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- Title
- Rethinking education: Anthony Benezet and the Quakers.
- Author
- Garland, Megan Elizabeth
- Abstract/Description
-
Examining the education practices in early America provides a glimpse into the structure of colonial society as a whole. More specifically, the education system sheds light on how traditionally marginalized groups gained improved opportunities within society. This thesis examines the education of three key groups of people: women, Africans, and Native Americans. More specifically, this thesis traces the increase in educational opportunities made available to each of these groups in eighteenth...
Show moreExamining the education practices in early America provides a glimpse into the structure of colonial society as a whole. More specifically, the education system sheds light on how traditionally marginalized groups gained improved opportunities within society. This thesis examines the education of three key groups of people: women, Africans, and Native Americans. More specifically, this thesis traces the increase in educational opportunities made available to each of these groups in eighteenth-century Philadelphia. With the Quakers at the forefront, traditionally marginalized people began to receive improved educational opportunities. Writings from a Quaker central to education reform, Anthony Benezet, are examined in order to show how the Quakers in eighteenth-century Philadelphia created a unique system of educational inclusivity. Benezet was an early abolitionist and educator who played a significant role in the education of women and minorities in eighteenth-century Pennsylvania. Benezet and the Quakers reimagined education by providing quality educations to less-fortunate groups of people. Their work served as an example of how women and minorities were capable of high-level academic achievement.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2021, 2021
- Identifier
- 1293868060, WFE0000756
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- Another brick in the wall: a pedagogical approach to excavations at a 19th-century brickyard.
- Author
- Dietrich, Emily Elizabeth
- Abstract/Description
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Incorporating archaeology within the high school curricula fosters an interest in archaeology and site preservation. The Milton High School Archaeology Project provides students the opportunity to experience and participate in archaeological research. At a 19th-century brickyard, students learn anthropology and their local history through hands-on excavations. Through the use of Project-Based Learning (PBL), students conducted archaeological and historical research and presented their work in...
Show moreIncorporating archaeology within the high school curricula fosters an interest in archaeology and site preservation. The Milton High School Archaeology Project provides students the opportunity to experience and participate in archaeological research. At a 19th-century brickyard, students learn anthropology and their local history through hands-on excavations. Through the use of Project-Based Learning (PBL), students conducted archaeological and historical research and presented their work in the form of a museum exhibit at the Florida Public Archaeological Network's Destination Archaeology Resources Center museum for the public and their parents. The Milton High School Archaeology Project provides an example of how archaeology can easily and effectively be integrated into high school educational standards. Quantitative and qualitative data collected throughout the 2016-2017 school year shows how archaeology education leads to increased awareness of and appreciation for heritage sites.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2020, 2020
- Identifier
- 1233055172, WFE0000744
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- Instructor intent to integrate online collaborative activities: a case study.
- Author
- Valaitis, Karen Lynn
- Abstract/Description
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Online higher education has expanded over the last decade to meet workforce needs for job placement in areas such as healthcare. Collaborative activities are a method used in higher education to develop the higher-order skills that students need to succeed in today's workforce. However, instructors have continued to make the integration of online collaborative activities a low priority. The purpose of this qualitative case study was to explore instructor intent to integrate collaborative...
Show moreOnline higher education has expanded over the last decade to meet workforce needs for job placement in areas such as healthcare. Collaborative activities are a method used in higher education to develop the higher-order skills that students need to succeed in today's workforce. However, instructors have continued to make the integration of online collaborative activities a low priority. The purpose of this qualitative case study was to explore instructor intent to integrate collaborative activities in online undergraduate courses preparing students in the field of healthcare. Participants were a purposefully selected sample of 10 undergraduate instructors in healthcare who were not integrating online collaborative activities at the time of the study. The sources of data were one-on-one interviews, a focus group interview, and document research. The theory of planned behavior provided the framework to align the purpose of the study and the research questions. The theory of planned behavior assumes a person's intentions accurately predict a corresponding behavior, and the factors influencing their intent include personal attitude, subjective norms, and perceived behavioral control. The findings demonstrate that instructors had a negative intent to integrate online collaborative activities, and the primary areas of influence were personal attitude and subjective norms. Major conclusions include the fact that instructors believe collaborative activities do not achieve the intended outcomes and are more difficult for instructors to manage online than in face-to-face courses. Future research should explore whether strategies directed at changing these beliefs alter the intent to integrate online collaborative activities.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2020, 2020
- Identifier
- 1202267738, WFE0000725
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- Examining factors that influence student use of lecture capturing technology.
- Author
- Adrian, Todd Lee
- Abstract/Description
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ABSTRACT: Higher education institutions implement lecture capturing technology (LCT) to provide students access to recorded course lectures. Consequently, institutions can experience barriers implementing LCT related to lack of student use of the technology. This study's purpose was to examine whether performance expectancy, effort expectancy, social influence, and facilitating conditions influence undergraduate nursing students' decisions to use LCT after attending face-to-face lectures at a...
Show moreABSTRACT: Higher education institutions implement lecture capturing technology (LCT) to provide students access to recorded course lectures. Consequently, institutions can experience barriers implementing LCT related to lack of student use of the technology. This study's purpose was to examine whether performance expectancy, effort expectancy, social influence, and facilitating conditions influence undergraduate nursing students' decisions to use LCT after attending face-to-face lectures at a state college in Florida. The unified theory of acceptance and use of technology (UTAUT) served as the theoretical framework. This study incorporated a quantitative correlational design and used a modified UTAUT survey instrument to determine if there are statistically significant relationships among the UTAUT constructs and LCT use. A linear regression was performed, and the results suggested there was a statistically significant relationship between the performance expectancy construct and use of LCT, r(116) = .647, p < .01, two-tailed; the effort expectancy construct and use of LCT, r(116) = .249, p < .01, two tailed; and the social influence construct and student use of LCT, r(116) = .255, p < .01, two tailed. A multiple regression analysis suggested performance expectancy, effort expectancy, social influence, and facilitating conditions statistically significantly predicted student LCT usage, F(4, 113) = 21.32, p < .001. The R2 = .430 with a large effect size (f2 = .754). The results from this study add to the limited body of knowledge on LCT use and provide technology leaders with a better understanding of factors contributing to student use of LCT, which can be used for future research.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2019.
- Identifier
- 1127639386, WFE0000645
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- Cemeteries as classrooms: Making archaeology education relevant, accessible, and sustainable.
- Author
- Hines, Rachel Louise
- Abstract/Description
-
Despite promoting K-12 education initiatives for decades, public archaeologists struggle to reach precollegiate audiences due to archaeology's absence in curriculum standards, a lack of qualified archaeology educators, and barriers within the school system. To investigate replicable and accessible methods of archaeology education and to better understand teacher needs and motivations, I created lesson plans which engage high school students in recording and researching historic cemeteries....
Show moreDespite promoting K-12 education initiatives for decades, public archaeologists struggle to reach precollegiate audiences due to archaeology's absence in curriculum standards, a lack of qualified archaeology educators, and barriers within the school system. To investigate replicable and accessible methods of archaeology education and to better understand teacher needs and motivations, I created lesson plans which engage high school students in recording and researching historic cemeteries. Hands-on efforts are often excavation-based and limited by access to professional archaeologists; however, cemetery recording is nondestructive and offers students a chance to participate in project-based learning. Four educators from Santa Rosa County taught the materials to nine classes in Fall 2019 while I evaluated the lessons through surveys, guided observations, and summative interviews. The materials were revised based on results to ensure they are useful and useable. Every participant indicated the lessons are user-friendly, relevant, and meaningful. Administrative support, passionate teachers, and carefully crafted lessons contributed to programmatic success, indicating collaborative efforts from archaeological and educational professionals can produce hands-on archaeology programming that is mutually rewarding.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2020, 2020
- Identifier
- 1201528775, WFE0000707
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- Comparing route learning in drivers using conventional navigation assistance devices and a hypothetical augmented reality system.
- Author
- Yount, Zachary Franklin
- Abstract/Description
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Current trends point towards the development and implementation of augmented reality (AR) navigation assistance systems for drivers. Previous research has found augmented reality can benefit driving performance, but the impact of AR on route learning (spatial knowledge acquisition) has received less attention. The current study used simulated driving scenarios to determine how the type of navigation aid device used (i.e., paper map, electronic map, and AR system) affected driving performance...
Show moreCurrent trends point towards the development and implementation of augmented reality (AR) navigation assistance systems for drivers. Previous research has found augmented reality can benefit driving performance, but the impact of AR on route learning (spatial knowledge acquisition) has received less attention. The current study used simulated driving scenarios to determine how the type of navigation aid device used (i.e., paper map, electronic map, and AR system) affected driving performance and route learning. Route learning was examined at landmark, route, and survey levels. The hypotheses tested were that AR would improve driving performance, but diminish route learning compared to paper map use; that AR would outperform electronic map use in both driving performance and route learning; and that experts and novices would be affected differently. Paper map use resulted in poorer driving performance and greater route learning, but map recognition may be a confounding factor in higher level spatial knowledge acquisition with paper map use. Driving performance and route learning were similar for drivers using the electronic map and AR, but there were differences that suggest drivers have reduced uncertainty and hesitation while using AR to navigate in unfamiliar areas. Differences between expert and novice drivers were not found.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2020, 2020
- Identifier
- 1222213022, WFE0000736
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- Can delivery modality influence test performance?: comparing traditional and digital formats.
- Author
- Moyer, Gage H.
- Abstract/Description
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This paper presents a mixed group experimental design to examine whether how students take a test within the classroom affects exam performance and test delivery preferences. In this study, I randomly assigned 35 students in a social psychology course to take their first exam in either a paper-based format or an online mode in the same context. Students switched to the alternative format for their second exam. I measured average exam scores, speed of completion, attitudes towards computer...
Show moreThis paper presents a mixed group experimental design to examine whether how students take a test within the classroom affects exam performance and test delivery preferences. In this study, I randomly assigned 35 students in a social psychology course to take their first exam in either a paper-based format or an online mode in the same context. Students switched to the alternative format for their second exam. I measured average exam scores, speed of completion, attitudes towards computer testing, testing anxiety, and modality preference. As predicted, the testing format made no difference in mean test performance on each exam. There also was no majority preference for one modality over the other when given a choice of how students wanted to take the final exam in the class. Format preference was unrelated to testing anxiety or exam performance. However, attitudes towards computer-based testing appear to correlate with modality preference. Therefore, online-based testing modalities do not appear to have any significant disadvantages when compared to paper-based formats and can possibly serve as a convenient, resource saving alternative.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2020, 2020
- Identifier
- 1202267393, WFE0000723
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- Epigenetic effects of microplastics exposure on the common mysid shrimp, americamysis bahia.
- Author
- Prior, Jack Hamilton
- Abstract/Description
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Microplastics are publicly recognized as a ubiquitous issue of environmental concern in aquatic systems. Primary consumers of microplastics are often zooplankton of biological and commercial importance, including the mysid shrimp, Americamysis bahia. In the presence of environmental stressors, gene expression may be altered without changing DNA sequences. This can occur through methylation of the DNA, in which a methyl group binds to nucleotide base pairs, most commonly cytosine. In this...
Show moreMicroplastics are publicly recognized as a ubiquitous issue of environmental concern in aquatic systems. Primary consumers of microplastics are often zooplankton of biological and commercial importance, including the mysid shrimp, Americamysis bahia. In the presence of environmental stressors, gene expression may be altered without changing DNA sequences. This can occur through methylation of the DNA, in which a methyl group binds to nucleotide base pairs, most commonly cytosine. In this study, exposure to 5 micrometer microbeads at different concentrations caused no significant effect on mortality within 72 hours of exposure, but significantly increased mortality thereafter. Microplastics were shown to interact and accumulate on mysid bodies in various ways that would likely cause stress. An ELISA-like colorimetric assay was used to assess mysid shrimp genomic DNA for differences in global percent methylation that are potentially associated with microplastics exposure. No significant difference in the average percent of methylated DNA was found between treatment groups. There was no significant difference in the number methylation detections between treatments. This is the first study that has detected DNA methylation in any member of the order Mysida. This is the first study that has investigated DNA methylation effects as a result of microplastic induced stress.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2020, 2020
- Identifier
- 1206362804, WFE0000728
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- Ground reaction force comparison between barefoot and shod single leg landing at varied heights.
- Author
- Arnett, Jocelyn Esther
- Abstract/Description
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Landing is a common movement that occurs in many sports. Barefoot research has gained popularity in examining how shoes can alter natural movements. However, it is unknown how a single leg landing under barefoot conditions, as well as landing height, will affect ground reaction forces (GRF). PURPOSE: The purpose of this research was to examine the differences in ground reaction forces during a single leg landing under barefoot and shod conditions from various heights. METHODS: Sixteen female...
Show moreLanding is a common movement that occurs in many sports. Barefoot research has gained popularity in examining how shoes can alter natural movements. However, it is unknown how a single leg landing under barefoot conditions, as well as landing height, will affect ground reaction forces (GRF). PURPOSE: The purpose of this research was to examine the differences in ground reaction forces during a single leg landing under barefoot and shod conditions from various heights. METHODS: Sixteen female Division II collegiate athletes, 8 basketball (age: 19.88 ± 0.64 yrs; height: 1.77 ± 0.09 m; mass: 75.76 ± 12.97 kg) and 8 volleyball (age: 20.00 ± 1.07 yrs; height: 1.74 ± 0.08 m; mass: 72.41 ± 5.41 kg), performed single leg landings from 12 inches, 18 inches, 24 inches, and 30 inches barefoot and shod. An AMTI AccuGait force plate was used to record GRF. A 2 (condition) x 4 (box height) x 2 (sport) repeated measures ANOVA was performed to determine any GRF differences. RESULTS: There were no significant three way or two-way interactions for GRF (p > 0.05). There was also no main effect for sport (p > 0.05). There were main effects for footwear and box height (p = 0.000) where shod (2295.121 ± 66.025 N) had greater impact than barefoot (2090.233 ± 62.684 N). CONCLUSIONS: Single leg shod landing produced greater vertical ground reaction forces (vGRF) than during a barefoot landing. Current research continues to be contradictory on whether or not barefoot activities lower GRF; therefore, it is important to continue research in this area.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2020, 2020
- Identifier
- 1201541141, WFE0000709
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- Ecological dynamics of vibrio vulnificus and vibrio parahaemolyticus: distribution, molecular tools, and harmful algal bloom interactions.
- Author
- Potdukhe, Trupti Vilas
- Abstract/Description
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With the rising threat of anthropogenic climate change, human pathogens Vibrio vulnificus (Vv) and parahaemolyticus (Vp) may become more problematic to world health. The aims of this study were to i) report baseline Vv and Vp abundances, ii) develop new oligonucleotide primer sets for detection of Vv and Vp pathogens, and iii) explore interactions with other waterborne nuisances. We sampled surface waters, sediments, and invertebrate biofilms from 43 locations in two estuarine systems over...
Show moreWith the rising threat of anthropogenic climate change, human pathogens Vibrio vulnificus (Vv) and parahaemolyticus (Vp) may become more problematic to world health. The aims of this study were to i) report baseline Vv and Vp abundances, ii) develop new oligonucleotide primer sets for detection of Vv and Vp pathogens, and iii) explore interactions with other waterborne nuisances. We sampled surface waters, sediments, and invertebrate biofilms from 43 locations in two estuarine systems over seven dates in winter 2020. Culturable Vv was present in most water and sediment samples, but Vp only in about half of the surface waters. Surface Vv covaried with bottom water pH and tidal coefficient. Vp surface concentrations correlated negatively with surface salinity, and positively with total surface nitrogen. Both species correlated with wind, suggesting resuspension was important. These regionally-novel winter baseline Vibrio abundances will aid in predicting risk factors in each waterbody of interest. In-house databases were constructed to design better primer pairs for virulence genes. End-point PCR was used to verify new trh and tdh primers for more accurate detection of Vv and Vp type strains. A novel Vv tdh gene pair showed promise, whereas the vvhA pair was no better than published primers. These in silico and preliminary end-point PCR data will inform future efforts in quantifying Vibrio with quantitative PCR. Finally, an exploratory study showed that Karenia brevis (Kb), a toxic dinoflagellate rampant in southwest Florida waterways, inhibited Vv growth by 150-fold, and Kb had little to no effect on Vp growth.
Show less - Identifier
- 1298232859, WFE0000784
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- Quantifying microplastics in fjords along the western Antarctic peninsula.
- Author
- Garza, Tristyn Nicole
- Abstract/Description
-
Microplastic pollution is ubiquitous to water sources around the world, including freshwater, drinking water, salt water, and sea ice. Microplastics have also been documented in all parts of the water column from the sea floor and sediments to surface water. It was believed that microplastic pollution was concentrated in coastal areas with large human populations around the world. While remaining either entirely absent or minimal from remote areas where human influence is minimal such as in...
Show moreMicroplastic pollution is ubiquitous to water sources around the world, including freshwater, drinking water, salt water, and sea ice. Microplastics have also been documented in all parts of the water column from the sea floor and sediments to surface water. It was believed that microplastic pollution was concentrated in coastal areas with large human populations around the world. While remaining either entirely absent or minimal from remote areas where human influence is minimal such as in Antarctica, specifically the Antarctic Peninsula. This project determined microplastic concentration of three fjord habitats on the Western Antarctic Peninsula where glaciers are rapidly retreating within the fjords. Over a three-year period from 2017 to 2020 water samples were collected from the surface and benthos from 16 stations in Marian Cove, King George Island, Börgen Bay, Anvers Island, and Sheldon Glacier, Adelaide Island. For each station, three liters from the surface and three liters from the benthic were collected using a CTD rosette with Niskin Bottles, vacuum-filtered with a Buchner-Filter hand pump then, quantified under a compound microscope to determine the classification of microplastic, (fragment, fiber, or bead) color, and size. Comparisons over time and location were made in average microplastic per liter. It was determined that all the fjord habitats had microplastic present every year sampled, but the microplastic concentration was also increasing over time in the three fjords. This demonstrates that even with barriers such as the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, plastics are present and increasing in the Western Antarctic Peninsula during this time.
Show less - Identifier
- 1298600763, WFE0000785
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- Freedom for hire: free black apprenticeship in New Orleans.
- Author
- Crain, Maggie Eleanor
- Abstract/Description
-
During the early 1700s and into the early 1800s in Louisiana, a unique community of free black people created a fluid political and cultural identity within New Orleans. Surrounded by plantation slavery, free black people living in this important urban port city accumulated a degree of wealth, property, and agency that free and enslaved people of color did not have access to in other areas of the South. Though this community faced many obstacles and limitations due to their precarious place...
Show moreDuring the early 1700s and into the early 1800s in Louisiana, a unique community of free black people created a fluid political and cultural identity within New Orleans. Surrounded by plantation slavery, free black people living in this important urban port city accumulated a degree of wealth, property, and agency that free and enslaved people of color did not have access to in other areas of the South. Though this community faced many obstacles and limitations due to their precarious place within a hostile and rigid racial system, free black people, as individuals and as a community, used the often confusing and fluid nature of their racial identity to bolster their agency and place in New Orleans. One such way free black people accomplished this was through the extensive practice of apprenticeship, a labor practice that allowed young people to learn a skill from an artisan, who in exchange for their training, used the free or low wage labor from their apprentice. Using over four hundred contracts between free children of color, local artisans, and a sponsor, this research explores how apprenticeship was in part a formal educational opportunity for black youth. The role that family members, especially black mothers and white fathers, played in acquiring and sponsoring apprenticeships for their children attests to the importance of education and establishing relationships with local artisans and business owners in New Orleans. Using the data collected from these documents, as well as supporting public records, this research reveals the complex and interconnected ways that the free community navigated their material and cultural environment to survive, and often thrive, in the face of increased racial hostility and threats to free black agency in the decades leading up to the Civil War.
Show less - Identifier
- 1294639545, WFE0000775
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- South Springs.
- Author
- Brehm, Faith Danielle
- Abstract/Description
-
When South Springs resident Allison Cooper is found dead at the local dam, it sparks a frenzy in the usually quiet small town as residents speculate on what exactly happened to her the last night of her life. A murder? Accident? Suicide. No one seems to know and the police are out of their depth. South Springs follows the lives of those closest to Allison in the months following her death. As they struggle to come to terms with her loss, they find themselves under the increased scrutiny and...
Show moreWhen South Springs resident Allison Cooper is found dead at the local dam, it sparks a frenzy in the usually quiet small town as residents speculate on what exactly happened to her the last night of her life. A murder? Accident? Suicide. No one seems to know and the police are out of their depth. South Springs follows the lives of those closest to Allison in the months following her death. As they struggle to come to terms with her loss, they find themselves under the increased scrutiny and fascination of the rest of the town. Each manages their grief through different facets as they attempt to reestablish their lives without her
Show less - Date Issued
- 2021
- Identifier
- 1293880388, WFE0000761
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- Growing pains: investigating satellite tag epoxy attachments on juvenile turtles.
- Author
- Vidal, Alexander
- Abstract/Description
-
While nesting behavior of sea turtles is well understood, gaps in knowledge exist for inwater movements. This is especially true for neonate and small juvenile turtles, which are overall data poor at pelagic and early neritic stages. The use of satellite-linked platform terminal transmitters (PTTs) allows scientists to study sea turtle movements; however, long-term tracking of sea turtles comes with a unique set of challenges. Tracking durations can be brief and limited by technical failures....
Show moreWhile nesting behavior of sea turtles is well understood, gaps in knowledge exist for inwater movements. This is especially true for neonate and small juvenile turtles, which are overall data poor at pelagic and early neritic stages. The use of satellite-linked platform terminal transmitters (PTTs) allows scientists to study sea turtle movements; however, long-term tracking of sea turtles comes with a unique set of challenges. Tracking durations can be brief and limited by technical failures. Most PTTs on small juveniles fail within one year. There is a general consensus among many biologists who tag small juvenile turtles that tags are failing due to premature detachment from carapace expansion. I tested this growth-caused detachment hypothesis through a series of controlled experiments. First, using empty red-eared slider (Trachemys scripta elegans) shells, I conducted axial load testing with model transmitters attached. Second, using juvenile red-eared sliders with model PTTs, I recreated the stress of shell growth on the epoxied-tag attachment. In both experiments, a suite of epoxies were tested, expansion factors were measured, and data was compared to sea turtle growth rates. This research contributes to the knowledge of how adhesives interact with a growing turtle shell.
Show less - Identifier
- 1294313663, WFE0000769
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- Short story collection: fermented summer.
- Author
- Waller, Chaise Jurnee
- Abstract/Description
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Fermented Summer is a collection of three stories: Fermented, Evaporated, and Distilled that explore themes of Southern Gothic American Literature in a modern, short story format in a small fictional Floridian town surrounded by swamp land. The characters experience troubles of southern culture: alcoholism, prejudice, alienation, poverty, transgression, and decayed settings. Each story depicts encounters of a different time in the same place whilst switching between central figures' narration...
Show moreFermented Summer is a collection of three stories: Fermented, Evaporated, and Distilled that explore themes of Southern Gothic American Literature in a modern, short story format in a small fictional Floridian town surrounded by swamp land. The characters experience troubles of southern culture: alcoholism, prejudice, alienation, poverty, transgression, and decayed settings. Each story depicts encounters of a different time in the same place whilst switching between central figures' narration. The expectation of Fermented Summer is to examine the multifaceted relationship of humanity and its ecological surroundings, putting pressure on the already brittle bonds with nature. Its purpose is to explore the degree to which humanity is recognizable without its ancestral and nearly primal synergy with the land and life. The figures of Fermented Summer highlight not the struggles of impoverished southerners, but the degrading relation of humanity to the earth itself. Each character has their own conflicts and challenges, ultimately placing the troubles with Del, the youngest, to sort through the remains of her dying homeland and familial relations.
Show less - Identifier
- 1296378801, WFE0000778
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- Vergil in the "Wracke" and the "Comming to Virginia": William Strachey's structural, literary, and ideological adaptation of the Aeneid.
- Author
- Scott, Teresa Yates
- Abstract/Description
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This paper investigates William Strachey's A True Reportory, a stylized eyewitness account of Strachey's 1609-1610 voyage to the Jamestown colony, showing how the text utilizes Vergil's Aeneid to set a precedent for the British colonization of the New World. By using the Aeneid as a resource for A True Reportory, I argue that Strachey is committed to creating a new and active history for Jamestown by connecting the ongoing foundation of Jamestown to that of the Roman Empire, an empire...
Show moreThis paper investigates William Strachey's A True Reportory, a stylized eyewitness account of Strachey's 1609-1610 voyage to the Jamestown colony, showing how the text utilizes Vergil's Aeneid to set a precedent for the British colonization of the New World. By using the Aeneid as a resource for A True Reportory, I argue that Strachey is committed to creating a new and active history for Jamestown by connecting the ongoing foundation of Jamestown to that of the Roman Empire, an empire destined for greatness, in the attempt to align his account with the promotional goals of the Virginia Company. In particular, I will show that Strachey leverages Rome's greatness to induce the British population to take a more active role in the larger North American colonial project, while also using uniquely Roman paradigms of colonialism to legitimize Britain's possession of Jamestown and place the British experience within a known colonial framework.
Show less - Identifier
- 1296381331, WFE0000779
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- Stuck in Stockholm: examining sexual harassment and COVID-19 related factors as predictors of Stockholm Syndrome in the workplace.
- Author
- Hurley, Kenzie Joy, University of West Florida, University of West Florida
- Abstract/Description
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The researcher investigated whether personality type and learning style predicted performance in distance education. Thirty-four participants from 3 sections of Art Humanities completed online the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator and the Learning Styles Inventory. Using regression analysis, it was determined that neither personality type nor learning style had a statistically significant effect on student performance in this setting. However, the data did reveal some apparent self-selection of the...
Show moreThe researcher investigated whether personality type and learning style predicted performance in distance education. Thirty-four participants from 3 sections of Art Humanities completed online the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator and the Learning Styles Inventory. Using regression analysis, it was determined that neither personality type nor learning style had a statistically significant effect on student performance in this setting. However, the data did reveal some apparent self-selection of the learning environment. Sensors outrepresented Intuitives by a large scale, identifying further areas for research. A binomial test was used to prove these results were not random. As some scholars have noted, COVID-19 has exacerbated existing inequities and economic insecurities that increase the risk of harassment. Sexual harassment (SH) involves conduct of a sexual nature that creates an intimidating or hostile work environment or interferes with an individual's job performance. This speculated increase in SH due to COVID-19 could relate to an increase in Stockholm syndrome (SS) among essential workers, as many essential workers may stay at their workplace due to benefits (e.g., finances, healthcare) despite having experienced abuse. As such, the current study applies Stockholm syndrome as a framework to examine the potential relationship between SH and SS, and the effects that various factors (e.g., essential worker status, source of harassment) have on this relationship. One-hundred and twelve participants completed online surveys using Amazon's Mechanical Turk (MTurk). Analyses revealed a positive relationship between SH and SS. Furthermore, essential workers reported higher levels of both SH and SS than their non-essential counterparts. This thesis bridges the gap between SH and domestic violence literature, such that it is the first to apply the SS framework to workplace instances of SH. Future research calls for examining the influence of race and power in influencing this relationship, as well as examining the long-term effects of feelings of SS in the workplace.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2021, 2021.
- Identifier
- 1319438744, WFE0000798
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- Measuring stable isotopes to trace groundwater transport of dissolved nitrogen in seagrass beds.
- Author
- McQueen, Haley Anne
- Abstract/Description
-
Submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) connects terrestrial groundwater to coastal surface waters through porous sediments. This research tracked dissolved nutrients as they traverse the subterranean estuary by measuring nitrogen stable isotope ratios in association with SGD inputs to nearshore beds of Thalassia testudinum. Variations of SGD-transported nutrients into the local environment (including porewaters and bottom waters) in which Thalassia is growing was investigated. Analysis was...
Show moreSubmarine groundwater discharge (SGD) connects terrestrial groundwater to coastal surface waters through porous sediments. This research tracked dissolved nutrients as they traverse the subterranean estuary by measuring nitrogen stable isotope ratios in association with SGD inputs to nearshore beds of Thalassia testudinum. Variations of SGD-transported nutrients into the local environment (including porewaters and bottom waters) in which Thalassia is growing was investigated. Analysis was carried out for variations in elemental abundance and stable isotope composition of seagrass in areas receiving SGD compared to control areas in which no SGD is measured. Eight site locations were sampled within Florida's Gulf Islands National Seashore's Naval Like Oaks (NALO) Preserve for bottom-water nitrate, nitrite, ammonium and phosphate; physical water quality parameters (dissolved oxygen, specific conductivity, temperature, pH, and turbidity); δ15N in pore-waters and groundwater transect; and dissolved radon. Additionally, Thalassia testudinum IRMS analysis for δ15N to investigate SGD influences on N ratios and stable isotope composition in the local seagrasses, including spatial and tidal controls on any variability in water column chemistry and seagrass biogeochemistry. Overall, there was not a significant correlation between SGD inputs and the stable isotope values found in Thalassia. However, significant findings linking SGD to atmospheric precipitation and isotope ratios to seagrass growing seasons were unearthed. The results of this research could prove advantageous for policymakers and environmental managers as they deal with pollution and conservation efforts surrounding seagrasses.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2020, 2020
- Identifier
- 1202267186, WFE0000721
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- Meshless space-time method to solve two-dimensional wave equation.
- Author
- Mahaguruge, Niranjan Warnakulasooriya
- Abstract/Description
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Meshless methods utilizing Radial Basis Functions(RBF) have been widely used to find numerical solutions for Partial Differential Equations(PDEs). Unlike the other numerical methods, meshless algorithms are significantly simpler to implement as they do not require a mesh in the simulation domain. Rolland L. Hardy, an Iowa State geodesist, was the first to study using RBF for scattered data interpolations in the early 1970s. He introduced his Multiquadric(MQ) RBF, which has been used to obtain...
Show moreMeshless methods utilizing Radial Basis Functions(RBF) have been widely used to find numerical solutions for Partial Differential Equations(PDEs). Unlike the other numerical methods, meshless algorithms are significantly simpler to implement as they do not require a mesh in the simulation domain. Rolland L. Hardy, an Iowa State geodesist, was the first to study using RBF for scattered data interpolations in the early 1970s. He introduced his Multiquadric(MQ) RBF, which has been used to obtain numerical solutions for various types of RBF interpolation problems. In addition to that, E. J. Kansa, in the very early 1990s, made the first attempt to extend RBF interpolation to obtain solutions for PDEs. In this thesis, we propose a numerical scheme, which has been based on Kansa's method, to solve time-dependent PDEs. In contrast to already existing methods for solving time-dependent PDEs, our model treats the time variable the same as a spatial variable. However, the accuracy of the RBF numerical methods highly depends on the shape parameter, c, which is associated with the RBF. The value of the c that guarantees the highest accuracy is problem dependent and it is called as the optimal value of c. Even with the optimal value of c, it is not possible to achieve a significantly high accuracy compared to existing methods. In order to enhance the level of accuracy, we introduce \Ghost Points" into the computational domain. While traditional RBF based numerical methods place the centers exclusively inside the computational domain, the ghost point approach expands the region of the centers inside and outside the computational domain. Our numerical results suggest that the accuracy of the numerical results has been significantly increased by the ghost points.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2020, 2020
- Identifier
- 1202266955, WFE0000720
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- The microrna miR-18a regulates neural regeneration in the injured retina.
- Author
- Magner, Evin Tyson
- Abstract/Description
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In mammals, retinal injuries and photoreceptor degeneration (PD) can damage photoreceptors causing permanent blindness. However, retinal injury in zebrafish (Danio rerio) elicits a rapid stem cell-based response that regenerates photoreceptors and restores vision. Crucial to this are the Müller glia (stem cells) that generate multipotent progenitor cells, which regenerate photoreceptors. Photoreceptor regeneration requires accurate control over the immune response (inflammation), cell cycle...
Show moreIn mammals, retinal injuries and photoreceptor degeneration (PD) can damage photoreceptors causing permanent blindness. However, retinal injury in zebrafish (Danio rerio) elicits a rapid stem cell-based response that regenerates photoreceptors and restores vision. Crucial to this are the Müller glia (stem cells) that generate multipotent progenitor cells, which regenerate photoreceptors. Photoreceptor regeneration requires accurate control over the immune response (inflammation), cell cycle exit, and differentiation. Understanding the mechanisms which control photoreceptor regeneration in zebrafish could lead to treatments for blindness that stimulate Müller glia to reestablish vision in humans. Past investigations have demonstrated that microRNAs (miRNAs) are essential regulators of retinal neurogenesis, but lacking is an understanding of the roles of miRNAs in regulating photoreceptor regeneration. Preliminary data with miR-18a mutant fish generated using CRISPR/Cas9 gene-editing indicated that this microRNA regulates photoreceptor regeneration. The objective of this study was to determine if and how miR-18a, following light-induced photoreceptor injury, functions to regulate the cell cycle and/or differentiation in Müller glia and photoreceptor progenitors. In-situ hybridization (ISH) and immunohistochemical (IHC) labeling showed that miR-18a is expressed in microglia, proliferating Müller glia and photoreceptor progenitors, suggesting roles at both early and later stages of the photoreceptor regeneration response. Bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) and proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) immunolabeling experiments showed that, following photoreceptor injury, there are more proliferating cells in miR-18a mutant (CRISPR) retinas compared with x wild-type (WT), demonstrating that miR-18a regulates the cell cycle. Expression of miR-18a in Müller glia and microglia (macrophages) indicates a role in the early regeneration response during which inflammation plays a critical role, and microRNA databases predict that miR- 18a might interact with and regulate several molecules involved in inflammation. These results led to the hypothesis that miR-18a regulates photoreceptor regeneration by regulating inflammation. As an initial test of this hypothesis, ISH was used to show that, in miR- 18a mutants compared with WT, the inflammatory mediator NFkB is expressed for a more extended period of time, indicating that miR-18a might typically function to suppress inflammation. To test this, dexamethasone (corticosteroid) was administered at critical time points to reduce inflammation levels in the miR-18a mutants. By blocking inflammation from days 2 to 6 post-injury, the treatment rescued the phenotype in the mutants, reducing the numbers of proliferating cells to the levels observed in WT fish. Finally, to determine if miR- 18a also regulates photoreceptor differentiation, ISH for rods and cones showed that miR- 18a mutant fish generate photoreceptors slower than wild-type fish but that by 14 days postinjury (dpi) miR-18a mutant fish generate more cones than WT. Together, these results demonstrate that miR-18a regulates the cell cycle and photoreceptor differentiation through molecular control over inflammation.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2020, 2020
- Identifier
- 1202266988, WFE0000719
- Format
- Document (PDF)