez que a instrução escolar é amplamente valorizada no país de origem.
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Cape Cod Bay (Massachusetts) is the only known winter and early spring feeding area for concentrations of the endangered North Atlantic right whale (Eubalaena glacialis) population. During January–May, 1998–2002, 167 aerial surveys were conducted (66,466 km of total survey effort), providing a complete representation of the spatiotemporal distribution of right whales in the bay during winter and spring. A total of 1553 right whales were sighted; some of these sightings were multiple sightings of the same individuals. Right whale distribution and relative abundance patterns were quantified as sightings per unit of effort (SPUE) and partitioned into 103 23-km2 cells and 12 2-week periods. Significant interannual variations in mean SPUE and timing of SPUE maxima were likely due to physically forced changes in available food resources. The area of greatest SPUE expanded and contracted during the season but its center remained in the eastern bay. Most cells with SPUE>0 were inside the federal critical habitat (CH) and this finding gave evidence of the need for management measures within CH boundaries to reduce anthropogenic mortality from vessel strikes and entanglement. There was significant within-season SPUE variability: low in December−January, increasing to a maximum in late February−early April, and declining to zero in May; and these results provide support for management measures from 1 January
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Endoparasitic helminths were inventoried in 483 American plaice (Hippoglossoides platessoides) collected from the southern Gulf of St. Lawrence, NAFO (North Atlantic Fisheries Organization) division 4T, and Cape Breton Shelf (NAFO subdivision 4Vn) in September 2004 and May 2003, respectively. Forward stepwise discriminant function analysis (DFA) of the 4T samples indicated that abundances of the acanthocephalans Echinorhynchus gadi and Corynosoma strumosum were significant in the classification of plaice to western or eastern 4T. Cross validation yielded a correct classification rate of 79% overall, thereby supporting the findings of earlier mark-recapture studies which have indicated that 4T plaice comprise two discrete stocks: a western and an eastern stock. Further analyses including 4Vn samples, however, indicated that endoparasitic helminths may have little value as tags in the classification of plaice overwintering in Laurentian Channel waters of the Cabot Strait and Cape Breton Shelf, where mixing of 4T and 4Vn fish may occur.
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Metal-framed traps covered with polyethylene mesh used in the fishery for the South African Cape rock lobster (Jasus lalandii) incidentally capture large numbers of undersize (<75 mm CL) specimens. Air-exposure, handling, and release procedures affect captured rock lobsters and reduce the productivity of the stock, which is heavily fished. Optimally, traps should retain legalsize rock lobsters and allow sublegal animals to escape before traps are hauled. Escapement, based on lobster morphometric measurements, through meshes of 62 mm, 75 mm, and 100 mm was investigated theoretically under controlled conditions in an aquarium, and during field trials. SELECT models were used to model escapement, wherever appropriate. Size-selectivity curves based on the logistic model fitted the aquarium and field data better than asymmetrical Richards curves. The lobster length at 50% retention (L50) on the escapement curve for 100-mm mesh in the aquarium (75.5 mm CL) approximated the minimum legal size (75 mm CL); however estimates of L50 increased to 77.4 mm in field trials where trapentrances were sealed, and to 82.2 mm where trap-entrances were open. Therfore, rock lobsters that cannot escape through the mesh of sealed field traps do so through the trap entrance of open traps. By contrast, the wider selection range and lower L25 of field, compared to aquarium, trials (SR = 8.2 mm vs. 2.6 mm; L25 =73.4 mm vs. 74.1 mm), indicate that small lobsters that should be able to escape from 100-mm mesh traps do not always do so. Escapement from 62-mm mesh traps with open entrance funnels increased by 40−60% over sealed traps. The findings of this study with a known size distribution, are related to those of a recent indirect (comparative) study for the same species, and implications for trap surveys, commercial catch rates, and ghost fishing are discussed.
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South African (Cape) fur seals, Arctocephalus pusillus pusillus, interact with the South African trawl fisheries-offshore demersal, inshore demersal, and midwater fisheries. These interactions take thef ollowing forms: Seals take or damage netted fish, on particular vessels they become caught in the propeller, seals drown in the nets, live seals come aboard and may be killed. Except in specific cases of seals damaging particular trawler propellers, interactions result in little cost to the offshore and midwater trawl fisheries. For the inshore fishery, seals damage fish in the net at an estimated cost in excess of R69, 728 (US$18,827) per year, but this is negligible (0.3%) in terms ofthe value of the fishery. Seal mortality is mainly caused by drowning in trawl nets and ranges from 2,524 to 3,636 seals of both sexes per year. Between 312 and 567 seals are deliberately killed annually, but this most likely takes place only when caught and they enter the area below deck, where they are difficult to remove, and pose a potential threat to crew safety. Overall, seal mortality during trawling operations is negligible (0.4-0.6%) in terms of the feeding population of seals in South Africa.