2,390 research outputs found
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Evaluation of online mentoring project supporting young people who are NEET or at risk of becoming NEET in Reading and Wokingham
Evaluation of creative problem solving abilities in undergraduate structural engineers through interdisciplinary problem based learning
For a structural engineer, effective communication and interaction with architects cannot be underestimated as a key skill to success throughout their professional career. Structural engineers and architects have to share a common language and understanding of each other in order to achieve the most desirable architectural and structural designs. This interaction and engagement develops during their professional career but needs to be nurtured during their undergraduate studies. The objective of this paper is to present the strategies employed to engage higher order thinking in structural engineering students in order to help them solve complex problem-based learning (PBL) design scenarios presented by architecture students. The strategies employed were applied in the experimental setting of an undergraduate module in structural engineering at Queen’s University Belfast in the UK. The strategies employed were active learning to engage with content knowledge, the use of physical conceptual structural models to reinforce key concepts and finally, reinforcing the need for hand sketching of ideas to promote higher order problem-solving. The strategies employed were evaluated through student survey, student feedback and module facilitator (this author) reflection. The strategies were qualitatively perceived by the tutor and quantitatively evaluated by students in a cross-sectional study to help interaction with the architecture students, aid interdisciplinary learning and help students creatively solve problems (through higher order thinking). The students clearly enjoyed this module and in particular interacting with structural engineering tutors and students from another disciplin
Comparison of methods for estimating continuous distributions of relaxation times
The nonparametric estimation of the distribution of relaxation times approach
is not as frequently used in the analysis of dispersed response of dielectric
or conductive materials as are other immittance data analysis methods based on
parametric curve fitting techniques. Nevertheless, such distributions can yield
important information about the physical processes present in measured
material. In this letter, we apply two quite different numerical inversion
methods to estimate the distribution of relaxation times for glassy \lila\
dielectric frequency-response data at 225 \kelvin. Both methods yield unique
distributions that agree very closely with the actual exact one accurately
calculated from the corrected bulk-dispersion Kohlrausch model established
independently by means of parametric data fit using the corrected modulus
formalism method. The obtained distributions are also greatly superior to those
estimated using approximate functions equations given in the literature.Comment: 4 pages and 4 figure
Policy Implications of a Behavioural Economics Analysis of Land Use Determinants in Rural Scotland
The paper analyses the land use behaviour of Scottish land managers and the factors influencing it in the current context of the EU rural land use policies. The analysis employs a frequently used behavioural economics method, namely structural equation modelling (SEM). Central to the empirical analysis in this paper is a cross-section database containing data collected in May to June 2009 through telephone interviews of 600 land managers in Scotland. The model tests and estimates the relationships between land use behaviour, i.e., behavioural intentions to change the size of business/holding, and several of its a priori determinants found significant in the scientific literature. The results indicate that a stronger propensity to change size of their businesses is exhibited by younger land managers who intend to pass their land on to family, with larger land size and stronger attitudes towards increasing it, with lower percentage of their income made up from Government support, who are less likely to have perceived changes in regulation and input/output prices as having an impact on their business, who discuss and plan changes in size of business with their banks/building societies, and frequently access sources of information to help with their strategic decisions.Land use, rural policies, Scotland, structural equation modelling, Land Economics/Use,
Aspects of topology of condensates and knotted solitons in condensed matter systems
The knotted solitons introduced by Faddeev and Niemi is presently a subject
of great interest in particle and mathematical physics. In this paper we give a
condensed matter interpretation of the recent results of Faddeev and Niemi.Comment: v2: Added a reference to the paper E. Babaev, L.D. Faddeev and A.J.
Niemi cond-mat/0106152 where an exact equivalence was shown between the
two-condensate Ginzburg-Landau model and a version of Faddeev model.
Miscelaneous links related to knotted solitons are available at the author
homepage at http://www.teorfys.uu.se/PEOPLE/egor/ . Animations of knotted
solitons by Hietarinta and Salo are available at
http://users.utu.fi/h/hietarin/knots/c45_p2.mp
From caging to Rouse dynamics in polymer melts with intramolecular barriers: a critical test of the Mode Coupling Theory
By means of computer simulations and solution of the equations of the Mode
Coupling Theory (MCT), we investigate the role of the intramolecular barriers
on several dynamic aspects of non-entangled polymers. The investigated dynamic
range extends from the caging regime characteristic of glass-formers to the
relaxation of the chain Rouse modes. We review our recent work on this
question, provide new results and critically discuss the limitations of the
theory. Solutions of the MCT for the structural relaxation reproduce
qualitative trends of simulations for weak and moderate barriers. However a
progressive discrepancy is revealed as the limit of stiff chains is approached.
This disagreement does not seem related with dynamic heterogeneities, which
indeed are not enhanced by increasing barrier strength. It is not connected
either with the breakdown of the convolution approximation for three-point
static correlations, which retains its validity for stiff chains. These
findings suggest the need of an improvement of the MCT equations for polymer
melts. Concerning the relaxation of the chain degrees of freedom, MCT provides
a microscopic basis for time scales from chain reorientation down to the caging
regime. It rationalizes, from first principles, the observed devations from the
Rouse model on increasing the barrier strength. These include anomalous scaling
of relaxation times, long-time plateaux, and non-monotonous wavelength
dependence of the mode correlators.Comment: 15 pages, 14 figure
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“It Sounds Like a Drama:” Hearing Stories of Chronic Low Back Pain Through Poetic (Re)presentation
A poetic voice develops in different ways and from different sources. In this paper, a poetic voice is brought to the experiences of patients and family members as recounted in the first phase of a UK National Health Service funded Q-methodological study, the key outcomes of which are summarized. Their stories are presented as a single poetic performance text crafted from the analysis of combined transcripts of three focus group discussions. The performance bears witness to the sadness, frustration, and resolve of those living with chronic low back pain, and offers an additional hearing to that provided by the main study
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