3,943 research outputs found
A condição bucal e o estado nutricional em três gerações
Tese (doutorado) - Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Centro de Ciências da Saúde. Programa de Pós-Graduação em OdontologiaEstudo em três gerações realizado em uma amostra de 162 participantes, divididos em 54 famílias, cada qual com seu avô, seu filho e seu neto. Além da avaliação bucal e nutricional, verificaram-se os hábitos alimentares e relacionados à saúde bucal. A análise estatística foi realizada por meio de testes de associação Qui-Quadrado e teste de kappa. Nos resultados, a associação entre a condição bucal e o estado nutricional nas diferentes gerações não foi encontrada. Quanto à concordância intrafamiliar, tanto na condição bucal como nos hábitos alimentares, observou-se significância estatística entre a geração adulta e a geração criança. Concluiu-se que a condição bucal, o estado nutricional e os hábitos referentes à saúde bucal e alimentar parecem ser influenciados pelo contexto familiar
Introduction: Marginalised Voices in Criminology
This book is about people who are under-heard and under-served in criminology; it is an attempt to make space and amplify voices that are too often omitted or overlooked, spoken about, or for. In essence, it is a project about listening, and not only that, paying attention, being engaged, and showing humility about what we do not know, instead of eagerly filling up that knowledge space with loud noise, chatter, and colonial practices. This book offers the reader a critical pause; we invite you to stay with us in the discomfort and reflect on how we come to know what we know (Le Bourdon, 2022), question what else there is to know (Trouillot, 1988), reflect on what pains and privileges this has afforded us, and consider who gets to speak about issues within and across the criminological landscape
Final Reflections
It is important to explicitly acknowledge in the conclusion of the book that we, as editors of the collection, do not have all the answers when it comes to addressing deep-seated issues relating to race, gender, class, dis/ability, sexuality, and other often intersecting inequalities generated and perpetuated within academia, society, or the criminal justice system. What we reflect on in our own practice and hope to encourage others to talk about, question, and challenge is how these inequalities are reproduced and perpetuated by the people who research, write about, and publish in relation to crime, criminology, and criminal justice, either consciously or not
Black Fashion Designers Symposium: June Ambrose in conversation with Carly Cushnie and Michelle Ochs
June Ambrose in conversation with Carly Cushnie and Michelle Ochs at The Museum at FIT's annual fashion symposium, Black Fashion Designers, held on Monday, February 6, 2017. The one-day symposium featured talks by designers, models, journalists, and scholars on African diasporic culture and fashion.June Ambrose is a celebrity stylist and designer whose clients include Sean Combs, Jay Z, Alicia Keys, and Gabrielle Union. She is author of the book Effortless Style.Carly Cushnie and Michelle Ochs founded their brand Cushnie et Ochs in 2008, creating collections that juxtapose bold sensuality with minimalist sophistication
Imposter agony aunts : ambivalent feminist advice
Imposter syndrome is something of a buzzword in blogs and online commentaries on higher education (HE) and is receiving increasing research attention. Research findings regularly orientate towards advice for coping with feeling like an imposter in the university (Hutchins & Rainbolt 2017). For instance research identifies reflexive diary keeping (Wilkinson 2020) and coaching and mentoring (Hutchins et al. 2018) as strategies for combating academics' imposterism. Likewise, everyday informal talk of academic imposter syndrome, including on social media, repeats advice on how to overcome imposterism (Taylor & Breeze 2020). A common recommendation is that academics 'open up' (Bahn 2014) and share experiences of insecurity, inadequacy, fraudulence, and failure: 'The first rule of impostor syndrome is you talk about impostor syndrome' (Vaughn 2019 np). Having participated in university training courses, mentoring programmes, and having been on the receiving end of such advice, in this chapter we re-think the politics of advice and of talking about it. What structures and surpasses opening up in reflexive accounts of imposterism? What are the preconditions and limits of advice-giving and receiving? In this chapter we think through the ambivalences of these questions, exploring how feminist academics might respond to and rework a familiar advice format by inhabiting the figure of the agony aunt. Throughout we aim to explore the possibilities and constraints of feminist advice as well as drawing attention to underlying assumptions perpetuated in advising, when talking about it is heralded as a solution to the problem of imposter 'syndrome'
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Media Representations of Michelle Obama
In this article the author presents ideas about the media representations of Michelle Obama. The author argues that the public perceptions and favorability of Michelle Obama are tied to which aspects of her identity are presented in the media
sj-pdf-1-top-10.1177_00986283231199454 - Supplemental material for How do Students and Faculty Consider Numerical Ratings and Comments About Daily Quizzing when Interpreting Student Evaluations of Teaching?
Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-top-10.1177_00986283231199454 for How do Students and Faculty Consider Numerical Ratings and Comments About Daily Quizzing when Interpreting Student Evaluations of Teaching? by Michelle L. Rivers, Addison L. Babineau, Katherine P. Neely, and Sarah K. Tauber in Teaching of Psychology</p
Interview of author Michelle Martinez
Michelle Martinez, author of the crime novel "Most wanted," talks about the issues faced by Latin Americans in their home country versus what they face in the United States. She describes her family and education, graduation form Harvard Law School, and her professional endeavors. Martinez discusses the story line of her book, what motivated her to write, and how she brought her experiences from the prosecutor's office to bear on her writing. She describes her writing as an opportunity to explore her own cultural heritage. Martinez discusses the art of writing and talks about what she reads. Martinez is interviewed by Diana Rivera at the 2005 Left Coast Crime Conference held in El Paso, Texas
Young Investigator: Michelle J Yoo
Supervisor’s supporting comments I have always been impressed with Michelle’s ability to conduct research in an independent and yet highly effective manner. Part of her research in my group has examined the use of affinity columns to examine drug–protein binding with serum proteins, such as human serum albumin. This work is extremely important to the fields of pharmaceutical chemistry and clinical chemistry in providing the data needed for the development of new drugs or in the optimization of treatments for patients with new, or existing, drugs. Another topic that Michelle has examined in her research is the use of new supports based on monolithic materials and ultrafast-extraction methods for affinity-based separations of biological samples and high-throughput screening of drug–protein binding. She was the lead author on a review written on this topic and also has several research publications related to this area of work. During her graduate studies, Michelle has emerged as a real leader in my group. She has excellent people and communication skills and is highly motivated in her pursuit of an advanced degree in analytical chemistry and bioanalysis. I have extremely high expectations for her in the future as she continues her career. Nominated by: David S Hage, University of Nebraska, Department of Chemistry, Hamilton Hall 704, Lincoln, NE 68588, USA </jats:p
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