119 research outputs found

    Community Sport Coaching and Impression Management

    No full text
    This chapter positions community sport coaching work as a social, interactive performance. It begins by introducing the concept of dramaturgy and Erving Goffman’s ground-breaking work addressing ‘the presentation of the self in everyday life. This background information is then followed by an exposition of some of Goffman’s central dramaturgical concepts and the ways in which they connect with, and could be used to inform, everyday community sport coaching practice. Here, Callum, the last author, provides detailed examples of how he has utilised these dramaturgical concepts to inform the ways in which he performs his community sport coaching role. Finally, the conclusion summarises the central arguments and issues raised in this chapter and provides some critical questions to stimulate your reflection on the dramaturgical dimensions of everyday practice

    School Bullying: a Social Justice Issue? How Restorative Approaches May Prevent Future Violence

    No full text
    This article by Callum Jones discusses how restorative approaches by schools could be used to prevent future harm. The author explores how bullying is experienced, how it could be linked to future violent crime, and how school bullying prevention is a social justice issue

    Special issue, British DiGRA

    No full text
    Edited issue of ToDiGRA journal (Vol. 3 No. 3) curated by Paolo Ruffino, Garry Crawford, and Esther Mac-Callum Stewart</p

    Special issue, British DiGRA

    No full text
    Edited issue of ToDiGRA journal (Vol. 3 No. 3) curated by Paolo Ruffino, Garry Crawford, and Esther Mac-Callum Stewart</p

    Becoming Atheist: Humanism and the Secular West

    No full text
    The western world is becoming atheist. In the space of three generations, churchgoing and religious belief have become alien to millions. We are in the midst of one of humankind's great cultural changes. How has this happened? Becoming Atheist offers the most thorough analysis of this phenomenon to date, exploring through their own words how people have come to live their lives as if there is no God. It tells the stories of those who have come to secular lives in Britain, western Europe, the United States and Canada, mostly from Christian and Jewish backgrounds. Based on interviews with over 80 people born in 18 countries, Callum Brown shows that a long-latent humanism has been roused in the post-1945 secularising west. Focusing on the gender, ethnic and childhood dimensions of atheists from the United Kingdom, the USA, Canada and Europe, the author looks at how the religious condition of the western world changed during the 20th and 21st centuries. By listening to individuals' life stories, this book moves away from mere statistical or broad cultural analysis. Making extensive use of frank, humorous and sometimes harrowing personal testimony, Becoming Atheist exposes the people's role in renegotiating their own identities and fashioning a secular and humanist culture for the western world

    Application of adiabaticity map: highly efficient coupling from optical fibers to silicon waveguides by adiabatic mode evolution

    No full text
    Efficient coupling of light from an optical fiber to silicon waveguides is a challenging task in integrated photonics. Couplers based on adiabatic mode evolution have the advantages of high bandwidth and low loss but are often accompanied by longer device lengths. In this paper, we introduce the concept of adiabaticity map and optimize the coupling between an optical fiber and Si waveguides by selecting routes on the map that minimize unwanted mode coupling. The map clearly indicates areas in mode evolution where supermode coupling is large and identifies optimal routes for efficient mode evolution. Optimized interaction length and widths are obtained from the adiabaticity map. We obtain highly efficient coupling (96%) with large bandwidth (1-dB bandwidth 280 nm) and misalignment tolerance (⪆90 nm lateral misalignment range for 1-dB excess losses) for the TE polarization.Dynamics of Micro and Nano System

    Triploid Atlantic salmon, temperature, early development, and the potential for epigenetic programming

    No full text
    Triploidy is the only technique approved for inducing sterility in fish intended for human consumption. To increase the environmental sustainability and public perception of the aquaculture industry, scientific understanding of triploids must increase, assumptions must be challenged, and the additional costs linked with triploid production must be reduced. The gap between triploids and diploids in terms of performance is shrinking, but temperature tolerance remains a significant hurdle. In this thesis we aimed to tackle some of these issues. A suite of microsatellites was developed to verify triploidy, a protocol was established for extracting usable DNA (Deoxyribonucleic acid) from embryos between 26-78 degree days. In combination, these tools can reduce the cost and resources related with triploidy validation. The held assumption that triploids develop at the same rate as diploids during embryogenesis was validated; although differences in the timing of hatch were observed, with triploids hatching earlier. Optimal cleaning solution was determined, providing a useful tool for further studies. Triploidy was shown to have no significant negative impact on health or performance after thermal shocks at around 360 degree days, providing more support for the acceptance of triploids. Triploids performed well incubated at 4°C till eyeing and 6°C until hatch, with only a slight differential in radiological vertebral abnormalities found and no ploidy difference in mortalities or other malformations. Transcriptomic analysis after embryonic thermal shock and during thermal challenge later in life improved scientific understanding of triploids, revealing slight the differences between ploidy. Epigenetic analysis revealed triploids increased variability in the case of DNA methylation patterns. The potential of thermal programming to improve temperature tolerance was first demonstrated in a fish species, with shocked triploids experiencing increased growth under thermal stress. Raising the exciting prospect of not only removing a major barrier in triploid acceptance, but also providing a vital tool as the aquaculture industry faces rising temperatures worldwide

    COP26 and opening to postcapitalist climate politics, religion, and desire

    No full text
    Climate change represents a set of emergencies for humanity. Many geographers have argued that in order to repair and avert the damage that these confluent emergencies have and may-yet cause, a postcapitalist society is necessary. However, strategies for how this might be achieved often forgo any consideration of desire, which is problematic given the influence that desire holds over the ‘popularity’ towards which a postcapitalist politics may aspire. This paper reports on a psychogeographic walk to a church in Glasgow, taken by the author during the COP26 Youth March. Reflections on the role of the church amidst the roil of protest allows the author to imagine new ways in which movements striving for a climate-conscious postcapitalist future might engage with religion and spirituality in order to direct popular desires away from and beyond further climate breakdown

    Cultivating Spatial Diversity: The Nieuwe Binnenweg Forum

    No full text
    Today, Rotterdam’s city is observed as a mosaic of diverse cultures representing various characters and atmospheres. Recently, the research ‘Coming to Terms with Superdiversity: The Case of Rotterdam’ gives a historical account of Rotterdam’s diversity since the 1600s to present day to try and understand how diversity formed and shifted within society. The findings recorded are represented through interviews, empirical graphs and maps highlighting ethnicities, incomes and other social sciences. However, do not investigate how diversity exists within architecture and form. Therefore, this study uses the knowledge gained from ‘Coming to terms with superdiversity’ to understand how spatial diversity forms in the built environment, explicitly questioning ‘How can understanding the temporality of spatial diversity inform the way we design new spatial interventions?’. The question is tackled by creating a catalogue of maps based on the lessons learnt and new parameters to investigate the most spatially diverse area within the Western Archipelago site (WA). Thus, the series of maps create a visual narrative of the existing spatial diversity and enables the user to generate a design framework by highlighting critical areas for development and design potentials.Nieuwe Binnenweg Forum | Hotel New YorkArchitecture, Urbanism and Building Sciences | Complex Project
    corecore