Journal articles: 'Audiovisual Education Association of Iowa' – Grafiati (2024)

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Relevant bibliographies by topics / Audiovisual Education Association of Iowa / Journal articles

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Author: Grafiati

Published: 4 June 2021

Last updated: 17 February 2022

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1

Schretter, Didier. "The European Association for Audiovisual Media Education (EAAME)." Educational Media International 34, no.3 (September 1997): 153–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0952398970340309.

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Boza-Osuna, Luis. "Educative project, tools for an audiovisual education." Comunicar 13, no.25 (October1, 2005): 177–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.3916/c25-2005-024.

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TAC is a civil, non-profit, association created in Barcelona in 1985. Nowadays we have more than 15.000 associates and we are still fighting for an objective and transparent quality TV. We present a special attention to children protection issues; we also create opinion for influencing on the media, reach society and enrich public debate. Since 1999 TAC is working in an educative project that consists basically of offering to the educative institutions tools that contribute to diminish those television’s negative effects in all school’s levels: parents, professors and students. El objeto de este trabajo es examinar la necesidad de informar y formar en educación audiovisual a familias, alumnos y profesores. Desde 1999, Telespectadores Asociados de Cataluña (TAC) decidió apostar decididamente por acercarse al mundo educativo, para dar respuesta a la evidente necesidad de las instituciones educativas de plantar cara a los efectos negativos de la televisión en los alumnos. Los directivos y profesionales de la enseñanza son perfectamente conscientes de la competencia desleal que realiza a diario entre sus alumnos la «escuela paralela» más insistente y omnipresente: la televisión. Por eso, TAC ha puesto en marcha un proyecto educativo que consiste básicamente en ofrecer a las instituciones educativas instrumentos que contribuyan a minimizar esos efectos negativos de la televisión en todos los niveles de la escuela: padres, profesores y alumnos. Al mismo tiempo contribuimos a sacar partido positivo de este medio de comunicación tan importante, por su presencia y uso en los hogares.

3

Hedden, Debra Gordon, GeorgeN.Heller, JereT.Humphreys, and ValerieA.Slattery. "Alice Carey Inskeep (1875-1942): A Pioneering Iowa Music Educator and MENC Founding Member." Journal of Research in Music Education 55, no.2 (July 2007): 129–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/002242940705500204.

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The purpose of this study was to examine the professional contributions of Alice Carey Inskeep (1875-1942), who contributed significantly to music education through her positive and effective teaching, supervising, community service, and leadership in music education. Inskeep was born in Ottumwa, Iowa, and taught for five years in that city's school system after graduating from high school. She served as music supervisor in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, for most of the remainder of her career, where she provided progressive leadership to the schools and community. She was one of three people appointed to plan the initial meeting in Keokuk, Iowa, for what eventually became MENC: The National Association for Music Education, and she was one of sixty-nine founding members of the organization in 1907. The Keokuk meeting served as an impetus for Inskeep to travel to Chicago, where she studied with several notable music educators. Later, she sat on the organization's nominating committee, the first Educational Council (precursor to the Music Education Research Council) board of directors, and provided leadership to two of the organization's affiliates, the North Central Division and the Iowa Music Educators Association. She served as a part-time or summer faculty member at Iowa State Normal School and Coe College in Cedar Falls and Cedar Rapids, Iowa, respectively, and the American Institute of Normal Methods in Evanston, Illinois, and Auburndale, Massachusetts.

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Boza-Osuna, José. "Viewers associations in quality television construction." Comunicar 13, no.25 (October1, 2005): 109–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.3916/c25-2005-015.

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The false and negative image of the audiovisual association movement stems in part from the associations themselves. The difficulties we encounter in our work are related to the complex audiovisual world (complex and kaleidoscopic product, psychologically complex relations between consumer and media, market of enormous dimensions and complex opacity). The cultural character of the product relates it to the delicate world of free expression all the while separating it from other audiovisual products share its enormous potential for socialization. In this context, the associations must learn to offer our service to society. La sociedad actual ha generado un cliché falso del asociacionismo audiovisual alimentado en parte por las propias asociaciones. No es nada fácil precisar ni el objeto, ni el sujeto del Asociacionismo audiovisual que afronta un producto muy complejo, poliédrico, multiforme; en un ámbito social de enorme envergadura, inabarcable y de dificilísimo análisis; y representando a un consumidor que ni siquiera sabe que lo es. No hay para el consumidor una marca identificable que no sea la marca televisión. El producto es, además, cultural y, por tanto, sometido a las leyes de la libertad de expresión. Sin embargo, frente a otros productos culturales de parecida naturaleza, la televisión es el más poderoso elemento socializador que exige por tanto un tratamiento social, educativo y jurídico completamente diferenciado para la consecución del bien común.

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Hebert, Kirsten. "A Century of Continuing Education." Hindsight: Journal of Optometry History 50, no.4 (October16, 2019): 103–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.14434/hindsight.v50i4.28037.

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2019 marks the 100th anniversary of the American Optometric Association’s first Department of Education and the launch of its first distance learning program. This article traces the evolution of the AOA’s distance continuing education strategy over the last century, highlighting three generations of educational technology and modes of delivery the association has employed: textual materials by mail, audiovisual media through library loan, and interactive digital modules over the world wide web. The author also explores the relationship between the warfare and the development of educational technology and pedagogy at each stage of development and introduces the reader to the AOA’s newest iteration of its distance learning web portal,EyeLearn.™

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VanDerZanden, Ann Marie. "Asynchronous Continuing Education for Iowa’s Green Industry Professionals." HortTechnology 23, no.5 (October 2013): 677–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.21273/horttech.23.5.677.

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A collaborative two-part project between Iowa State University Horticulture Extension and the Iowa Nursery and Landscape Association (INLA) resulted in an online, asynchronous training program to prepare green industry professionals for the Iowa Certified Nursery Professional (ICNP) exam, and to provide advanced training through webinars. Since 2008, members have accessed a set of 20 training modules that cover plant identification and content on the written portion of the certification exam. In the 6 years since the modules have been used, the pass rate for the written portion of the exam has increased from 57% (2005–07, 18 participants) to 85% (2008–13, 49 participants). A survey administered to participants between 2008 and 2013 gathered information on participant demographics, interest in learning in an online format, usefulness and applicability of information in preparing for the exam, module usability, and how the modules impacted their learning. Participants felt that the modules were an effective way to deliver content (4.45 out of 5) and reported they were comfortable using a web-based format to learn (4.89 out of 5). Advanced training was delivered to members through three webinar series: five webinars in 2011 and four webinars each in 2012 and 2013. Although attendance to the live webinar sessions was limited, the archived versions have been accessed a number of times.

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Montalvo-Castro, Jorge. "Audiovisual Riddles to Stimulate Children’s Creative Thinking." Comunicar 18, no.36 (March1, 2011): 123–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.3916/c36-2011-03-03.

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Solving riddles involves association of ideas, analysis of metaphors, and discovery of analogies. Therefore, promoting this type of children’s entertainment is a way to develop creative thinking. However, there is a problem: traditional riddles are literary forms that correspond to a pre-digital era. How can we increase its acceptance among the digital natives? One way might be creating audiovisual riddles specially designed for YouTube. In this research we made five prototypes of audiovisual riddles with different creative characteristics and validated them among 8-12 years old students. The validation results helped us to identify the attitudes, reactions, interpretations and ways of thinking of children when they try to solve such riddles. We also identified the resources of language and creative formats that fit best in audio-visual riddles. The outcome of this research emphasizes the need to correctly formulate the audiovisual riddle statements and their «clues» for children; this way we assure an intellectual and emotional satisfaction when solving them. It also concludes that reading or listening to traditional riddles are cognitive and sensory experiences that are very different from interacting with the same riddle in a multimedia language. Finally, we discuss and analyze the mediating role of the teacher and the importance of collaborative learning in educational projects using digital technologies.Para resolver una adivinanza hay que asociar ideas, analizar metáforas, descubrir analogías. Por eso, impulsar esta forma de entretenimiento infantil es un modo de ejercitar el pensamiento creativo. Sin embargo, existe un problema: las adivinanzas tradicionales son formas literarias que corresponden a una época pre-digital. ¿Cómo lograr, entonces, que tengan mayor aceptación entre los nativos digitales? Una posible solución sería crear adivinanzas audiovisuales diseñadas especialmente para YouTube. En esta investigación se realizaron cinco prototipos de adivinanzas audiovisuales con características creativas diferentes y se validaron con estudiantes de tercero a sexto grado de educación primaria. Los resultados de la validación permitieron identificar las actitudes, reacciones, interpretaciones y modos de razonamiento de los niños y niñas cuando intentan resolver este tipo de adivinanzas. También se identificaron los recursos de lenguaje y formatos creativos que funcionan mejor en una adivinanza audiovisual. En las conclusiones se destaca la necesidad de formular correctamente los enunciados de las adivinanzas audiovisuales y sus respectivas «pistas» para que los niños y niñas tengan la satisfacción intelectual y emocional de resolverlas. Se precisa, además, que leer o escuchar una adivinanza tradicional representa una experiencia cognitiva y sensorial muy distinta que interactuar con esa misma adivinanza en un lenguaje multimedia. Finalmente, se discute y analiza el rol mediador del docente y la importancia del aprendizaje colaborativo en los proyectos educativos que emplean tecnologías digitales.

8

Downs, Dennis, and Ellen Lindquist. "Harp Lessons by Telecommunication." American String Teacher 44, no.2 (May 1994): 59–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/000313139404400223.

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Dennis A. Downs, orchestra instructor at Cedar Falls High School and Peet Junior High School, has taught public school orchestras for 25 years. Past president of the Iowa String Teachers Association and Iowa School Orchestra Association, he is an MENC Certified Music Instructor with a BFAE from Wayne State College, MA from the University of Northern Colorado, and Ed Ad from the University of Nebraska. A cellist in the Waterloo-Cedar Falls Symphony, he also directs the Cedar Falls Municipal Band and performs professionally on guitar, bass, and trombone. Downs is the project facilitator for the distance education program he describes in this article.

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Pusateri,ThomasP. "A Decade of Changes since the St. Mary's Conference: An Interview with Thomas V. McGovern." Teaching of Psychology 29, no.1 (January 2002): 76–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1207/s15328023top2901_14.

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Tom Pusateri received his doctorate degree in 1984 from Ohio State University. He is a professor of psychology at Loras College in Dubuque, Iowa specializing in Social and Industrial/Organizational psychology. He served a 2-year appointment as Assessment Coordinator for his campus, continues to serve on its assessment committee, and has delivered several conference presentations on assessment. Tom serves as Executive Director for the Society for the Teaching of Psychology. Tom McGovern is professor and cofounder of the interdisciplinary Department of Integrative Studies at Arizona State University West. He was the first campus-wide Director of Assessment at Virginia Commonwealth University. Tom chaired the American Psychological Association (APA)/Association of American Colleges' project on liberal learning and study in depth as well as the steering committee for the St. Mary's Conference on Enhancing Undergraduate Education in Psychology (McGovern, 1993). He coauthored the Quality Principles with the steering committee from that APA-sponsored conference (see McGovern & Reich, 1996).

10

Kam, Shien-Yi, and Kususanto Ditto Prihadi. "Why students tend to compare themselves with each other? The role of mattering and unconditional self-acceptance." International Journal of Evaluation and Research in Education (IJERE) 10, no.2 (June1, 2021): 441. http://dx.doi.org/10.11591/ijere.v10i2.21238.

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<span lang="EN-US">Previous studies suggested that university students who are not able to accept themselves tend to develop negative tendency to compare themselves with each other. This study aimed to investigate the role of unconditional self-acceptance (USA) in explaining the association between mattering and social comparison among Malaysian undergraduate students. </span><span lang="EN-US">Three hundred and seventy </span><span lang="EN-US">undergraduate students were recruited and asked to complete an online version of Unconditional Self-Acceptance questionnaire, Iowa-Netherlands Comparison Orientation Measure and University Mattering Scale. Data analysis was conducted by employing Bootstrap Method with 95% confidence interval and 5000 sampling. The result showed that USA partially mediated the relationship between mattering and social comparison. Mattering and USA were identified as robust protective factors of social comparison among university students.</span>

11

Żyto, Kamila. "An Obstacle to Overcome: Problematic Issues Concerning Early Childhood Film and Media Education in Poland. The New Horizons Association Model as a Solution." Panoptikum, no.18 (December29, 2017): 89–105. http://dx.doi.org/10.26881/pan.2017.18.06.

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Film and media education in the case of preschool-age-children is a particularly complicated matter. There are many different factors, including the question of methodology, challenges which stem from the learning abilities and skills of young children that should be discussed. The article on the one hand tries to indicate the main obstacle that preschool audiovisual education in Poland deals with. But on the other hand it presents and describes as a case study the New Horizons Association projects dedicated to children age 3–7. As the New Horizons are a nongovernmental organisation, the kind of solution they propose does not solve all the problems and is limited and restricted. In the final part of the article I critically try to refer to, what is still for many, an exceptional proposition.

12

Wallace,JohnL. "A Question of Honor(aria)." Canadian Journal of Gastroenterology 15, no.1 (2001): 17–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2001/604503.

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Honorarium: fee, especially for professional services normally rendered without payment (Oxford English Dictionary)One of the main activities of the Canadian Association of Gastroenterology (CAG) is the organizing of professional education events, and the largest of these events is Canadian Digestive Diseases Week (CDDW). The CDDW is organized by members of the CAG for members of the CAG. The funds needed to run this meeting are generated from a number of sources - membership dues, sponsorship from pharmaceutical companies, sale of exhibit space, etc. These funds are used to pay for the convention facilities, for the audiovisual services, for the coffee breaks and lunches, and for the cost of bringing to our meetings the many experts who are on the program.

13

Taylor, Gloria, and Lin Johnson McGaw. "Determining Preferred Educational Methods for Neurological Surgery Residents regarding Organ Donation." Journal of Transplant Coordination 8, no.1 (March 1998): 30–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/090591999800800107.

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Design and implementation of professional education, especially physician education, continues to challenge procurement professionals. At the request of the American Association of Neurological Surgeons and the Congress of Neurological Surgeons, the United Network for Organ Sharing undertook a project to develop educational materials for neurological surgery residents. A survey tool was developed and administered on site at 11 neurological surgery residency programs in the United States. The survey explored the types of learning environments, teaching methods, educational resources, and audiovisual aids that neurological surgery residents typically experience during their residency programs. In addition, the survey sought to uncover the residents' informational needs regarding organ and tissue donation presentations as well as their educational program preferences. Based on our findings, neurological surgery residents prefer presentations that are brief and to the point, that are easily understood, that require no reading, that contain limited important information, and that always include food.

14

Jacobs,DavidR., Christina Hohe, Jaakko Mursu, Kim Robien, and AaronR.Folsom. "Whole grain intake, incident hip fracture and presumed frailty in the Iowa Women's Health Study." British Journal of Nutrition 104, no.10 (June23, 2010): 1537–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0007114510002382.

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Whole cereal grain foods are rich in phytate, a Ca chelator, and could increase the risk of hip fracture. The objective of the present study was to investigate the association between baseline whole grain intake and incident hip fracture. In the present study, 29 192 women who at baseline in 1986 were aged 55–69 years, free of diabetes, and reported a plausible energy intake of 2508–20 900 kJ/d and reported no fracture since the age of 35 years were followed. Hip fracture (n746) was self-reported in five questionnaires through 2004. Of 1451 hip fractures identified passively by Medicare linkage through 31 December 2004 (Medicare hip fracture), 507 had also been self-reported. Whole grain intake was inversely related to Medicare hip fracture (Ptrend = 0·02), but it was unrelated to self-reported hip fracture (Ptrend = 0·27). The hazard ratio in the highest to lowest quintile of whole grain intake for incident Medicare-only hip fracture (n944) was 0·66 (95 % CI 0·53, 0·82) after adjustment for age, energy intake, education, BMI, waist-to-hip ratio, farm residence, physical activity, oestrogen use, smoking, alcohol use, history of cancer and other dietary variables. Medicare-only cases may have failed to self-report due to severe illness; hazard ratio for total mortality after hip fracture was 2·92 (2·37, 3·59) for Medicare-only casesv.Medicare-confirmed self-reported cases. In conclusion, in this cohort, the inverse association between whole grain intake and hip fracture was explained by ascertainment bias. Whole grain intake may increase the ability to respond to a questionnaire and self-report hip fracture, and could reflect less undocumented frailty.

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Malyshev, Vladimir. "CILECT as the Project of a World Film School: Origins, Specifics, Development." Journal of Flm Arts and Film Studies 11, no.4 (December13, 2019): 8–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.17816/vgik1148-24.

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The continuing introduction of digital technologies into the production of meaningful and engaging audiovisual images accentuates the necessity of international cooperation in the sphere of the professional education of those young people who are planning to work in film, television and other screen arts. All over the world film schools are challenged by problems the solution of which requires consolidated participation of worldfamous masters. This has been recently confirmed at the Congress of the International Association of Film and Television Schools (CILECT) Congress held in October 2019 in Moscow in connection with the 100th anniversary of the All-Russian State Institute of Cinematography (VGIK). This essay analyzesVGIK's contribution to the process of perfecting programs in the field of screen arts at different stages of their development. The essay explores issues of CILECT development since its foundation in 1954. Initially, CILECT was supported by nations with developed film cultures, such as Brazil, Chile, Czechoslovakia, France, Italy, Poland, the Soviet Union, Spain, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Today, the Association unites 180 film schools from 65 nations. The essay analyzes VGIK's role in the development of film education and, more generally, the development of screen arts; and emphasizes the importance of international cooperation in this technological, digital age.

16

Bell, John Frederick. "When Regulation Was Religious: College Philanthropy, Antislavery Politics, and Accreditation in the Mid-Nineteenth-Century West." History of Education Quarterly 57, no.1 (February 2017): 68–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/heq.2016.4.

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The college accreditation movement that arose at the turn of the twentieth century had an important antecedent in the Society for the Promotion of Collegiate and Theological Education at the West. Founded in 1843, this nondenominational philanthropy aspired to direct the development of higher education by dispersing eastern funds to Protestant colleges that met its standards for instruction, administration, and piety. For all its ambitions, the Society did not always offer dependable or disinterested supervision. Its relationships with Knox College and Iowa College (now Grinnell) exposed its shortcomings. Coinciding with the rising sectional conflict over slavery, the activities of these institutions forced the regulatory association to engage in the very brand of ecclesiastical politics it had vowed to transcend. This article shows how institutional resistance and church rivalry helped delay the growth of accreditation until the turn of the twentieth century, when secular organizations took up the reins of regulation.

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Palšová, Lucia, Zuzana Bohátová, and Norbert Floriš. "Effectiveness of Common Agricultural Policy Implementation in Slovakia – European Project Implemeted by the Association of Agrarian and Environmental Lawyers." EU agrarian Law 8, no.2 (December1, 2019): 1–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/eual-2019-0006.

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AbstractThe Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) is the oldest EU policy and is one of the supranational areas and policies of the European Union (EU). CAP introduced diverse legal and economic tools for comprehensive and smart restructuralisation of the Slovak agriculture and rural areas. With the purpose to improve the CAP implementation in Slovakia, the project “Effectiveness of Common Agricultural Policy implementation in Slovakia” (CAPE) was prepared and submitted by the Association of Agrarian and Environmental Lawyers. The project was approved by the Education, Audiovisual and Culture Executive Agency and it has been granted from September 2019 (Decision Nr. 2019–1802/001.001, Project Nr. 611792–EPP–1–2019–1–SK–EPPJMO–SUPPA). The idea to submit project proposal aroused from the need to contribute to improving the Common Agricultural Policy implementation in Slovakia. The main aim of the project is to perform the interdisciplinary research in the field of the effectiveness of CAP implementation in Slovakia with the specific objectives to discuss and advise local, regional, national policymakers and decision–makers on different aspects of the CAP implementation, transfer the research results and the expertise to the practice and to disseminate the project outcomes among interested target groups and civil society.

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Ojeda-Castañeda, Gerardo. "For a new educational use of radio and television in Latin america." Comunicar 13, no.25 (October1, 2005): 87–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.3916/c25-2005-012.

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Due to the development of so many different educational experiments in radio and television with more than 40 years of existence in many Latin American countries, the appearance of new institutional initiatives done by most of the educational institutions of Latin America and, facing the innovating approaches of technological convergence of telecommunications, the audiovisual means and computer science, with the possible complementarity and interrelation of radio, television and Internet in new broadband IP digital networks, it becomes necessary to raise new lines of future and intervention to encourage the Televisión Educativa Iberoamericana (TEIb) (Latin American Educational Television), Program of Cooperation of the Latin American Heads of States and Governments Summit, and its managing association, the ATEI. Debido al desarrollo de tantas y diversas experiencias de radio y televisión educativas con más de 40 años de existencia en muchos países iberoamericanos, la aparición de nuevas iniciativas institucionales que realizan la mayoría de las instituciones educativas de Iberoamérica y, ante los innovadores planteamientos de la convergencia tecnológica de las telecomunicaciones, los medios audiovisuales y la informática, con la posible complementariedad e interrelación de la radio, televisión e Internet en las nuevas redes digitales de banda ancha IP, se hace necesario plantear nuevas líneas de futuro y actuación para relanzar la Televisión Educativa Iberoamericana (TEIb), Programa de Cooperación de las Cumbres Iberoamericanas de Jefes de Estado y de Gobierno, y su Asociación gestora, la ATEI.

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Ho, Shiaw-Hooi, Rungsun Rerknimitr, Kuriko Kudo, Shunta Tomimatsu, Mohamad Ahmad, Akira Aso, Dong Seo, Khean-Lee Goh, and Shuji Shimizu. "Telemedicine for gastrointestinal endoscopy: The Endoscopic Club E-conference in the Asia Pacific Region." Endoscopy International Open 05, no.04 (March31, 2017): E244—E252. http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0043-102935.

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Abstract Background and study aims An Endoscopic Club E-conference (ECE) was set up in May 2014 to cater to increased demand for gastrointestinal endoscopy-related teleconferences in the Asia-Pacific region which were traditionally organized by the medical working group (MWG) of Asia-Pacific Advanced Network. This study describes how the ECE meeting was run, examines the group dynamics, outlines feedback and analyzes factors affecting the enthusiasm of participants. It is hoped that the findings here can serve as guidance for future development of other teleconference groups. Methods The preparation, running of and feedback on the ECE teleconference were evaluated and described. The country’s economic situation, time zone differences, connectivity with a research and education network (REN) and engineering cooperation of each member were recorded and analyzed with regard to their association with participant enthusiasm, which was taken as participation in at least 50 % of the meetings since joining. Associations were calculated using 2-way table with chi-square test to generate odds ratio and P value. Results To date, ECE members have increased from 7 to 29 (increment of 314 %). Feedback received indicated a high level of satisfaction with program content, audiovisual transmission and ease of technical preparation. Upper gastrointestinal luminal endoscopy-related topics were the most favored program content. Those topics were presented mainly via case studies with a focus on management challenges. Time zone differences of more than 6 hours and poor engineering cooperation were independently associated with inactive participation (P values of 0.04 and 0.001 respectively). Conclusions Good program content and high-quality audiovisual transmission are keys to the success of an endoscopic medical teleconference. In our analysis, poor engineering cooperation and discordant time zones contributed to inactive participation while connectivity with REN and a country’s economic situation were not significantly associated with participant enthusiasm.

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Vaughn,ThomasE., KimberlyD.McCoy, SusanE.Beekmann, RobertF.Woolson, JamesC.Torner, and BradleyN.Doebbeling. "Factors Promoting Consistent Adherence to Safe Needle Precautions Among Hospital Workers." Infection Control & Hospital Epidemiology 25, no.7 (July 2004): 548–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/502438.

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AbstractObjective:To examine organizational factors and occupational characteristics associated with adherence to occupational safety guidelines recommending never recapping needles.Design:Mail surveys were conducted with healthcare workers (HCWs) and infection control professionals (ICPs).Setting:The surveys were conducted at all non-federal general hospitals in Iowa, except one tertiary-care hospital. Survey data were linked to annual survey data of the American Hospital Association (AHA).Participants:HCWs were sampled from statewide rosters of physicians, nurses, and laboratory workers in Iowa. Eligible HCWs worked in a setting and position in which they were likely to routinely handle needles. ICPs at all hospitals in the state were surveyed.Results:Ninety-nine ICPs responded (79% response rate). AHA data were available for all variables from 84 (85%) of the hospitals. Analyses were based on 1,454 HCWs who identified one of these hospitals as their primary hospital (70% response rate). Analyses were conducted using multiple logistic regression. Positive predictors of consistent adherence included infection control personnel hours per full-time–equivalent employee (odds ratio [OR], 1.03), frequency of standard precautions education (OR, 1.11), facilities providing personal protective equipment (OR, 1.82), facilities using needleless intravenous systems (OR, 1.42), and management support for safety (OR, 1.05). Negative predictors were use of “blood and body fluid precautions” isolation category (OR, 0.74) and increased job demands (OR, 0.90).Conclusion:Healthcare organizations can improve staff safety by investing wisely in educational programs regarding approaches to minimize these risks, providing protective equipment, and eliminating the use of blood and body fluid precautions as an isolation policy.

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del-Moral-Pérez, María Esther, and Lourdes Villalustre-Martínez. "Media literacy, participation and accountability for the media of generation of silence." Comunicar 20, no.40 (March1, 2013): 173–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.3916/c40-2013-03-08.

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The purpose of this research is to study the level of media literacy in a sample of elderly women, the so-called «silent generation», belonging to the Asturian Housewives Association, by means of a questionnaire to collect data on critical awareness in women. The questionnaire seeks information on the persuasive effects of advertising; the women’s evaluation of the information conveyed by the media, and their training, commitment and participation as media consumers. The survey also tries to identify the women’s demands and concerns, regarding the media they usually use, by conducting focus group discussions. Findings show that the women surveyed believe that advertising lacks credibility and claim that some TV stations offer information and content which is biased or has been manipulated to the extent that it goes against the law. Although such women know the channels for citizen participation, they do not know how to exercise their rights in the face of illegal content. In addition, certain training needs have been detected. This research points to the need to design a training plan for media literacy which will empower them with critical skills and foster participation as active and responsible consumers. It is also intended that such women will acquire specific knowledge about the media, as well as the psychological strategies, technical resources and audiovisual language the media use.La presente investigación, por un lado, pulsa el nivel de alfabetización mediática que posee una muestra de mujeres de la tercera edad o generación del silencio –integradas en la Agrupación de Amas de Casa del Principado de Asturias–, mediante un cuestionario que recaba información sobre su conciencia crítica a partir de: el efecto de persuasión que creen tiene la publicidad; su valoración sobre la información transmitida por los medios de comunicación; y su formación, compromiso y participación como consumidoras de los mismos. Y, por otro, recoge sus demandas y preocupaciones más acuciantes en torno a los medios que normalmente utilizan, obtenidas a partir de los debates generados en los grupos de discusión que participaron. Entre los resultados más destacados cabe mencionarse que las encuestadas consideran que la publicidad no merece credibilidad e indican que existen cadenas de TV que ofrecen información manipulada o sesgada y contenidos denunciables que vulneran la legislación vigente. Aunque conocen los cauces para la participación ciudadana, no saben reclamar sus derechos ante la exhibición de contenidos denunciables. Además, se detectan determinadas lagunas formativas. De la investigación se deriva la necesidad de diseñar un plan formativo de alfabetización mediática que potencie sus habilidades críticas y fomente su participación como consumidoras activas y responsables, al tiempo que les dote de conocimientos específicos sobre los medios, sus estrategias psicológicas, los recursos técnicos y el lenguaje audiovisual que emplean.

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Henkel, Paul, and Marketa Marvanova. "Pharmacists’ Utilization of Information Sources Related to Community and Population Needs in the Upper Midwest and Associations with Continuing Professional Education." Pharmacy 7, no.3 (August29, 2019): 125. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy7030125.

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Background: To investigate information sources utilized in pharmacists’ assessment of population-based health needs and/or community changes; and the association between information sources utilized and reported completion of continuing professional education topics. Methods: In 2017; licensed pharmacists (n = 1124) in North Dakota; South Dakota; Minnesota; Iowa; and Nebraska completed a questionnaire on continuing professional education and information sources on population-based health needs and community changes. Data were entered; cleaned and imported into Stata 11.1. Census Bureau county-level population density data were used to classify local area characteristics. Descriptive statistics and multivariate logistic regression analyses were performed. Results: Most sources of primary; county-level data on population-based health needs or community changes were minimally utilized. Pharmacists in more rural areas were statistically more likely to use local health professionals; local non-health professionals; and/or the state health department compared to pharmacists in less rural areas. Pharmacists reporting higher use of population-based information sources were more likely to have completed continuing education in the past 12 months for all 21 surveyed topics; 13 significantly so. Conclusions: There is a reliance of pharmacists on information from local health and non-health professionals for information on population-based health needs and/or community changes. Utilization of health departments and other primary information sources was associated with increased rates of completion of an array of continuing professional education topics. Expanding utilization of evidence-driven information sources would improve pharmacists’ ability to better identify and respond to population-based health needs and/or community changes through programs and services offered; and tailor continuing professional education to population-based health needs.

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Jefferson,UrmekaT. "Predictors of Breastfeeding Attitudes Among College-Educated African Americans." Research and Theory for Nursing Practice 29, no.3 (2015): 189–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1891/1541-6577.29.3.189.

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Breastfeeding initiation among African American women has reached 60%; however, it is the lowest rate among all races. This racial disparity is a public health concern considering the impact of breastfeeding on infant morbidity and mortality. The purpose of this study was to explore breastfeeding exposure and determinants of breastfeeding attitudes among African Americans. The theory of planned behavior guided this study focusing on the impact of background factors on determinants of breastfeeding attitudes. This secondary analysis included 348 African American college students with a mean age of 22 years with no children. The Iowa Infant Feeding Attitude Scale and a demographic questionnaire were used to collect data. A significant association between knowing someone who breastfed her infant and being breastfed as an infant (p < .001) was observed. Although gender, education, and breastfeeding exposure explained 15% of the variance in breastfeeding attitudes, being breastfed as an infant had no significant (p = .611) contribution. Breastfeeding exposure to someone who has breastfed her infant is a modifiable factor that influenced positive breastfeeding attitudes. Therefore, it is essential to identify strategies in practice to increase breastfeeding exposure for vulnerable populations in efforts to improve breastfeeding attitudes, intentions, and initiation.

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Woodrow, Amanda, Sarah Sparks, Valeria Bobrovskaia, Charlotte Paterson, Philip Murphy, and Paul Hutton. "Decision-making ability in psychosis: a systematic review and meta-analysis of the magnitude, specificity and correlates of impaired performance on the Iowa and Cambridge Gambling Tasks." Psychological Medicine 49, no.1 (September24, 2018): 32–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0033291718002660.

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AbstractTo identify factors which may help or hinder decision-making ability in people with psychosis, we did a systematic review and meta-analysis of their performance on the Iowa and Cambridge Gambling Tasks. Analysis of 47 samples found they had moderately poorer performance than healthy individuals (N= 4264,g= −0.57, 95% confidence interval (CI) −0.66 to −0.48). Few studies (k= 8) used non-psychotic clinical comparator groups, although very low-quality evidence (k= 3) found people with bipolar disorder may perform better. Negative symptoms (k= 13,N= 648,r= −0.17, 95% CI −0.26 to −0.07) and lower IQ (k= 11,N= 525,r= 0.20, 95% CI 0.29–0.10), but not positive symptoms (k= 10,N= 512,r= −0.01, 95% CI −0.11 to 0.08), each had small-moderate associations with poorer decision-making. Lower quality evidence suggested general symptoms, working memory, social functioning, awareness of emotional responses to information, and attentional bias towards gain are associated with decision-making, but not education, executive functioning or overall symptoms. Meta-regression suggested an inverse association between decision-making and depression severity (k= 6,Q= 6.41,R2100%,p= 0.01). Those taking first-generation (k= 6,N= 305,g= −0.17, 95% CI −0.40 to 0.06,p= 0.147) or low-dose antipsychotics (k= 5,N= 442,g= −0.19, 95% CI −0.44 to 0.06,p= 0.139) had unimpaired decision-making. Although meta-regression found no linear association between dose and performance, non-reporting of the dose was common and associated with larger impairments (k= 46,Q= 4.71,R214%,p= 0.03). Those supporting people with psychosis to make decisions, including treatment decisions, should consider the potential effect of these factors. Interventionist-causal trials are required to test whether reducing antipsychotic dose and treating anxiety and depression can improve decision-making in this group.

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Al Furaikh, Samia Saud, and Thilagavathy Ganapathy. "FIRST TIME EXPECTANT FATHERS’ PERSPECTIVES ON BREASTFEEDING." Volume 2 Issue 2 2, no.2 (April15, 2018): 80–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.31674/mjmr.2018.v02i02.012.

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Background: Mothers who have a supportive and encouraging partner are more likely to plan to breastfeed for a longer duration. Objective: To explore the first-time expectant fathers’ attitudes towards breast feeding practices. Methods: A descriptive cross-sectional study was carried out among n=157 purposively selected first-time expectant fathers attending antenatal clinics along with low risk term primigravida at a tertiary care corporate maternity hospital, Cosmopolitan Bangalore city, Karnataka, India from June 2015 to July 2016. In accordance with Declaration of Helsinki, data was collected by The Iowa Infant Feeding Attitudes Scale (IIFAS). SPSS version 20 was used for analysis. Results: In general men had a favorable attitude towards breastfeeding (51.6±6.98) but they did not articulate specific benefits of it. Most expectant fathers reported that breastfeeding is the ideal way to feed a baby, contains the perfect proportion of nutrients and provides babies with a wide range of health benefits. Plus, breastfeeding is a great way for a mother to bond with her baby physically and mentally. However, 57.2% of them preferred formula-feeding for the baby while mother is away and felt it as healthy as breast milk. Although the men were generally supportive of breastfeeding, majority (58%) did not support breastfeeding in the public places. A few knew about the long-term benefits of breastfeeding on mother and infants. Majority (82.4%) expressed a need for support and information from health personnel on how they could practically support their partners in promoting and enabling breastfeeding. A significant association has been found between their attitudes and level of education and occupation at 0.05 levels. Conclusion: Health professionals must provide man-centric prenatal education to promote breastfeeding practices. They should involve, include and support fathers, recognizing their importance in the breastfeeding relationship.

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Ajmera, Nirvi, PaulF.Collins, Hannah Weiss, and Monica Luciana. "Initiation of Moderately Frequent Cannabis use in Adolescence and Young Adulthood is Associated with Declines in Verbal Learning and Memory: A Longitudinal Comparison of Pre- versus Post-Initiation Cognitive Performance." Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society 27, no.6 (July 2021): 621–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1355617721000631.

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AbstractObjective:Cannabis use is associated with relative cognitive weaknesses as observed by cross-sectional as well as longitudinal research. Longitudinal studies, controlling for relevant confounds, are necessary to differentiate premorbid from post-initiation contributions to these effects.Methods:We followed a sample of adolescents and young adults across ten years. Participants provided neurocognitive data and substance use information at two-year intervals. Participants who initiated cannabis and/or alcohol use were identified (n = 86) and split into alcohol-only initiators (n = 39) and infrequent (n = 29) and moderately frequent (n = 18) cannabis initiators. Participants completed the Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Task (RAVLT) and the Iowa Gambling Task (IGT). Group differences before and after substance use initiation and the extent to which alcohol, nicotine, and cannabis use frequencies contributed to cognitive functions over time were examined.Results:After controlling for parental education, RAVLT new learning was worse in moderately frequent cannabis users prior to use initiation. RAVLT total learning and delayed recall showed significant declines from pre- to post-initiation in moderately frequent cannabis users. Regression analyses confirmed that frequencies of cannabis, but not alcohol, use contributed to post-initiation variations. Nicotine use showed an independent negative association with delayed memory. Findings for the IGT were not significant.Conclusions:Verbal learning and memory may be disrupted following the initiation of moderately frequent cannabis use while decreased new learning may represent a premorbid liability. Our use of a control group of alcohol-only users adds interpretive clarity to the findings and suggests that future studies should carefully control for comorbid substance use.

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Prieto Gutierrez, Juan Jose, and Francisco Segado Boj. "The role of libraries in cultural centres Abroad: an insight." New Library World 117, no.7/8 (July11, 2016): 475–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/nlw-03-2016-0018.

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Purpose This research paper sets up a typology of libraries managed by cultural centers abroad. Nearly 2,200 libraries linked to a tens of different cultural organizations not only provide traditional services such as loan and access to printed and audiovisual materials but also approach local citizens, offering help and services in matters of education, literacy, cooperation, social issues or development. These actions may fit under the label of cultural diplomacy actions. This paper aims to analyze the relevance of those cultural centers and offer a classification through a table including networks of institutions of the 30 most significant cultural centers worldwide. Design/methodology/approach This study includes the analysis of all foreign cultural centers in the world, as well as the situation, description and analysis of libraries belonging to the centers. Enumeration of the 30 largest libraries in the world is also included. Findings The findings help to view and share with the community the importance and necessity of libraries belonging to cultural centers abroad. Library networks are analyzed, and more than 2,000 institutions that help local communities are discovered. Research limitations/implications There is some difficulty to list and describe the dozens of library centers. There is no association that brings together this type of institutions. Practical implications The most important implication, written in the Conclusion section, is need for the International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions to help such libraries with a specific section. Social implications Libraries abroad are institutions able to help the local citizens and enable basic and essential services for the growth of society, as you can read in the article, some essential services are limited in some countries. Libraries abroad could work many times as public centers. Originality/value It is the first time that all library networks abroad are analyzed, and, thus, the value and originality of the article is maximum. The author has focused on the 30 most important libraries that more value give to the society and help citizens.

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Leal,AlexisD., Cristine Allmer, MatthewJ.Maurer, JamesR.Cerhan, GrzegorzS.Nowakowski, David James Inwards, WilliamR.Macon, et al. "Widespread use of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) among non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) survivors." Journal of Clinical Oncology 30, no.15_suppl (May20, 2012): 9057. http://dx.doi.org/10.1200/jco.2012.30.15_suppl.9057.

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9057 Background: The incidence of CAM use among patients with cancer is higher when compared to the general population. However, there are few studies examining CAM use in NHL survivors, and limited data are available regarding beliefs in CAM. This study was conducted to examine the prevalence of CAM use in NHL, define CAM beliefs among NHL survivors, and explore differences between patients with indolent and aggressive lymphoma. Methods: Newly diagnosed lymphoma patients were prospectively enrolled within 9 months of diagnosis in the University of Iowa/Mayo Clinic SPORE Molecular Epidemiology Resource from 2002-2008. NHL patients who completed the 3-year post diagnosis questionnaire, which includes questions regarding CAM use and beliefs, were included in this study. Chi-squared tests and Wilcoxon rank-sum tests were used to assess the association of CAM use with prognostic and demographic factors. Results: 719 patients were included with a median age of 63 years (range 22-92). 53% were male. Overall, 636 (89%) reported ever using CAM. 78% of patients used vitamins and 54% alternative therapies (chiropractic (36%) and massage therapy (24%)). Among CAM users, 141 (22%) believe CAM can assist the body to heal, 123 (19%) believe CAM can relieve cancer symptoms, 115 (18%) believe CAM use gives a feeling of control, 106 (17%) believe CAM can boost immunity, 24 (4%) believe CAM can cure cancer, and 35 (6%) believe CAM can prevent the spread of cancer. Female gender was associated with increased overall CAM use (p<0.0001) as well as use of vitamins (p<0.0001), herbal supplements (p=0.006) and alternative therapy (p=0.0002) specifically for cancer. Older age was also associated with increased vitamin use (p=0.005) and decreased herbal supplements use (p=0.008). There was no significant difference in overall CAM use between those with follicular lymphoma grades I-II (n=195, 91%) and non-relapsed diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (n=151, 87%), although massage therapy was utilized more often by FL survivors (29% versus 18%, p=0.005). Conclusions: CAM modalities are used by the majority of NHL survivors (89%). The assessment of CAM use and education regarding potential harms is imperative for the NHL survivor.

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Ikonnikova, Maryna. "African Studies as a Part of Philologists’ Professional Training in the USA." Comparative Professional Pedagogy 6, no.4 (December1, 2016): 41–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/rpp-2016-0046.

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Abstract It has been concluded that until recently debates on what is understood as African Studies have involved American scholars or have been mainly located within the African Studies Association (ASA) in the USA. Lately, European scholars have begun to occupy more discursive space and challenged Afrocentric orientations as well. African Studies emerged, on the one hand, predominantly due to the states’ participation in either the colonisation or decolonisation of Africa and its people. On the other hand, powerful strategic geopolitical dimensions have motivated the emphasis on area studies and, in particular, African studies, in the United States after Second World War. It has been stated that American curricula consist of the following groups of subjects: 1) the major, i.e. the subjects which provide the required level of knowledge, abilities and skills in a particular area; 2) the minor, i.e. the subjects, that are necessary for better mastering of specialization subjects; 3) other areas of concentration, which are also a part of the curriculum (optional classes, etc.); 4) liberal studies courses, that provide mastering necessary skills and understanding of the interconnectedness of different fields of knowledge; 5) upper division courses, that are studied at the third and fourth years of study; 6) electives, which students can choose to explore new fields or expand the list of both professionally oriented and non-oriented courses. Based on the results generated by the official websites providing applicants with relevant information about degree programs, we have found out that African Studies are offered by numerous American higher education institutions, namely, Stanford University, Yale University, Columbia University in the City of New York, University of Pennsylvania, Duke University, University of Chicago, Brown University, University of Richmond, University of Kansas, University of Iowa and others. It has been indicated that African studies provide students with the understanding of the interactions among the social, economic, cultural, historical, linguistic, genetic, geopolitical, ecological and biomedical factors that shape and have shaped African societies. The interdisciplinary structure of the programs offers students an opportunity to satisfy the increasingly rigorous expectations of admissions committees and prospective employers for a broad liberal arts perspective that complements a specialized knowledge of a field. In addition, students are encouraged to pursue Study Abroad to enhance their understanding of African diasporic experiences.

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Leal,AlexisD., Cristine Allmer, MatthewJ.Maurer, TaitD.Shanafelt, JamesR.Cerhan, BrianK.Link, and CarrieA.Thompson. "Variability Of Performance Status Assessment Between Patients With Hematologic Malignancies and Their Physicians." Blood 122, no.21 (November15, 2013): 1703. http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/blood.v122.21.1703.1703.

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Abstract Background Performance status (PS) is a measurement of a patient’s functional capabilities and has been validated as a prognostic indicator in patients with cancer. This study was conducted to compare patient and physician-rated Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) PS to determine the incidence of inter-observer variability and identify determinants of PS disagreement among a cohort of patients with hematologic malignancy. Methods Newly diagnosed patients with leukemia and lymphoma were prospectively enrolled in the University of Iowa/Mayo Clinic SPORE Molecular Epidemiology Resource (MER) from 2002-2008. At diagnosis, patients and their physicians were asked to independently rate ECOG PS. Those who reported PS within 1 month of diagnosis were included in this analysis. Chi-squared and Wilcoxon rank-sum tests were used to assess the association between PS disagreement and prognostic or demographic factors; Cox proportional hazards models and c-statistics were used to evaluate the association between PS and overall survival. Results 1269 patients were included with a median age of 61 years (range 18-91). Of these, 58% were male; 275 had chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), 127 had Hodgkin lymphoma (HL), and 867 had non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL). Overall, 829 (65%) patients and physicians rated PS the same. Age greater than 60 was a significant predictor of disagreement overall (p<0.001), as well as in CLL (p=0.014) and NHL (p=0.004), but not in HL (p=0.65). We found that across disease subtypes, the level of disagreement increased with more aggressive disease. This finding was significant in those with HL (p=0.027) and NHL (p<0.0001) as International Prognostic Score (IPS) and International Prognostic Index (IPI) increased respectively. In CLL, the trend for Rai stage was suggestive but not statistically significant (p=0.27). The incidence of disagreement was highest among patients with NHL (37%), with a higher percentage of disagreement among those with aggressive (45%) vs. non-aggressive (25%) subtypes (p<0.001). Disagreement was lower in patients with CLL (27%) and HL (33%). There were no significant associations between patient gender or education level and PS rating among subtypes or overall. Patient and physician-rated PS were both significant predictors of overall survival in univariate models and also adjusted for subtype and subtype specific risk score. The prognostic ability for PS was similar for both patient rated and physician-rated assessment overall (c-statistic=0.76 for both patient and physician rated PS) and in those with HL (c-statistic=0.85 for both patient and physician rated PS) and NHL (c-statistic=0.76 for both patient and physician rated PS). However, patient-rated PS was better for prognostication in CLL (c-statistic=0.75; p<0.0001), compared to physician-rated PS (c-statistic=0.67; p=0.002). Conclusions Patients with hematological malignancies and their physicians do not always rate PS the same, particularly in patients who are older or have more advanced or aggressive disease. These findings suggest the need for physicians to communicate with patients when determining PS, as PS is a strong predictor of survival. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

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Lee,JoeyA., and GregoryJ.Welk. "Association Between Comprehensive School Physical Activity Program Implementation and Principal Support." Health Promotion Practice, July17, 2019, 152483991986276. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1524839919862767.

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The use of Comprehensive School Physical Activity Program (CSPAP) has been recommended to help students achieve 60-minutes of physical activity each day. Implementing a CSPAP requires planning, coordination, and ongoing oversight, but an understudied factor is how principal support influences CSPAP implementation. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the impact of principal support on CSPAP implementation. Method. Schools in the Iowa FitnessGram Initiative ( n = 84), a participatory network of schools committed to supporting physical education and wellness efforts, were invited to participate in the study. Physical education teachers from 42 schools completed a survey assessing CSPAP implementation and principal support for school wellness. Descriptive statistics and correlation analyses were used to report associations between the variables. A regression analysis was conducted to evaluate the impact of principal support on CSPAP implementation. Results. Almost half of the schools were reported to be fully implementing just one CSPAP component and no school was reported to be fully implementing all five. The CSPAP component with the highest reported level of implementation was quality physical education, while the lowest level of implementation was reported for family and community engagement and staff involvement. The regression analysis identified that principal support was a significant predictor of CSPAP implementation, b = 0.55, t(37) = 3.10, p < .004. Conclusions. Principal support is associated with implementation of CSPAP initiatives. Strategies that focus on how to attain principal support for CSPAP initiatives are needed and could have a significant impact on student physical activity and health.

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Blázquez-Abella, Anna, and María Heredero-Jiménez. "Barcelona Film Diverse: young glances and voices for cultural diversity." Comunicar 13, no.25 (October1, 2005). http://dx.doi.org/10.3916/c25-2005-216.

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Mitjans is an association of Communication and Education professionals, persons and collectives worried about and interested in Media Literacy and its incidence in the society. Nowadays, Mitjans is working on two related projects: Barcelona Film Diverse and YEFF! (Young European Film Forum for cultural diversity). On one hand, both encourage young people to learn film language and aesthetic principals of film and television while encouraging them to develop their voice. On the other hand, both ask the entrants to reflect on the experiences and perception of the issues of cultural diversity from their individual point of view. Mitjans, Xarxa d’Educadors i Comunicadors (http://www.mitjans.info) es una asociación formada por profesionales de la comunicación y la educación, además de colectivos y personas preocupadas e interesadas por la comunicación mediática y su incidencia social y educativa. Como asociación que se preocupa por el presente y el futuro de los medios y la comunicación social lleva a cabo diferentes acciones de coordinación e intervención social, entre las que se encuentran el proyecto Film Divers a Barcelona y la red europea YEFF! (Young European Film Festival-for cultural diversity). Ambas inciden en dos premisas cruciales de las sociedades del siglo XXI: el pleno desarrollo de la competencia comunicativa (comprensiva y expresiva) de las personas en cualquier tipo de sistema de símbolos y soporte tecnológico y la gestión autónoma y colectiva del factor intelectual que caracteriza nuestras cotidianidades. Los media son considerados como parte del entretenimiento, información e inspiración de los jóvenes de hoy en día. No obstante, todavía se percibe una gran falta de comprensión e interpretación crítica hacia éstos, ya sea a nivel estético, técnico o, incluso, de exposición de contenidos. El analfabetismo audiovisual es una realidad palpable en nuestras sociedades. Por otro lado, se constata que los jóvenes en situaciones de riesgo de exclusión social difícilmente tienen la oportunidad de acceder al campo de la producción audiovisual, sea profesional o amateur, y que, además, no son representados en igualdad de condiciones en los discursos mediáticos predominantes. Por ello, tanto desde la red europea YEFF! como desde el proyecto Film Divers a Barcelona, se anima a los jóvenes a utilizar el audiovisual como medio de autoexpresión y diálogo entre grupos culturales y sociales distintos. Se trata, pues, de ofrecer a los jóvenes el apoyo y acompañamiento necesarios para que puedan producir obras audiovisuales sinceras y permanentemente descubridoras. Film Divers a Barcelona nace a partir de la búsqueda de subvenciones para el proyecto europeo YEFF! en el que Mitjans participa como representante y futura entidad coordinadora del Estado Español en el que se presentarán diferentes producciones audiovisuales realizadas por jóvenes amateurs. En concreto, Film Divers a Barcelona se ha llevado a cabo a partir del diseño de una serie de talleres audiovisuales en cuatro barrios de Barcelona: dos del centro de la ciudad (Raval y Casc Antic) y dos de la periferia norte (Trinitat Vella y Torre Baró). Todos estos barrios tienen la característica de tener fuertes componentes de diversidad cultural. Casi la totalidad de los talleres se enmarcaron en espacios de educación no formal porque interesaba trabajar, sobre todo, la interacción y participación activa de los y las jóvenes con su entorno más inmediato y realidades cotidianas. En total, se desplegaron simultáneamente, entre febrero y junio de 2005, ocho equipos de trabajo y participaron en los talleres unos 40 jóvenes de la ciudad. La oportunidad merecía plantearse una investigación acción del proceso y un estudio de caso cuyas conclusiones podemos presentar en la presente comunicación. En la búsqueda de dar la oportunidad a jóvenes de expresarse y manifestar su opinión sobre los problemas sociales y culturales de su entorno (y que, en muchas ocasiones, coinciden con las grandes cuestiones sociales de nuestros tiempos), se optó por subvertir el proceso de producción audiovisual tradicional convirtiendo a los receptores pasivos en emisores activos. Otorgándoles autonomía en sus voces y sus miradas, comprometiéndolos con la comunidad y corresponsabilizándolos de un espacio de creación colectiva.

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"Teacher education." Language Teaching 39, no.2 (April 2006): 125–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0261444806253709.

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06–300Andrew, Michael D. (U New Hampshire, USA), Casey D. Cobb & Peter J. Giampietro, Verbal ability and teacher effectiveness. Journal of Teacher Education (Sage) 56.4 (2005), 343–354.06–301Arnold, Nike (U Tennessee, USA; mnarnold@utk.edu) & Lara Ducate, Future foreign language teachers' social and cgnitive collaboration in an online environment. Language Learning & Technology (http://llt.msu.edu/intro.html) 10.1 (2006), 42–66.06–302Ballet, Katrijn, Geert Kelchtermans (U Leuven, Belgium) & John Loughran, Beyond intensification towards a scholarship of practice: Analysing changes in teachers' work lives. Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice (Routledge/Taylor & Francis) 12.2 (2006), 209–229.06–303Borg, Michaela (Northumbria U, UK; mborg13@yahoo.com), A case study of the development in pedagogic thinking of a pre-service teacher. TESL-EJ (www.tesl-ej.org) 9.2 (2005), 30 pp.06–304Burton, Jill (U South Australia; Jill.Burton@unisa.edu.au), The importance of teachers writing on TESOL. TESL-EJ (www.tesl-ej.org) 9.2 (2005), 18 pp.06–305Curtis, Andy (Queen's U, Canada; curtisa@post.queensu.ca) & Margit Szestay, The impact of teacher knowledge seminars: Unpacking reflective practice. TESL-EJ (www.tesl-ej.org) 9.2 (2005), 16 pp.06–306Day, Christopher, Gordan Stobart, Pam Sammons & Alison Kington (U Nottingham, UK), Variations in the work and lives of teachers: Relative and relational effectiveness. Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice (Routledge/Taylor & Francis) 12.2 (2006), 169–192.06–307Develotte, Christine (Ecole Normale Supérieure Lettres et Sciences Humaines, Lyon, France; cdevelotte@ens-lsh.fr), Francois Mangenot & Katerina Zourou, Situated creation of multimedia activities for distance learners: Motivational and cultural issues. ReCALL (Cambridge University Press) 17.2 (2005), 229–244.06–308Gebhard, Jerry G. (Indiana U Pennsylvania; jgebhard@iup.edu), Teacher development through exploration: Principles, ways, and examples. TESL-EJ (www.tesl-ej.org) 9.2 (2005), 15 pp.06–309Gordon, June A. (U California-Santa Cruz, USA), The crumbling pedestal: Changing images of Japanese teachers. Journal of Teacher Education (Sage) 56.5 (2005), 459–470.06–310Gorsuch, Greta J. (Texas Technical U, USA; greta.gorsuch@ttu.edu), Discipline-specific practica for international teaching assistants. English for Specific Purposes (Elsevier) 25.1 (2006), 90–108.06–311Hanson, Jane L. (U Iowa, USA; jane-hanson@uiowa.edu), Svetlana Dembovskaya & Soojung Lee, CALL research archive: How can an online knowledge base further communication among second language professionals?ReCALL (Cambridge University Press) 17.2 (2005), 245–253.06–312Holmes, John (U Leeds, UK; j.l.holmes@education.leeds.ac.uk) & Maria Antonieta Alba Celani, Sustainability and local knowledge: The case of the Brazilian ESP Project 1980–2005. English for Specific Purposes (Elsevier) 25.1 (2006), 109–122.06–313Johnson, Karen (Pennsylvania State U, USA), The sociocultural turn and its challenges to second language teacher education. TESOL Quarterly (Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages) 40.1 (2006), 235–257.06–314Kupetz, Rita & Birgit Zeigenmeyer (U Hannover, Germany; Rita.Kupetz@anglistik.uni-hannover.de), Blended learning in a teacher training course: Integrated interactive e-learning and contact learning. ReCALL (Cambridge University Press) 17.2 (2005), 179–196.06–315Lloyd, Rosemarie, Considerations in survey design, data analysis and presentation: A guide for ELT practitioners. English in Australia (www.englishaustralia.com.au) 22.2 (2005), 25 pp.06–316Lyons, Nona (U College Cork, Ireland), Reflective engagement as professional development in the lives of university teachers. Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice (Routledge/Taylor & Francis) 12.2 (2006), 151–168.06–317Napier, Jemina (Macquarie U, Australia), Making learning accessible for sign language interpreters: A process of change. Educational Action Research (Oxford, UK) 13.4 (2005), 505–524.06–318Orland-Barak, Lily (U Haifa, Israel), Convergent, divergent and parallel dialogues: Knowledge construction in professional conversations. Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice (Routledge/Taylor & Francis) 12.1 (2006), 13–31.06–319Orland-Barak, Lily (U Haifa, Israel), Lost in translation: Mentors learning to participate in competing discourses of practice. Journal of Teacher Education (Sage) 56.4 (2005), 355–366.06–320Phillips, Rachel & Sandra Hollingsworth (San José State U, USA), From curriculum to activism: A graduate degree program in literacy to develop teachers as leaders for equity through action research. Educational Action Research (Routledge/Taylor & Francis) 13.1 (2005), 85–102.06–321Rust, Frances (New York U, USA) & Ellen Meyers, The bright side: Teacher research in the context of educational reform and policy-making. Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice (Routledge/Taylor & Francis) 12.1 (2006), 69–86.06–322Schmidt, Clea (U Manitoba, Canada; schmidtc@cc.umanitoba.ca), From teacher candidates to ESL ambassadors in teacher education. TESL-EJ (www.tesl-ej.org) 9.2 (2005), 11 pp.06–323Silva, Marimar Da (U Federal de S Catarina, Brazil; marimars@bol.com.br), Constructing the teaching process from inside out: How pre-service teachers make sense of their perceptions of the teaching of the four skills. TESL-EJ (www.tesl-ej.org) 9.2 (2005), 19 pp.06–324Sivell, John (Brock U, Canada; jsivell@brocku.ca), Second language teacher education in Canada: The development of professional standards. TESL-EJ (www.tesl-ej.org) 9.2 (2005), 7 pp.06–325Somekh, Bridget (Manchester Metropolitan U, UK), Constructing intercultural knowledge and understanding through collaborative action research. Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice (Routledge/Taylor & Francis) 12.1 (2006), 87–106.06–326Stewart, Timothy (Kumamoto U, Japan; stewart@kumamoto-u.ac.jp) & Bill Perry, Interdisciplinary team teaching as a model for teacher development. TESL-EJ (www.tesl-ej.org) 9.2 (2005), 17 pp.06–327Tillema, Harm (Leiden U, the Netherlands) & Gert Van der Westhuizen (U Johannesburg, South Africa), Knowledge construction in collaborative enquiry among teachers. Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice (Routledge/Taylor & Francis) 12.1 (2006), 51–67.06–328Ting, Y. L. Teresa (U Calabria, Italy; yltting@tin.it), Empowering the teacher-researcher: Adopting a tool from biochemist-researcher training. TESL-EJ (www.tesl-ej.org) 9.2 (2005), 13 pp.06–329Watkins, Amanda (U Central England, UK; amanda@european-agency.org), So what exactly do teacher researchers think about doing research?Support for Learning (Blackwell) 21.1 (2006), 12–18.06–330Wilkinson, Lyn, Improving literacy outcomes for students in disadvantaged schools: the importance of teacher theory. Australian Journal of Language and Literacy (Australian Literacy Educators' Association) 28.2 (2005), 127–137.06–331Zellermayer, Michal & Tabak, Edith (Levinsky College of Education, Israel), Knowledge construction in a teachers' community of enquiry: A possible road map. Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice (Routledge/Taylor & Francis) 12.1 (2006), 33–49.

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"Abstracts: Language teaching." Language Teaching 40, no.4 (September7, 2007): 331–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0261444807004582.

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07–508Amengual-Pizarro, Marian (U Balearic Islands, Spain), How to respond to the demands set by the communicative approach? New challenges second-language (L2) teachers face in the classroom. European Journal of Teacher Education (Routledge/Taylor & Francis) 30.1 (2007), 63–73.07–509Compton, Lily K. L. (Iowa State U, USA; lilycompton@yahoo.com), The impact of content and context on International Teaching Assistants' willingness to communicate in the language classroom. TESL-EJ (http://www.tesl-ej.org) 10.4 (2007), 20pp.07–510Goto Butler, Yuko (U Pennsylvania, USA), Factors associated with the notion that native speakers are the ideal language teachers: An examination of elementary school teachers in Japan. JALT Journal (Japan Association for Language Teaching) 29.1 (2007), 7–40.07–511Hillyard, Lindsey, Randi Reppen (Northern Arizona U, USA; randi.reppen@nau.edu) & Camilla Vásquez, Bringing the outside world into an intensive English programme. ELT Journal (Oxford University Press) 61.2 (2007), 126–134.07–512Hyland, Ken (U London, UK; k.hyland@ioe.ac.uk) & Eri Anan, Teachers' perceptions of error: The effects of first language and experience. System (Elsevier) 34.4 (2006), 509–519.07–513Kato, Mie (Yoshiki Senior High School, Japan), Corrective feedback in oral communication classes at a Japanese senior high school. The Language Teacher (Japan Association for Language Teaching) 31.3 (2007), 3–8.07–514Kawai, Yuko (Tokai U, Japan), Japanese nationalism and the global spread of English: An analysis of Japanese governmental and public discourses on English. Language and International Communication (Multilingual Matters) 7.1 (2007), 37–55.07–515Lee, Yo-An (DePaul U, Chicago, USA; ylee19@depaul.edu), Third turn position in teacher talk: Contingency and the work of teaching. Journal of Pragmatics (Elsevier) 39.1 (2007), 180–206.07–516Leshem, Shosh (Oranim Academic College of Education, Israel) & Vernon Trafford (Anglia Ruskin U, UK), Unravelling cultural dynamics in TEFL: Culture tapestries in three Israeli schools. Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice (Routledge/Taylor & Francis) 12.6 (2006), 639–656.07–517McCrostie, James, Investigating the accuracy of teachers' word frequency intuitions. RELC Journal (Sage) 38.1 (2007), 53–66.07–518McDonough, Kim (Northern Arizona U, USA; kim.mcdonough@nau.edu) & Wanpen Chaikitmongkol, Teachers' and learners' reactions to a task-based EFL course in Thailand. TESOL Quarterly (Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages) 41.1 (2007), 107–132.07–519Md Yunus, Melor (U Bristol, UK; Melor.Md-Yunus@bristol.ac.uk), Malaysian ESL teachers' use of ICT in their classrooms: Expectations and realities. ReCALL (Cambridge University Press) 19.1 (2007), 79–95.07–520Nault, Derrick (Jeonju U, South Korea), Going global: Rethinking culture teaching in ELT contexts. Language, Culture and Curriculum (Multilingual Matters) 19.3 (2006), 314–328.07–521O'Brien, Anne & Volker Hegelheimer (Iowa State U, USA; aobryan@iastate.edu), Integrating CALL into the classroom: The role of podcasting in an ESL listening strategies course. ReCALL (Cambridge University Press) 19.2 (2007), 162–180.07–522O'Dowd, Robert (U León, Spain; dfmrod@unileon.es), Evaluating the outcomes of online intercultural exchange. ELT Journal (Oxford University Press) 61.2 (2007), 144–152.07–523Raby, Françoise (U Stendhal de Grenoble, France; Francoise.Raby@libertysurf.fr), A triangular approach to motivation in Computer Assisted Autonomous Language Learning (CAALL). ReCALL (Cambridge University Press) 19.2 (2007), 181–201.07–524Sakui, Keiko (Kobe Shoin Women's U, Japan), Classroom management in Japanese EFL classrooms. JALT Journal (Japan Association for Language Teaching) 29.1 (2007), 41–58.07–525Savignon, Sandra J. (Pennsylvania State U, USA), Beyond communicative language teaching: what's ahead?Journal of Pragmatics (Elsevier) 39.1 (2007), 207–220.07–526Starkey, Hugh (U London Institute of Education, UK), Language education, identities and citizenship: Developing cosmopolitan perspectives. Language and International Communication (Multilingual Matters) 7.1 (2007), 56–71.07–527Stockwell, Glenn (Waseda U, Japan; gstock@waseda.jp), A review of technology choice for teaching language skills and areas in the CALL literature. ReCALL (Cambridge University Press) 19.2 (2007), 105–120.07–528Tan, Zhi (Guangdong U Foreign Studies, China; tanzhi@mail.gdufs.edu.cn), Questioning in Chinese university EL classrooms: What lies beyond it?RELC Journal (Sage) 38.1 (2007), 87–103.07–529Üstünlüoglu, Evrim (Izmir U of Economics, Turkey), University students' perceptions of native and non-native teachers. Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice (Routledge/Taylor & Francis) 13.1 (2007), 63–79.07–530Varghese, Manka M. (U Washington, USA; mankav@u.washington.edu) & Bill Johnston, Evangelical Christians and English language teaching. TESOL Quarterly (Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages) 41.1 (2007), 5–31.07–531Zacharias, Nugrahenny (Satya Wacana Christian U, Indonesia; ntz_abac@yahoo.com), Teacher and student attitudes toward teacher feedback. RELC Journal (Sage) 38.1 (2007), 38–52.07–532Zeng, Zhen (New York U, USA; zz290@nyu.edu) & Elizabeth Murphy, Tensions in the language learning experiences and beliefs of Chinese teachers of English as a Foreign Language. TESL-EJ (http://www.tesl-ej.org) 10.4 (2007), 19 pp.

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Lyons, Bertram. "Editorial." International Association of Sound and Audiovisual Archives (IASA) Journal, no.48 (January21, 2018). http://dx.doi.org/10.35320/ij.v0i48.60.

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Helen Harrison in her opening editorial in issue number 2 of the IASA Journal notes, “...on no account should we be complacent about the Journal or other IASA publications, ideas for change are always welcome and material for inclusion even more so.” She was contemplating the state of the Journal on the heels of its transformation from the Phonographic Bulletin (1971–1993) to the IASA Journal (1993–present). The name had changed, but Harrison took the role of editor with ideas for additional improvements to the structure, content, operation, and aesthetics of the Journal; and she found herself also faced with the task of developing a new reputation for the newly minted IASA Journal. That was 26 years ago, and the IASA Journal has now been the IASA Journal longer than it was the Phonographic Bulletin. The transformation, we can say, was a success. Today, in 2018, as editor, I face a similar challenge: whether to transform the IASA Journal to an e-Journal, and whether to push for an open access model for content in the IASA Journal. These are two slightly independent changes that I am proposing for the Journal, and both have a variety of options associated with them. The IASA Journal as an e-Journal When we think about the IASA Journal as an electronic journal, we can consider it with or without a printed version. At one extreme, we can imagine an online platform that serves as the only access point to IASA Journal publications. Such a platform can provide a variety of discovery and access options for IASA Journal content, including text-based search, author indexes, online reading via PDF or HTML, syndication for subscribers, and API access for data aggregators, among others. We can also imagine these online access options with additional options for printed issues, either “on-demand” or in small batches. At the opposite extreme, we could imagine the same full print scenario we have today with the addition of an online access point with the options I mention above (although, this option, of course, requires the greatest cost to the organization). These are the types of options we are considering as we develop a strategy for moving the IASA Journal to an online home. The IASA Journal as an Open Access Journal A related question, once the Journal has an e-Journal access point, is whether the content of the IASA Journal should remain closed to the World, open only to IASA members and subscribers, for five years after its publication. This has been, and still is, the policy of the IASA Journal. But, should it be? Does such a policy support the central mission of IASA, as stated in its constitution, “to promote, encourage, and support the development of best professional standards and practice in all countries through communication, cooperation, advocacy, promulgation, dissemination, training and/or education, amongst public or private archives or libraries, institutions, businesses, organisations and associations which share these purposes?” Could we, as an organization, do better to disseminate the writings in the Journal to the global audiovisual archives community? Could we, instead of using the content as bait for membership, rather use the content as a shared resource that enriches IASA’s network and entices new members to the organization? Launching an e-Journal does not require IASA to provide Open Access to the content; it merely offers the opportunity, and because of that, I think it valuable to have the conversation. So, these are the types of access questions that we are also considering as we develop a strategy for the IASA Journal online platform. If you, as a IASA member or subscriber, have thoughts on these topics, please feel free to reach out to me at editor@iasa-web.org. I am eager to hear from you. The Issue at Hand This issue, our third peer-reviewed issue, features a wide variety of topics important to the audiovisual archives communities today, including digital preservation, born-digital video, contemporary memories, diversification of the archive(s), repatriation of colonial and radio collections, and building stronger connections between archives and users of archival collections. The issue commences with three profiles highlighting the human labor that underlies all archives and archival collections. In Ghana, Judith Opoku-Boateng interviews J. H. Kwabena Nketia about his work recording the songs and interviews that would become the cross-cultural foundation for the J. H. Kwabena Nketia Archives of the Institute for African Studies at the University of Ghana. In Australia, Melinda Barrie talks with sound scholar Robyn Holmes about her lifelong passion to dissemination and document Australian music. And, in Italy, Ettore Pacetti and Daniela Floris discuss the pioneering fieldwork of the Italian ethnomusicologist, Diego Carpitella, and how his efforts laid the seeds for the current project of the Audiovisual Archives at RAI Teche to bring Italian cultural heritage to a worldwide audience. Paul Conway and Kelly Askew, both of the University of Michigan, provide a glimpse into efforts to organize, describe, and “re-broadcast” content from Voice of America’s radio program Music Time in Africa to new audiences. Conway and Askew contextualize the issues associated with providing access to cultural heritage resources, and conclude with a proposal for a proactive strategy for online dissemination. Approaching the topic of repatriation of cultural heritage from another angle, Diane Thram, from the International Library of African Music in South Africa, articulates the effort that she and her colleagues undertook to hand-deliver (or, digitally return) recorded copies of performances to musicians across the African continent. Beginning with Uganda, and then Kenya, Thram and colleagues located performers and descendents from recordings made by Hugh Tracey and coordinated visits to return and re-study the music and performances that had been recorded more than 50 years ago with musicians in these locales. Together, these two articles offer a thorough glimpse into the theory and practice of post-colonial archival practice. Reformulating a talk that was delivered at this year’s IASA conference in Berlin, Gisa Jähnichen of the Shanghai Conservatory of Music in China, along with colleagues Ahmad Faudzi Musib (Malaysia), Thongbang Homsombat (Laos), Chinthaka Prageeth Meddegooda (Sri Lanka), and Xiao Mei (China), take a close look at the successes and failures they see in the small-scale audiovisual archives where they work in China, Malaysia, Laos, and Sri Lanka. The work of these authors lays a foundation for conversations about how to ensure that audiovisual archives maintain living networks and continue to develop capacity within and outside of the archives themselves. If smaller archives in Asia are to sustain themselves in the digital present, what are the key issues that must be addressed? And, what can archives in other regions of the world learn from this study? The remaining articles in this issue move from questions of the management of archives, to technical questions about the digital infrastructures and digital formats that we are facing in audiovisual archives today. Silvester Stöger, from NOA in Austria, looks at the needs of broadcast archives with regard to production and preservation workflows, describing the values of an archive asset management system that can integrate with other business systems in a broadcast environment. Iain Richardson, from Vcodex, Ltd. in the UK, illustrates the lossy process of data reduction as a compression technique in digital video, offering insight into quantitative and qualitative methods to compare quality in digital video objects. From the Alexander Turnbull Library, National Library of New Zealand, Valerie Love describes the changes that the acquisition of born-digital content, specifically oral history content, has brought to the archive’s standard operating procedures. Wrapping up this issue, Ariane Gervásio, from the Brazilian Association of Audiovisual Archives, challenges readers to re-imagine the concept of personal memories in today’s transmedia world, where traditional concepts of content and media—e.g., a song exists as a single recording in a single place—must be understood as a multifarious entity, perhaps existing initially as a video posted to one web platform, yet then interacted with by users in another web platform, leaving a complex trail of engagement that ultimately constitutes the object that will be collected by an archive. Are we, as audiovisual archivists, ready to conceive of contemporary born-digital content in this way? Do we have a choice? I look forward to hearing your thoughts on the contents of this Issue, as well as on the future of the IASA Journal. Bertram Lyons, CAIASA Editor

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"Language testing." Language Teaching 39, no.4 (September26, 2006): 291–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0261444806243854.

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06–731Carr, Nathan T. (California State U, USA), The factor structure of test task characteristics and examinee performance. Language Testing (Hodder Arnold) 23.3 (2006), 269–289.06–732Denton, Carolyn A. (U Texas at Austin, USA), Dennis J. Ciancio & Jack M. Fletcher, Validity, reliability, and utility of the observation survey of early literacy achievement. Reading Research Quarterly (International Reading Association) 41.1 (2006), 8–34.06–733Eckes, Thomas & Rüdiger Grotjahn (TestDaF Institute, Hagen, Germany), A closer look at the construct validity of C-tests. Language Testing (Hodder Arnold) 23.3 (2006), 290–325.06–734He, Lianzhen & Ying Dai (Zhejiang U, China), A corpus-based investigation into the validity of the CET–SET group discussion. Language Testing (Hodder Arnold) 23.3 (2006), 370–401.06–735Huhta, Ari, Paula Kalaja & Anne Pitkänen-Huhta (U Jyväskylä, Finland), Discursive construction of a high-stakes test: The many faces of a test-taker. Language Testing (Hodder Arnold) 23.3 (2006), 326–350.06–736Kenworthy, Roger (Ohio U, USA; hkadvisor@ohio.edu), Timed versus at-home assessment tests: Does time affect the quality of second language learners' written compositions?TESL-EJ (http://www.tesl-ej.org) 10.1 (2006), 13 pp.06–737Kikuchi, Keita (Waseda U, Japan), Revisiting English entrance examinations at Japanese universities after a decade. JALT Journal (Japan Association for Language Teaching) 28.1 (2006), 77–96.06–738Mayor, Barbara (The Open U, UK), Dialogic and hortatory features in the writing of Chinese candidates for the IELTS test. Language, Culture and Curriculum (Multilingual Matters) 19.1 (2006), 104–121.06–739Myklebust, Jon Olav (Volda U College, Norway; jom@hivolda.no), Class placement and competence attainment among students with special educational needs. British Journal of Special Education (Blackwell) 33.2 (2006), 76–81.06–740Papajohn, Dean (Pima County, Tucson, AZ, USA; Dean.Papajohn@dot.pima.gov), Standard setting for next generation TOEFL Academic Speaking Test (TAST): Reflections on the ETS panel of International Teaching Assistant developers. TESL-EJ (http://www.tesl-ej.org) 10.1 (2006), 9 pp.06–741Yan, Jin (Shanghai Jiao Tong U, China) & Yang Huizhong, The English proficiency of college and university students in China: As reflected in the CET. Language, Culture and Curriculum (Multilingual Matters) 19.1 (2006), 21–36.06–742Zhang, Su (U Iowa, USA), Investigating the relative effects of persons, items, sections, and languages on TOEIC score dependability. Language Testing (Hodder Arnold) 23.3 (2006), 351–369.

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Lanfear,DavidE., PhilipG.Jones, Sharon Cresci, Fengming Tang, SaifS.Rathore, and JohnA.Spertus. "Abstract 846: Patient Willingness to Participate in Genetic Research After a Myocardial Infarction." Circulation 118, suppl_18 (October28, 2008). http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/circ.118.suppl_18.s_624-a.

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To achieve ‘Personalized Medicine’, identifying genetic associations with outcomes is essential. However, not all patients invited to participate in such studies agree. While existing data suggests race, gender, and education may influence this decision, correlates of patient willingness to participate in genetic studies remain incompletely understood. We assessed correlates of patient participation in the genetic substudy of TRIUMPH, a prospective myocardial infarction registry ongoing at 26 US hospitals. Patients enrolled in the first wave (4/05–12/06, N=1854) were analyzed. Factors examined included sociodemographics, financial status, social support, medical literacy, health status, depressive symptoms (PHQ-9, higher scores indicate greater depression) and 26 clinical variables. Predictors of participation were identified using hierarchical logistic regression adjusting for hospital. Variation in consent rates across hospitals was quantified by the median odds ratio (MOR), which compares the odds of consent between two randomly selected patients with identical covariates chosen from different hospitals. Most subjects consented to donation and storage of their genetic material (1,513, 81.6%). Participation rates varied greatly by site, ranging from 50% to 100%. After adjustment for possible confounding by patient factors, the MOR for hospitals was 4.5. Clinical characteristics were not associated with participation in univariate analysis (all p>0.1). In multivariable analysis adjusted for hospital, the only significant predictors of consent were greater depressive symptoms (OR 1.41 per +5 PHQ points, 95% CI 1.19–1.67, p<0.0001), and gender (OR 1.54 for males, 95% CI 1.16–2.04, p=0.0027). Roughly 80% of subjects enrolled in our study consented to genetic analysis. The strongest overall factor associated with participation was hospital. While we cannot rule out confounding by unmeasured characteristics, this suggests that variation in the way information is presented, or other site-specific factors, strongly influence patient participation in genetic studies. This research has received full or partial funding support from the American Heart Association, AHA Midwest Affiliate (Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota & Wisconsin).

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Kulkarni,MuralidharM., Veena Ganesh Kamath, Asha Kamath, Sarah Lewis, Ilze Bogdanovica, Manpreet Bains, Jo Cranwell, et al. "Exposure to tobacco imagery in popular films and the risk of ever smoking among children in southern India." Tobacco Control, September8, 2020, tobaccocontrol—2019–055353. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2019-055353.

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BackgroundExposure to smoking in films is a recognised cause of smoking uptake among children. In India, in an attempt to protect children, films containing smoking are required to include tobacco control messaging including audiovisual disclaimers, on-screen health warnings when tobacco imagery is displayed and antitobacco ‘health spots’ before and during the film. We report a study of the association between ever smoking and exposure to tobacco imagery in locally popular films among children in Udupi district of Karnataka state in southern India.MethodsA cross-sectional questionnaire survey of all students in grades 6–8 in schools in the Udupi district ascertained smoking status and potential confounders of smoking uptake, and whether children had seen any of 27 locally popular films we had coded and found to contain imagery of actual or implied tobacco use. Ever-smoking status was defined as any reported smoking of cigarettes, beedis or other tobacco products currently or at any time in the past. Independent effects on ever-smoking status were estimated using multiple logistic regression.ResultsOf 46 706 students enrolled in grades 6–8 in 914 participating schools, 39 282 (84.1%) provided questionnaire responses sufficiently complete for analysis. Ever smoking was reported by 914 (2.3%) participants and in a mutually adjusted model was significantly related to age, male sex, living in a home where smoking is allowed, having parents or siblings who smoke, low paternal education, low levels of family wealth, low self-esteem, rebelliousness and poor school performance. After allowing for these effects, the odds of ever smoking were not increased among students who had seen any of the listed films containing tobacco imagery when included in the analysis as a binary exposure (OR 0.9, 95% CI 0.4 to 2.0), and decreased in relation to level of exposure graded into tertiles of tobacco intervals seen.ConclusionsIn this cross-sectional study, children in southern India who had seen films containing tobacco imagery are no more likely to smoke than those who had not, indicating that the tobacco control messaging mandated by Indian law may be attenuating the effect of tobacco imagery in films on smoking uptake.

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"Language learning." Language Teaching 39, no.1 (January 2006): 19–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0261444806223310.

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06–20Abbott, Chris (King's College, U London, UK) & Alim Shaikh, Visual representation in the digital age: Issues arising from a case study of digital media use and representation by pupils in multicultural school settings. Language and Education (Multilingual Matters) 19.6 (2005), 455–466.06–21Andreou, Georgia & Napoleon Mitsis (U Thessaly, Greece), Greek as a foreign language for speakers of Arabic: A study of medical students at the University of Thessaly. Language, Culture and Curriculum (Multilingual Matters) 18.2 (2005), 181–187.06–22Aune, R. Kelly (U Hawaii at Manoa, USA; kaune@hawaii.edu), Timothy R. Levine, Hee Sun Park, Kelli Jean K. Asada & John A. Banas, Tests of a theory of communicative responsibility. Journal of Language and Social Psychology (Sage) 24.4 (2005), 358–381.06–23Belz, Julie A. (The Pennsylvania State U, USA; jab63@psu.edu) & Nina Vyatkina, Learner corpus analysis and the development of L2 pragmatic competence in networked intercultural language study: The case of German modal particles. The Canadian Modern Language Review (University of Toronto Press) 62.1 (2005), 17–48.06–24Bird, Stephen (U Brunei Darussalam, Brunei; sbird@fass.ubd.edu.bn), Language learning edutainment: Mixing motives in digital resources. RELC Journal (Sage) 36.3 (2005), 311–339.06–25Carrington, Victoria (U Plymouth, UK), The uncanny, digital texts and literacy. Language and Education (Multilingual Matters) 19.6 (2005), 467–482.06–26Chung, Yang-Gyun (International Languages Program, Ottawa, Canada; jchung2536@rogers.com), Barbara Graves, Mari Wesche & Marion Barfurth, Computer-mediated communication in Korean–English chat rooms: Tandem learning in an international languages program. The Canadian Modern Language Review (University of Toronto Press) 62.1 (2005), 49–86.06–27Clopper, Cynthia G. & David B. Pisoni, Effects of talker variability on perceptual learning of dialects, Language and Speech (Kingston Press) 47.3 (2004), 207–239.06–28Csizér, Kata (Eötvös U, Budapest, Hungary; weinkata@yahoo.com) & Zoltán Dörnyei, Language learners' motivational profiles and their motivated learning behavior. Language Learning (Blackwell) 55.4 (2005), 613–659.06–29Davis, Adrian (Macao Polytechnic Institute, Macao, China; ajdavis@ipm.edu.mo), Teachers' and students' beliefs regarding aspects of language learning. Evaluation and Research in Education (Multilingual Matters) 17.4 (2003), 207–222.06–30Deterding, David (Nanyang Technological U, Singapore; dhdeter@nie.edu.sg), Listening to Estuary English in Singapore. 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"Language teaching." Language Teaching 36, no.4 (October 2003): 252–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0261444804212009.

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(U Sydney, Australia; l.woodrow@edfac.usyd.edu.au), A model of adaptive language learning. The Modern Language Journal (Blackwell) 90.3 (2006), 297–319.07–256Yoshii, Makoto (Prefectural U Kumamoto, Japan; yoshii@pu-kumamoto.ac.jp), L1 and L2 glosses: Their effects on incidental vocabulary learning. Language Learning & Technology (University of Hawaii) 10.3 (2006), 85–101.07–257Yoshioka, Keiko (Leiden U, the Netherlands; k.yoshioka@let.leidenuniv.nl) & Eric Kellerman, Gestural introduction of ground reference in L2 narrative discourse. International Review of Applied Linguistics in Language Teaching (Walter de Gruyter) 44.2 (2006), 173–195.07–258Zyzik, Eve (Michigan State U, USA; zyzik@msu.edu), Transitivity alternations and sequence learning: Insights from L2 Spanish production data. Studies in Second Language Acquisition (Cambridge University Press) 28.3 (2006), 449–485.

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Devine,LukeA., WayneL.Gold, AndreaV.Page, StevenL.Shumak, BrianM.Wong, Natalie Wong, and Lynfa Stroud. "Tips for Facilitating Morning Report." Canadian Journal of General Internal Medicine 12, no.1 (May9, 2017). http://dx.doi.org/10.22374/cjgim.v12i1.206.

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Morning report (MR) is a valued educational experience in internal medicine training programs. Many senior residents and faculty have not received formal training in how to effectively facilitate MR. Faculty at the University of Toronto were surveyed to provide insights into what they felt were key elements for the successful facilitation of MR. These insights fell within 5 major categories: planning and preparation, the case, running the show, wrapping up and closing the loop.Résumé Le rapport du matin (RM) est un outil pédagogique précieux dans les programmes de formation en médecine interne. Nombre de résidents séniors et de membres du corps enseignant n’ont toutefois jamais reçu de formation officielle sur la façon de faciliter l’élaboration du RM. Nous avons sondé les membres du corps enseignant de l’université de Toronto pour avoir un aperçu de ce qu’ils percevaient comme étant des éléments-clés susceptibles d’améliorer grandement l’élaboration du RM. Les réponses reçues se répartissent en cinq principales catégories: la planification et la préparation du RM, les caractéristiques du cas évalué, l’importance et la façon de prendre en main le processus, le résumé des informations et l’art de « boucler la boucle». Morning report (MR) has long been an integral and valued part of Internal Medicine training programs in North America.1,2 Some residents recognize MR as the most important educational activity during their training.3 Medical students, residents and faculty typically attend MR. Although the structure and function of MR can vary across institutions, it usually involves a case-based discussion facilitated by a faculty member, chief medical resident (CMR), or other senior resident. The facilitator discusses pertinent aspects of one or more clinical cases to teach medical knowledge, clinical reasoning and other important aspects of physician competencies, such as communication and collaboration skills. 4 Residents have expressed a preference for an interactive teaching session led by an individual with extensive medical knowledge and excellent clinical acumen.5Despite trainees’ perceptions about the core educational function of MR and their preference for skilled facilitators, most residents and many faculty have never received any formal training on how to conduct an effective MR. This, coupled with a lack of resources in the literature, may contribute to feelings of trepidation about assuming the role of facilitator.6 Based on this need, we were invited by the organizing group of residents at the 2015 Canadian CMR Conference, held in Toronto, Canada, to lead a seminar to introduce CMRs to the principles of effective MR facilitation. The conference was attended by over 70 current and future CMRs. In preparation for this seminar, we reviewed available literature and found that practical guidelines on how to facilitate a successful MR were generally lacking. To help us to provide guidance and to capture broad opinions and experiences, we recruited a sample of 24 faculty at the University of Toronto, including many award-winning teachers whose experience in leading MR ranges from 3 to over 30 years. We asked them to provide insights into what they felt were key elements of facilitating a successful MR. While not a systematic collection of data, their insights taken together represent a broad experience base. Given the relative lack of evidence-based literature describing how to facilitate MR, we decided to disseminate a refined summary of the shared wisdom we uncovered in hopes that it would benefit other CMRs and junior faculty as they take on this challenging role.The insights provided fall within 5 main themes (Table 1) which are discussed below, followed by a brief discussion about future directions for MR:1) Planning and preparation2) The case3) Running the show4) Wrapping up5) Closing the LoopTable 1. Experience-Based Tips to Running an Effective Morning ReportPLANNING AND PREPARATION:1) Ensure audiovisual aids are present and working before starting. 2) Start and end on time. 3) Encourage all faculty to attend and participate. 4) Know the audience (including names).THE CASE:5) The case can be undifferentiated or one for which the diagnosis and even response to treatment is known. 6) There are pros and cons to the facilitator knowing details of the case in advance. 7) If details of the case are not known to the facilitator, determine with the person presenting if the discussion should be focused on diagnosis, management or other pertinent issues. 8) Cases need not be limited to inpatients and can include ambulatory cases and case simulations.RUNNING THE SHOW:9) Establish a respectful learning climate. 10) Personal anecdotes and reflections on past cases can engage the audience. 11) Ensure time is spent discuss learning issues valuable to all present. 12) Facilitate and engage in discussion rather than deliver a lecture. 13) Use a mix of pattern recognition (heuristics) and analytical reasoning strategies. 14) Start with a question that has an obvious answer if dealing with a quiet audience. 15) Promote volunteerism for answers as much as possible, but direct a question to a specific person if no one volunteers. 16) Begin by engaging the most junior learners and advance to involve senior learners. 17) Encourage resource stewardship and evidence-based medicine. 18) Acknowledge areas of uncertainty and don’t be afraid to say “I don’t know”. 19) Teaching “scripts” or the use of a systematic approach to developing a differential diagnosis can be used when discussing less familiar topics. 20) Highlight the variability in clinical approach amongst "the experts" in the room.WRAPPING-UP:21) Ensure there is time to summarize “take home points”. 22) Provide learners with the opportunity to summarize what they have learned.CLOSING THE LOOP23) Reinforcement of learning can include a distribution of a relevant paper or providing a summary of learning points via email or blog. 24) Maintain a case log to ensure a balanced curriculum. 25) Provide feedback to the case presenter and facilitator.Planning and Preparation It is important for the organizer and facilitator (these may or may not be the same person) to be diligent when preparing for MR. The person in charge of organizing MR should ensure that all necessary audiovisual equipment is in working order, which may be as simple as ensuring there is a whiteboard and working marker. To optimize housestaff attendance, the sessions and facilitators should be scheduled in a regular and predictable way. The lure of a light breakfast should not be underestimated and may add to the social aspect of this event. Sessions should begin and finish on time (or even slightly early). Ideally, deferring pages for all but critical clinical issues should occur. Having faculty regularly attend MR as audience participants, and not just as facilitators, improves the attendance of learners who see through role-modelling the importance of continuing medical education and lifelong learning. Faculty presence also raises the level of discussion around grey areas of diagnosis and management, providing trainees with a spectrum of opinions and approaches to clinical medicine, specifically role-modelling how faculty approach clinical uncertainty. The organizer must also ensure that someone, usually a trainee, is responsible for bringing the details of one or more clinical cases to be discussed.The facilitator should ensure they know the names and year of training of the housestaff in attendance. It is helpful if the organizer can provide a list (ideally with pictures) of those who will be in attendance for the facilitator to reference. Over time, this helps to develop a sense of community within the group. It also allows the facilitator to engage all participants and with the goals of first posing level-specific questions to the more junior learners and ending with the most senior learners.The Case The selected clinical case can be either a new patient seen in consultation in the past 24 hours or a patient that has been in hospital for some time and for whom results of investigations and response to treatment are known. Ideally, the majority of the cases selected should not involve particularly rare medical issues and should mirror the clinical case mix of patients being cared for by the trainees. Trainees will benefit more from discussions about common clinical problems rather. However, to highlight issues of diagnostic reasoning, it can be beneficial to occasionally discussing uncommon case including typical presentations of rare diseases or unusual presentations of common problems.The faculty surveyed expressed differing opinions when asked if they thought the details of the case should be known to the facilitator in advance. Knowing the details of the case in advance can ensure the facilitator is comfortable with the content area and allows them to focus on aspects of the case that they think will have the highest learning impact for trainees. However, when the case is not known to the facilitator, the audience will be more likely to garner insight into the clinical reasoning process of the facilitator. The opportunity to learn about the cognitive process that an “expert” uses when generating a differential diagnosis and formulating plans for investigation and management is potentially much more valuable than the discussion of content that could be read in a textbook or electronically. When the details of a case are not known, the discussion is more spontaneous and the lines of discussion are more reflective of the thoughts of the trainees, rather than the facilitator. The discussion can be guided by the case itself and the trainees’ questions and answers. A mixed approach to case discussion will provide the variety that the participants value.Although traditionally MR has focused on the diagnosis or management of one or more clinical cases from the inpatient service, its format is flexible enough to provide opportunity for discussion or for other important aspects of patient care. MR can also address ambulatory cases,7 include the presence of a real patient for the purposes of highlighting history-taking and clinical findings and also incorporate discussion of simulated cases, such as code blue scenarios. The discussion can also be enriched by the health professionals from other disciplines including, pharmacists, physical therapists, occupational therapists, nurses, and social workers. The case can also be selected to allow the discussion to be focused on other specific elements of management, such as resource utilization and “choosing wisely,”8 quality and safety, bioethics, and evidence-based medicine.9Running the Show In developing their skills in facilitation, many of the faculty surveyed discussed that they continuously build on the facilitation skills that they have learned over time, the basic principles of which are described elsewhere.10,11 Through feedback and reflection, they adapt to a style that reflects how they believe the MR should be conducted.The facilitator must establish a respectful climate at MR that is conducive to learning. He or she must ensure that the session is collegial and enforce that the goal of the session is learning, rather than showmanship. The environment should encourage interaction and permit people to ask questions. Trainees should feel comfortable enough to answer questions and test hypotheses, even if answers are incorrect. However, the facilitator must ensure that the correct information is conveyed to the group and that incorrect answers are explored as key teaching points. Humour can put people at ease. Self-deprecating humour can be non-threatening and freely employed if it is within the facilitator’s comfort zone. However, humour should never come at the expense of a trainee. Personal anecdotes and reflections on past cases can engage the audience, relax the atmosphere and vividly impart key facts and clinical wisdom.It is important for the facilitator to be respectful of time. Trainees often report that too much time is spent on reviewing the history and physical examination and on the development of an exhaustive differential diagnosis while less time is spent on investigation and management issues, which senior trainees find most valuable. There need not be a fixed formula related to how much time to spend on specific components of the case. A skilled facilitator will expand and abbreviate aspects of the case discussion based on the specific case presented. Some cases represent excellent opportunities to review evidence-based physical examination, some may highlight issues of resource stewardship related to investigation and some are particularly well-suited to discussion of evidence-based management.The facilitator should facilitate a clinical discussion, rather than deliver a didactic talk. He or she should coach the audience to identify key historical facts or findings on physical examination to allow everyone to fully participate in the case formulation and clinical reasoning that will follow. Demonstrating a mix of pattern recognition and heuristics (e.g., “Quick – what do you think the diagnosis is?”) and analytical reasoning strategies will help trainees learn to employ and recognize the strengths and limitations of each.In the face of a quiet audience, questions that have obvious answers should be posed first. The facilitator should promote volunteerism as much as possible; however, addressing specific members of the audience prevents silence and can help ensure everyone is engaged in the discussion. Sensitivity to the level of trainee is important. A facilitator should avoid potential embarrassment of a trainee by allowing a more junior learner to come up with the answer to a question that the more senior trainee could not answer. In other words, there should be an inviolate sequence wherein, for any given topic, the facilitator starts with trainees at an appropriate level for the questions and moves upward sequentially by level of training. This allows participants to relax and set their focus on learning, rather than avoiding eye contact and fearing embarrassment.A skilled facilitator should not allow any one person to dominate the discussion and should also refrain from asking multiple questions to the same participant. However, it can be valuable to challenge a respondent or the group to elaborate on their answers, as this can uncover gaps in knowledge and understanding and provide additional opportunities for learning.It is important to ensure that the discussion is of interest to trainees at all levels. If faculty are present, their opinions should be sought throughout the case. It is helpful to highlight the variability in approach amongst “the experts” in the room. Judicious use and justification of investigations should be encouraged to promote learning about resource stewardship and evidence-based medicine principles should be incorporated, when relevant.Many facilitators are anxious about how to handle situations where they don’t know the answer to a particular clinical problem. In these cases, a demonstration of the clinical reasoning process and a focus on an approach to clinical problems can be helpful. Some of the most useful discussions centre on how to deal with uncertainty and on how to find answers to clinical questions in real-time using available resources. The facilitator should not hesitate to say “I don’t know,” as this demonstrates that nobody has infinite knowledge and role-models the necessity of recognizing one’s limitations. Teaching scripts relating to specific topics or the use of an etiologic or body systems-based approach to developing a differential diagnosis are helpful teaching approaches6.Wrapping Up Sufficient time should be dedicated to recapitulation and repetition of one to 3 key take home messages. This serves to reinforce the important points that were discussed and to ensure that participants walk away with key messages to facilitate learning. Having a few members of the audience identify what they have learned is often beneficial as the facilitator may not identify the same issues as the trainees.Closing the Loop Further reinforcement can occur if a summary of the take home points, or a relevant paper, is circulated by email or posted to a blog.12 This must be done in a manner that protects patient confidentiality. Updates on previously presented diagnostic dilemmas will enhance learning. Finally, the organizer of MR can keep a log of cases that have been presented to avoid excessive repetition of topics and ensure a balanced curriculum.A process for the person presenting the case to be provided with feedback about their presentation skills by the facilitator or peers should be implemented. It is also important for the facilitator to receive feedback about their teaching and the session overall. Feedback will help faculty refine their facilitation skills, especially if coupled with faculty development initiatives to improve teaching skills.13 It may also be important for novice clinician teachers who need to build a teaching portfolio as part of their academic review and promotion process. 14 If it is clear the faculty utilize the feedback, it serves to role-model self-reflection and promote a culture of frequent formative feedback.The Future of MR MR has a long tradition and can be an evolving teaching format capable of meeting current educational needs. For example, with the implementation of competency-based medical education (CBME) into residency training programs, the competencies being developed for Internal Medicine trainees can provide a framework to organize aspects of learning experiences, including MR. 15 Issues of advocacy and stewardship may be highlighted as explicit learning points of cases, as MR allows for discussion of authentic core clinical tasks and problems, avoiding the reduction of competencies to endless lists taught without the necessary context needed for deeper learning.16 There are also challenges to implementing and sustaining a successful MR in today's current training climate. Issues such as duty-hour restrictions, increased volume and acuity of patients, and pressure to discharge patients early in the day17–19 have prompted some to modify the traditional MR. An “afternoon report” allows for attention to clinical duties early in the day and preserves teaching for later in the day. MR should continue to evolve to meet current education and healthcare delivery needs, and these innovations should be described in the literature and studied.Although these tips have been generated from shared experiences at a single centre, we believe they will be useful to facilitators in many other settings, as they represent the experiences of many facilitators with many cumulative years of experience. This article is intended to stimulate others to reflect upon and discuss what they have found to be the key elements to facilitating a successful MR.Acknowledgements We would like to thank our colleagues who contributed tips and whose teaching has influenced the careers of countless trainees: Dr. Ahmed Bayoumi, Dr. Isaac Bogoch, Dr. Mark Cheung, Dr. Allan Detsky, Dr. Irfan Dhalla, Dr. Vera Dounaevskaia, Dr. Trevor Jamieson, Dr. Lauren Lapointe Shaw, Dr. Jerome A. Leis, Dr. Don Livingstone, Dr. Julia Lowe, Dr. Ophyr Mourad, Dr. Valerie Palda, Dr. Joel Ray, Dr. Donald Redelmeier, Dr. Steve Shadowitz, Dr. Rob Sargeant.References1. Parrino TA, Villanueva AG. The principles and practice of MR. JAMA 1986;256(6):730–33.2. Amin Z, Guajardo J, Wisniewski W, Bordage G, Tekian A, Niederman LG. MR: focus and methods over the past three decades. Acad Med 2000;75(10):S1–S5.3. Gross CP, Donnelly GB, Reisman AB, Sepkowitz KA, Callahan MA. Resident expectations of MR: a multi-institutional study. Arch Int Med 1999;159(16):1910–14.4. McNeill M, Ali SK, Banks DE, Mansi IA. MR: can an established medical education tradition be validated? J Grad Med Educ 2013;5(3):374–84.5. Ways M, Kroenke K, Umali J, Buchwald D. MR: A survey of resident attitudes. Arch Int Med 1995;155(13):1433–37.6. Sacher AG, Detsky AS. Taking the stress out of MR: an analytic approach to the differential diagnosis. J Gen Intern Med 2009;24(6):747–51.7. Wenderoth S, Pelzman F, Demopoulos B. Ambulatory MR. J Grad Med Educ 2002;17(3):207–209.8. Kane GC, Holumzer C, Sorokin R. Utilization management MR: Purpose, planning and early experience in a university hospital residency program. Sem Med Pract 2001;4(1):27–36.9. Banks DE, Runhua Shi M. Decreased hospital length of stay associated with presentation of cases at MR with librarian support. J Med Libr Assoc 2007;95(4):381–87.10. Azer SA. Challenges facing PBL tutors: 12 tips for successful group facilitation. Med Teach 2005;27(8):676–81.11. Skeff KM. Enhancing teaching effectiveness and vitality in the ambulatory setting. J Gen Intern Med 1988;3(1):S26–S33.12. Bogoch II, Frost DW, Bridge S, Lee TC, Gold WL, Pansiko DM, Cavalcanti R. MR blog: a web-based tool to enhance case-based learning. Teach Learn Med 2012;24(3):238–41.13. Boerboom TB, Stalmeijer RE, Dolmans DH, Jaarsma DA. How feedback can foster professional growth of teachers in the clinical workplace: A review of the literature. Stud Educ Eval 2015;46:47–52.14. Fleming VM, Schindler N, Martin GJ, DaRosa DA. Separate and equitable promotion tracks for clinician-educators. JAMA 2005;294(9):1101–1104.15. Frank JR, Snell LS, Ten Cate O, Holmboe ES, Carraccio C, Swing SR, Harris, KA. Competency-based medical education: theory to practice. Med Teach, 2010;32(8):638–45.16. Hawkins RE, Welcher CM, Holmboe ES, Kirk LM, Norcini JJ, Simons KB, Skochelak SE. Implementation of competency‐based medical education: are we addressing the concerns and challenges? Med Educ. 2015;49(11):1086–1102.17. Arora VM, Georgitis E, Siddique J, Vekhter B, Woodruff JN, Humphrey HJ, Meltzer DO. Association of workload of on-call medical interns with on-call sleep duration, shift duration, and participation in educational activities. JAMA 2008;300(10):1146–53.18. Horwitz LI, Krumholz HM, Huot SJ, Green ML. Internal medicine residents' clinical and didactic experiences after work hour regulation: a survey of chief residents. J Gen Int Med 2006;21(9):961–65.19. Khanna S, Sier D, Boyle J, Zeitz K. Discharge timeliness and its impact on hospital crowding and emergency department flow performance. Emerg Med Aus 2016;28(2):164–70.

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