137 research outputs found
Duchowość maryjna Fultona J. Sheena
The article concerns the Marian aspect of the spirituality of a well known American bishop, author of many publications, and famous preacher, Servant of God Fulton Sheen. The author shows, on the basis of Sheen’s most important publications, the bishop’s dogmatic teaching on Mother of God, the main forms of Marian piety put forward by him, and the idea of Her as a role model in the Christian spirituality. The Marian spirituality of Fulton Sheen, as early as in the pre‑conciliar time, realized generally ten aspects of devotion to the Blessed Virgin, which later Pope Paul VI indicated in his apostolic exhortation Marialis cultus, in 1974.Autor artykułu bada znaczenie Najświętszej Maryi Panny w duchowości amerykańskiego biskupa Fultona J. Sheena. Pokazuje duchowość maryjną jako aspekt duchowości chrześcijańskiej, opartej na wzorze postawy Matki Bożej. Jego duchowość, oparta na biblijnych i dogmatycznych podstawach, realizuje się w specyficznej pobożności maryjnej. Autor najpierw ukazuje obraz Maryi, jaki wyłania się z pism Sheena. Następnie omawia najważniejsze formy pobożności maryjnej. Na koniec, ukazując jej wzorczość, zastanawia się, na ile ta forma duchowości spełnia zasady pogłębionej pobożności maryjnej zawartej w adhortacji Marialis cultus
Confidence in Motion: Building Leadership and Visibility in Exercise Science Careers
Success in exercise science and kinesiology requires more than academic excellence or technical skill—it requires confidence, visibility, and the ability to communicate your expertise. In this keynote, WSJ-bestselling author Sheena Yap Chan (The Tao of Self-Confidence, Bridging the Confidence Gap) shares how students can overcome self-doubt, advocate for themselves in research and professional spaces, and step into leadership roles early in their careers. Drawing from her own journey and stories from hundreds of professionals she has interviewed, Sheena will equip students with tools to present research confidently, network authentically, and translate their knowledge into impact. This session inspires the next generation of exercise science leaders to not only excel academically but also become visible voices advancing health and human performance.
Learning Objectives
By the end of this session, students will be able to:
1. Identify confidence barriers that affect how they present their skills, research, and professional goals.
2. Apply visibility strategies—storytelling, presence, and advocacy—in academic and career advancement.
3. Create a personal “Confidence Roadmap” to prepare for graduate school applications, interviews, and professional opportunities
Eve Arnold's People
A survey of the career and work of the photographer Eve Arnold exploring her portraiture and her place in the history of photojournalism, edited by Brigitte Lardinois. Working closely with Eve Arnold as Cultural Director of Magnum Photos in London, Lardinois was aware of Arnold's wish to bring together her portraits together in a book. Though Arnold formerly edited her books herself, her advanced age did not allow her to fulfil this wish. Lardinois suggested the book to Thames and Hudson. Arnold gave the names of people who had been important in her career and Lardinois based her text on their recollections: Elliott Erwitt, Beeban Kidron, Mary McCartney, Sheena McDonald, David Puttnam, Michael Rand, Jon Snow and John Tusa.
Introductions were written by Angelica Huston and Isabella Rosselini.
Eve Arnold (b. 1912 in Philadelphia) was one of the great photographers of the modern era. This collection features her exceptional photographs of people, both famous and unknown, captured in formal and informal settings. In addition to Arnold's superb individual portraits of Monroe, Dietrich, Gable, Crawford, and more, there are a number of Photo Stories: visual essays made on assignment, including Malcolm X and the Black Muslims; her seminal work In China; and more. The work is organized into three key periods: 1948-60, her early career, and becoming the first woman member of Magnum; 1961-70, when she moved to the UK and began working with color film; 1971-97, with assignments in the Middle East, Afghanistan, and beyond.
With Arnold's permission Lardinois added the complete list of her photographic assignments, material never before published by Magnum. This clearly illustrates a photojournalist's way of working over a long period of time and of great interest to photo historians and students alike.
The book was published by Thames and Hudson in UK as well as the US and in Germany by Rolf Heyne and was sold world-wide
Coping and Multiple Sclerosis:Individuals with Multiple Sclerosis and their Significant Others
Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is a degenerative condition which affects everyone differently as regards emergence of symptoms. The illness uncertainty associated with MS has ramifications for how those with the condition and those close to them cope with the illness, with each other and with the effect it has on their lives. Health professionals acknowledge that those with MS need to be seen in the context of their families. The perspective of significant others (SOs) need to be acknowledged. However there is a lack of knowledge about what to expect about how people cope as a dyad.
This study used Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) to explore how those with MS and their SOs cope with this illness in their lives. Seven couples were recruited using purposive sampling through the MS society. Each person in the couple was interviewed separately using a semi-structured interview schedule. The interviews were transcribed and analysed using the principles of IPA to produce overarching themes and sub themes. Peer coding by two supervisors helped to enrich the analysis and contributed to the trustworthiness of the findings.
Three overarching themes emerged from the data, two overarching themes with four sub themes and one overarching theme with 3 sub themes. These overarching themes are labelled: Resources and Barriers to Coping, Coping Together: "Peaks and Troughs" and Coping over the Long Haul. Two integrative themes emerged, which were called Faith in Self and Faith in Each Other, encapsulating the participants’ identified primary resources which enabled them to cope.
The results of this study will assist health professionals to better comprehend how those with MS cope in an interconnected way with those with whom they share their lives. This research has highlighted the individual preferences about coping style and choice of coping strategies from the perspective of both the person with MS and their significant other. In addition, the nature of the relationship between couples, and the impact this relationship has on their ability to cope, needs to be understood and acknowledged by health professionals. The results of this study indicated that the relationship can be a powerful resource for couples during times of illness related stress. This study adds to the small but growing body of literature about how couples with MS make sense of the disease and how they develop coping strategies relevant to their relationship
Coping and Multiple Sclerosis:Individuals with Multiple Sclerosis and their Significant Others
Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is a degenerative condition which affects everyone differently as regards emergence of symptoms. The illness uncertainty associated with MS has ramifications for how those with the condition and those close to them cope with the illness, with each other and with the effect it has on their lives. Health professionals acknowledge that those with MS need to be seen in the context of their families. The perspective of significant others (SOs) need to be acknowledged. However there is a lack of knowledge about what to expect about how people cope as a dyad.
This study used Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) to explore how those with MS and their SOs cope with this illness in their lives. Seven couples were recruited using purposive sampling through the MS society. Each person in the couple was interviewed separately using a semi-structured interview schedule. The interviews were transcribed and analysed using the principles of IPA to produce overarching themes and sub themes. Peer coding by two supervisors helped to enrich the analysis and contributed to the trustworthiness of the findings.
Three overarching themes emerged from the data, two overarching themes with four sub themes and one overarching theme with 3 sub themes. These overarching themes are labelled: Resources and Barriers to Coping, Coping Together: "Peaks and Troughs" and Coping over the Long Haul. Two integrative themes emerged, which were called Faith in Self and Faith in Each Other, encapsulating the participants’ identified primary resources which enabled them to cope.
The results of this study will assist health professionals to better comprehend how those with MS cope in an interconnected way with those with whom they share their lives. This research has highlighted the individual preferences about coping style and choice of coping strategies from the perspective of both the person with MS and their significant other. In addition, the nature of the relationship between couples, and the impact this relationship has on their ability to cope, needs to be understood and acknowledged by health professionals. The results of this study indicated that the relationship can be a powerful resource for couples during times of illness related stress. This study adds to the small but growing body of literature about how couples with MS make sense of the disease and how they develop coping strategies relevant to their relationship
Volunteering Overseas: A Career Episode.
This article focuses on the effect of a voluntary overseas aid assignment on career development, and compares such a career step or episode with other overseas career experiences such as the company expatriate assignment and the New Zealand "big OE" (overseas experience). In particular, the article reports on the findings of a recently completed longitudinal study of 48 such volunteers who were recruited by New Zealand Volunteer Service Abroad (VSA). The article considers careers within the "New Careers" paradigm of career development theory, and in particular the effects of individual self-direction in career, across international boundaries. Analysis of data from the recent study suggests VSA volunteers are individuals who are knowledge workers, making cross-cultural experience and learning a key focus of their careers, combined with an altruistic desire to aid those less fortunate than themselves. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] Copyright of New Zealand Journal of Counselling is the property of New Zealand Association of Counsellors and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.
Retracted article: Students' learning styles and academic performance in Readings in Philippine History: Basis for a proposed course syllabus enhancement
The article entitled “Students’ learning styles and academic performance in Readings in Philippine History: Basis for a proposed course syllabus enhancement” (Volume 4, Issue 1, December 2022, pp. 45-51) written by Adrian Ote, Margie M. Lepangge, Nobelen Joy M. Marsonia, Sheena Joy C. Pagran, Jennilyn C. Se, and Jason A. Romero has been retracted at the request of the Corresponding Author
A changed climate created by Title IX within HBCU
For the last six months, I have researched Title IX and its impact on athletics within historical black colleges and universities (HBCU) specifically race. African-American women including all minorities have participated in college athletics as a direct result of Title IX. African-American women eventually graduate from college and are offered professional opportunities as either coaches or administrators. In 1972 Title IX became a federal law and banned sex discrimination in federally funded educational programs. I asked whether Title IX had a different impact on historical black colleges and universities (HBCU) vs. historical white colleges and universities (HWCU). My research suggests that the impact of Title IX on higher education is complicated. The primary focus of this paper is the institutional response to Title IX, and the institutions’ aspirations for black women leaders. I examined the institutional response at three colleges/universities: Spellman College, Howard University, and Rutgers University – New Brunswick. Through this research process, I have discovered that historical white colleges’ and universities’ response to Title IX has been to expand women’s varsity athletics but historical black colleges and universities have chosen to de-emphasize college sports and create physical educational activities. HBCU’s communities have provided learning centers, wellness programs, and career workshops to prepare their female student athletes for their future goals as leaders in society. This new revived role of physical education that has been created by HBCUs suggests that the institutions have not responded to Title IX by expanding women’s sports for gender equality but in fact HBCUs have put more emphasis on the racial uplift ideology. M.A.Includes bibliographical referencesby Sheena Pierc
Health impact assessment of coal-fired boiler retirement at the Martin Drake and Comanche power plants
Includes bibliographical references.Health impact assessment (HIA) is a suite of tools used to characterize potential health effects of policies, projects, or regulations. The objective of this HIA was to understand the impact of decommissioning units at two large coal-fired power plants on mortality and morbidity in the Southern Front Range region of Colorado. Based on Community Multiscale Air Quality (CMAQ) chemical transport models of fine particulate matter with an aerodynamic diameter less than 2.5 μm (PM2.5) and ozone (O3), we modeled five potential emissions reductions scenarios and estimated the potential health benefits of reduced exposures to PM2.5 and ozone for premature deaths, cardiovascular and respiratory hospitalizations, and other health outcomes for ZIP codes in the Southern Front Range region, including the cities of Denver, Colorado Springs, and Pueblo. Health Benefits Scenarios 1 and 2 estimated the health benefits of shutting down most units at the Comanche plant in Pueblo, CO (one newer unit remained operational) relative to a baseline scenario using emissions from 2011 (Scenario 1) or a counterfactual baseline scenario that accounted for sulfur dioxide emissions controls (scrubbers) installed at the Martin Drake plant in Colorado Springs in 2016 (Scenario 2). Health Benefits Scenario 3 estimated the benefits of shutting down the Martin Drake plant relative to the 2011 baseline. Health Benefits Scenario 4 estimated the health benefits of shutting down the Martin Drake power plant and shutting down all but one boiler at the Comanche power plant relative to a 2011 emissions baseline. Health Benefits Scenario 5 estimated the marginal health benefits of decommissioning these plants (with one remaining coal-fired boiler at Comanche) relative to a counterfactual baseline year that considered emissions controls installed at the Martin Drake facility in 2016. In addition to estimating the number of deaths, hospitalizations, and other health outcomes that would potentially be avoided by reducing emissions at these facilities, we also estimated the monetary impact using outcome valuations typically used in US EPA health benefits analyses and examined the environmental justice implications of reduced emissions and exposures across the Southern Front Range. • For Health Benefits Scenario 1 (Comanche Units 3 and 4 were “zeroed out” and compared to a baseline where all other emissions were at 2011 levels), we estimated that reducing population exposures to PM2.5 would result in 1 (95% CI: 0 - 1) fewer premature death each year. Reductions in PM2.5 and O3 exposures would also result in fewer restricted activity days among adults [5 (95% CI: -3 – 95)] and fewer missed school days for children [27 (95% CI: -19- 582)]. Benefits of retiring the Comanche units were similar when emissions controls at Martin Drake are taken into account (Health Benefits Scenario 2).
• For Health Benefits Scenario 3 (emissions at Martin Drake were “zeroed out”), we estimated that reducing population exposures to PM2.5 and O3 would result in 4 (95% CI: 2 - 5) and < 1 (95% CI: 0 - 1) fewer premature deaths each year, respectively. Reductions in PM2.5 and O3 exposures would also result in fewer restricted activity days among adults [10 (95% CI: 0 – 74)] and fewer missed school days for children [4 (95% CI: 2- 5)]. • For Health Benefits Scenario 4, we estimated that reducing population exposures to PM2.5 and O3 would result in 4 (95% CI: 2 - 6) and < 1 (95% CI: 0 - 1) fewer premature deaths each year, respectively. Among the largest annual health benefits are avoided asthma symptom days among children [16 (95% CI: -1 – 141) due to PM2.5 and 13 (95% CI: -348 - 972) due to O3] and minor restricted activity days among adults [69 (95% CI: 0 - 488) due to PM2.5 and 71 (95% CI: -31 - 750) due to O3]. We also estimated that, for Health Benefits Scenario 1, children in the study area would miss 77 (95% CI: -77 - 1180) fewer days of school each year due to lower O3 exposures. • Annual health benefits were lower for Health Benefits Scenario 5 compared to Scenario 4 due to the smaller change in exposure concentration after accounting for the control technologies installed at Martin Drake in 2016. For Health Benefits Scenario 5, we estimated that reducing population exposures to PM2.5 and O3 would result in 2 (95% CI: 1 - 3) and < 1 (95% CI: 0 - 1) fewer premature deaths each year, respectively. Other annual benefits under Health Benefits Scenario 2 included 2 (95% CI: -17 – 44) and 9 (-242 – 678) avoided asthma symptom days due to PM2.5 and O3 exposures, respectively; 28 (95%CI: -2 – 188) and 48 (95%CI: -16 – 513) minor restricted activity days due to PM2.5 and O3 exposures; and 53 (95% CI: -48 – 833) avoided school absences among children due to O3 exposures. • Monetized health benefits when both plants were “zeroed out” ranged from 2.1 million - 1.7 million (95% CI: $0.8 million – 3.2 million) for Health Benefits Scenario 5. Benefits tended to be smaller when only one plant was considered. In all of the analyses, the monetized impacts were driven by the value of avoided premature mortality. In addition, we found that ZIP codes with lower median incomes tended to receive a greater share of the health benefits of decreasing exposures to PM2.5 and O3 resulting from power plant shutdowns. This finding suggests that reducing emissions at the power plants could potentially alleviate some environmental justice concerns in the area
Soil PH and clay content associated with chronic wasting disease in white-tailed deer in northern Illinois
Soil is an important reservoir for chronic wasting disease (CWD) which is a prion disease that infects cervids through both direct contact with infected animals and contact with contaminated environments. I built a boosted regression tree model that accurately predicted (AUC = 0.954) the probability of CWD presence in northern Illinois based on soil characteristics (soil texture, pH, cation exchange capacity, organic matter, and water content), then used the outcome to assess possible pathways by which soil characteristics increase the probability of transmission via environmental contamination. The model indicates CWD is likely to be present where: soil pH is greater than 6.6, percent clay is lower than 20%, cation exchange capacity (CEC) is lower than 15 meq/100g, and soil organic matter is less than 4.5%. Soil pH and the abundance of clays and associated soil organic matter and CEC appear to alter the availability of prions immobilized in soil. The results suggest that exposure to prions through probable routes of infection such as inhalation or ingestion is greatest where pH is greater than 6.6 and the percent clay is less than 20%.Submission published under a 24 month embargo labeled 'Closed Access', the embargo will last until 2018-12-01The student, Sheena Dorak, accepted the attached license on 2016-12-06 at 09:48.The student, Sheena Dorak, submitted this Thesis for approval on 2016-12-06 at 09:59.This Thesis was approved for publication on 2016-12-06 at 14:21.DSpace SAF Submission Ingestion Package generated from Vireo submission #10445 on 2018-08-14 at 16:00:19Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-14T21:37:11Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 3
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Previous issue date: 2016-12-06Embargo set by: Seth Robbins for item 106496
Lift date: 2020-08-14T21:37:20Z
Reason: Author requested closed access (OA after 2yrs) in Vireo ETD systemLimited Restriction Lifted for Item 106496 on 2020-08-15T09:15:08Z
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