92 research outputs found

    A Phenomenological Investigation of Academic Momism: Perceptions of Female College Faculty’s Role Expectations in High-Stakes STEM Courses

    Get PDF
    This qualitative phenomenological study looked at how female faculty in higher education who teach high-stakes courses may experience a role of academic momism (AM) and how they negotiate their roles and responses within a patriarchal system. Gender bias and prescriptive stereotyping of women as communal may lead female STEM instructors to be perceived more as “academic mothers” (Bernard, 1964) rather than respected academicians. Within higher education institutions, students often perceive their female professors as more concerned about their emotional well-being, nurturing, service oriented, and less academic when compared to male faculty members. The demanding nature of high-stakes courses in STEM-oriented programs within higher education can increase student demands. This has been further exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic. The culminations of these oppressive factors may play a role in female STEM faculty’s career path, thus affecting their presence in academia. Interviews were conducted with 15 female participants teaching at community, state, and private colleges in Northeast metropolitan and suburban areas. Themes included systemic stereotyping, teacher-student interactions, and instructor self-actualization. A notable finding included the lack of sisterhood between female faculty members within the same department and with those who hold a higher position. This study adds important findings of female STEM faculty experiences of student–teacher relationships, gender bias, role expectations, the changes brought about due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and more specifically, their experiences of AM

    The Wintertime Southern Hemisphere Split Jet: Structure, Variability, and Evolution

    Get PDF
    A persistent feature of the Southern Hemisphere upper-level time-mean flow is the presence of a split jet across the South Pacific east of Australia during the austral winter. The split jet is composed of the subtropical jet (STJ) on its equatorward branch and the polar front jet (PFJ) on its poleward branch. The NCEP-NCAR reanalysis is used to investigate the structure and evolution of the split jet. Results show that the presence/absence of the PFJ determines the degree of split flow, given that the STJ is a quasi-steady feature. A split-flow index (SFI) is developed to quantify the variability of the split jet, in which negative values represent strong split flow and positive values nonsplit flow. Correlations with teleconnection indices are investigated, with the SFI positively correlated to the Southern Oscillation index and negatively correlated to the Antarctic oscillation. The SFI is used to construct composites of heights, temperature, and wind for split-flow and non-split-flow days. The composites reveal that relatively cold conditions occur in the South Pacific in association with non-split-flow regimes, and split-flow regimes occur when relatively warm conditions prevail. In the latter situation cold air bottled up over Antarctica helps to augment the background tropospheric thickness gradient between Antarctica and the lower latitudes with a resulting increase in the thermal wind and the PFJ. It is surmised that frequent cold surges out of Antarctica moving into the South Pacific are associated with non-split-flow regimes. In this context, the variability of the split jet responds to large-scale baroclinic processes and is further modulated by synoptic-scale disturbances

    Evaluating the possibilities of obtaining initial concentrates of rare earth elements (REEs) from fly ashes

    Get PDF
    The article presents the results of initial laboratory research into the possibilities of obtaining REE from fly ash from one of Polish powerhouses. In the work the authors have presented the results of investigations into the obtaining of initial REEs concentrations from fly ashes by physicochemical and hydrometallurgical methods. These investigations provide a basis for developing a technology of RRE recovery from fly ashes produced in the process of hard coals combustion

    Population overlap and habitat segregation in wintering Black-tailed Godwits Limosa limosa

    Get PDF
    Distinct breeding populations of migratory species may overlap both spatially and temporally, but differ in patterns of habitat use. This has important implications for population monitoring and conservation. To quantify the extent to which two distinct breeding populations of a migratory shorebird, the Black-tailed Godwit Limosa limosa, overlap spatially, temporally and in their use of different habitats during winter. We use mid-winter counts between 1990 and 2001 to identify the most important sites in Iberia for Black-tailed Godwits. Monthly surveys of estuarine mudflats and rice-fields at one major site, the Tejo estuary in Portugal in 2005-2007, together with detailed tracking of colour-ringed individuals, are used to explore patterns of habitat use and segregation of the Icelandic subspecies L. l. islandica and the nominate continental subspecies L. l. limosa. In the period 1990-2001, over 66 000 Black-tailed Godwits were counted on average in Iberia during mid-winter (January), of which 80% occurred at just four sites: Tejo and Sado lower basins in Portugal, and Coto Dontildeana and Ebro Delta in Spain. Icelandic Black-tailed Godwits are present throughout the winter and forage primarily in estuarine habitats. Continental Black-tailed Godwits are present from December to March and primarily use rice-fields. Iberia supports about 30% of the Icelandic population in winter and most of the continental population during spring passage. While the Icelandic population is currently increasing, the continental population is declining rapidly. Although the estuarine habitats used by Icelandic godwits are largely protected as Natura 2000 sites, the habitat segregation means that conservation actions for the decreasing numbers of continental godwits should focus on protection of rice-fields and re-establishment of freshwater wetlands

    Inhibition of matrix metalloproteinases and cancer cell detachment by Ru(II) polypyridyl complexes containing 4,7-diphenyl-1,10-phenanthroline ligands : new candidates for antimetastatic agents

    Get PDF
    Primary tumor targeting is the dominant approach in drug development, while metastasis is the leading cause of cancer death. Therefore, in addition to the cytotoxic activity of a series of Ru(II) polypyridyl complexes of the type [Ru(dip)(2)L](2+) (dip: 4,7-diphenyl-1,10-phenanthroline while L = dip; bpy: 2,2′-bipyridine; bpy-SC: bipyridine derivative bearing a semicarbazone 2-formylopyridine moiety; dpq, dpq(CH(3))(2), dpb: quinoxaline derivatives) their ability to inhibit cell detachment was investigated. In vitro studies performed on lung cancer A549 cells showed that they accumulate in cells very well and exhibit moderate cytotoxicity with IC(50) ranging from 4 to 13 µM. Three of the studied compounds that have dip, bpy-SC, or dpb ligands after treatment of the cells with a non-toxic dose (<(1)/(2)IC(50)) enhanced their adhesion properties demonstrated by lower detachment in the trypsin resistance assay. The same complexes inhibited both MMP-2 and MMP-9 enzyme activities with IC(50) ranging from 2 to 12 µM; however, the MMP-9 inhibition was stronger. More detailed studies for [Ru(dip)(2)(bpy-SC)](2+), which induced the greatest increase in cell adhesion, revealed that it is predominately accumulated in the cytoskeletal fraction of A549 cells. Moreover, cells treated with this compound showed the localization of MMP-9 to a greater extent also in the cytoskeleton. Taken together, our results indicate the possibility of a reduction of metastatic cells escaping from the primary lesion to the surrounding tissue by prevention of their detachment and by influencing the activity of MMP-2 and MMP-9

    An assessment of the usefulness of a coconut as a model of the human skull for forensic identification of a homicide weapon

    Get PDF
    The authors made an attempt to verify if a coconut can be used as a model of human skull to determine the homicide weapon. During our experiment 27 strike attempts were performed with the use of 9 different tools. Among them there were authentic murder weapons and instruments which had been used in similar experiments conducted on human skulls in 1955. Depending on the size of an area in contact with a coconut, weapons caused dents corresponding to the shape of a weapon, irregular fractures or long linear cracks. Our results have shown that coconut can be used as an inexpensive screening model of human skull, but only to determine fractures made by tools with small striking surface

    Alginate-laccase beads in the decolourization of indigo carmine

    Get PDF
    The aim of the study was to assess the feasibility of utilizing sodium alginate biopolymer as animmobilization carrier for laccase in the removal of indigo carmine (IC), an anionic dye. The main goal of this work was to optimize the decolourization process by selecting the appropriate immobilized enzyme dose per 1 mg of dye, as well as the process temperature. The effective immobilization of laccase using sodium alginate as a carrier was confirmed by Raman spectroscopy. An analysis of the size and geometric parameters of the alginate beads was also carried out. Tests of IC decolourization using alginate-laccase beads were conducted. Applying the most effective dose of the enzyme (320 mg of enzyme/1 mg of IC) made it possible to remove 92.5% of the dye over 40 days. The optimal temperature for the IC decolourization process, using laccase immobilized on sodium alginate, was established at 30-40ºC. The obtained results indicate that laccase from Trametes versicolor immobilized on sodium alginate was capable of decolourizing the tested dye primarily based on mechanism of biocatalysis
    corecore