7 results on '"Harold, D"'
Search Results
2. FOLLOW-UP STUDY OF GRADUATES OF ELEVEN PUBLIC COMMUNITY COLLEGES IN MARYLAND (CLASSES OF 1959 THROUGH 1963).
- Author
-
REESE, HAROLD D.
- Abstract
THE DATA IN THIS STUDY WERE COLLECTED FROM ELEVEN COMMUNITY COLLEGES, FROM THE 4-YEAR INSTITUTIONS TO WHICH THEIR GRADUATES TRANSFERRED, AND FROM THE 1744 GRADUATES THEMSELVES, 1296 OF WHOM HAD BEEN ENROLLED IN TRANSFER AND 448 IN OCCUPATIONAL CURRICULA. OF THE OCCUPATIONAL STUDENTS, 19 PERCENT LATER CHANGED GOALS AND CONTINUED AT A 4-YEAR INSTITUTION. TABLES SHOW, AMONG OTHER THINGS, PRESENT AND PROPOSED OCCUPATIONAL CURRICULA, THE NUMBER OF GRADUATES IN OCCUPATIONAL COURSES, HOW MANY STUDENTS CHANGED CURRICULUM AFTER TRANSFER, HOW MANY TRANSFERS RECEIVED THEIR BACHELOR'S DEGREE, THE LENGTH OF TIME THEY TOOK TO DO SO, THE CHANGES IN THEIR GRADE POINT AVERAGES, AND CREDIT HOURS LOST UNDER CERTAIN CONDITIONS. IT IS POINTED OUT THAT JUNIOR COLLEGE GUIDANCE AND COUNSELING STAFFS MUST BEAR IN MIND THE CHARACTERISTICS OF THE HIGH SCHOOLS SUPPLYING THE COLLEGE'S STUDENTS AS WELL AS THE UNIVERSITIES AND 4-YEAR COLLEGES ACCEPTING THEM, IN ORDER TO MINIMIZE THE PENALTIES IN TIME AND MONEY CAUSED BY LOSS OF CREDIT AFTER TRANSFER. A FURTHER FOLLOW-UP STUDY IS CONTEMPLATED ON THE 365 GRADUATES OF THE OCCUPATIONAL PROGRAMS AND THE NATURE OF THEIR EMPLOYMENT AFTER COMPLETING THE 2-YEAR DEGREE COURSE. (HH)
- Published
- 1967
3. Intergenerational Social Networks and Health Behaviors Among Children Living in Public Housing.
- Author
-
Kennedy-Hendricks, Alene, Schwartz, Heather, Thornton, Rachel Johnson, Griffin, Beth Ann, Green Jr., Harold D., Kennedy, David P., Burkhauser, Susan, and Pollack, Craig Evan
- Subjects
INTERGENERATIONAL relations ,HEALTH behavior in children ,SOCIAL network research ,PUBLIC housing ,CAREGIVERS ,HEALTH & social status ,AMERICAN children ,HEALTH ,SOCIAL history ,TWENTY-first century ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,EXERCISE ,HEALTH behavior ,HEALTH status indicators ,PEDIATRICS ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,SOCIAL networks ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,BODY mass index ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ODDS ratio - Abstract
Objectives. In a survey of families living in public housing, we investigated whether caretakers' social networks are linked with children's health status. Methods. In 2011, 209 children and their caretakers living in public housing in suburban Montgomery County, Maryland, were surveyed regarding their health and social networks. We used logistic regression models to examine the associations between the perceived health composition of caretaker social networks and corresponding child health characteristics (e.g., exercise, diet). Results. With each 10% increase in the proportion of the caretaker's social network that exercised regularly, the child's odds of exercising increased by 34% (adjusted odds ratio = 1.34; 95% confidence interval = 1.07, 1.69) after the care- taker's own exercise behavior and the composition of the child's peer network had been taken into account. Although children's overweight or obese status was associated with caretakers' social networks, the results were no longer significant after adjustment for caretakers' own weight status. Conclusions. We found that caretaker social networks are independently associated with certain aspects of child health, suggesting the importance of the broader social environment for low-income children's health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The Impact of Public Housing on Social Networks: A Natural Experiment.
- Author
-
Pollack, Craig E., Green Jr., Harold D., Kennedy, David P., Griffin, Beth Ann, Kennedy-Hendricks, Alene, Burkhauser, Susan, and Schwartz, Heather
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL networks , *GOVERNMENT agencies , *STATISTICAL correlation , *EMPLOYMENT , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *PUBLIC housing , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH funding , *STATISTICAL sampling , *SMOKING , *STATISTICS , *DATA analysis , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *BODY mass index , *PHYSICAL activity , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Objectives. We assessed whether 2 types of public housing—scattered among market-rate housing developments or clustered in small public housing projects—were associated with the perceived health and health behaviors of residents' social networks. Methods. Leveraging a natural experiment in Montgomery County, Maryland, in which residents were randomly assigned to different types of public housing, we surveyed 453 heads of household in 2011. We asked residents about their own health as well as the perceived health of their network members, including their neighbors. Results. Residents in scattered-site public housing perceived that their neighbors were more likely to exercise than residents of clustered public housing (24.7% of network members vs 14.0%; P< .001). There were no significant differences in the proportion of network members who were perceived to have major health problems, depressed mood, poor diet, or obesity. Having more network members who smoked was associated with a significantly higher likelihood of smoking. Conclusions. Different types of public housing have a modest impact on the health composition of one's social network, suggesting the importance of housing policy for health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Enhanced Reductive Dechlorination of Polychlorinated Biphenyl Impacted Sediment by Bioaugmentation with a Dehalorespiring Bacterium.
- Author
-
Payne, Rayford B., May, Harold D., and Sowers, Kevin R.
- Subjects
- *
DEHALOGENATION , *REDUCTIVE elimination (Chemistry) , *BIODEGRADATION of polychlorinated biphenyls , *ANAEROBIC bacteria , *CONTAMINATED sediments , *HARBORS - Abstract
Anaerobic reductive dehalogenation of commercial PCBs such as Aroclor 1260 has a critical role of transforming highly chlorinated congeners to less chlorinated congeners that are then susceptible to aerobic degradation. The efficacy of bioaugmentation with the dehalorespiring bacterium Dehalobium chlorocoercia DF1 was tested in 2-L laboratory mesocosms containing sediment contaminated with weathered Aroclor 1260 (1.3 ppm) from Baltimore Harbor, MD. Total penta- and higher chlorinated PCBs decreased by approximately 56% (by mass) in bioaugmented mesocosms after 120 days compared with no activity observed in unamended controls. Bioaugmentation with DF-1 enhanced the dechlorination of doubly flanked chlorines and stimulated the dechlorination of single flanked chlorines as a result of an apparent synergistic effect on the indigenous population. Addition of granulated activated carbon had a slight stimulatory effect indicating that anaerobic reductive dechlorination of PCBs at low concentrations was not inhibited by a high background of inorganic carbon that could affect bioavailability. The total number of dehalorespiring bacteria was reduced by approximately half after 60 days. However, a steady state level was maintained that was greater than the indigenous population of putative dehalorespiring bacteria in untreated sediments and DF1 was maintained within the indigenous population after 120 days. The results of this study demonstrate that bioaugmentation with dehalorespiring bacteria has a stimulatory effect on the dechlorination of weathered PCBs and supports the feasibility of using in situ bioaugmentation as an environmentally less invasive and lower cost alternate to dredging for treatment of PCB impacted sediments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Maryland: Conference on Functions of Laboratory Schools.
- Author
-
Reese, Harold D.
- Subjects
LABORATORY schools ,GRADUATE study in education ,EXPERIMENTAL methods in education ,EDUCATION research ,DEMONSTRATION centers in education ,EDUCATIONAL innovations - Abstract
The article reports that representatives of various State Teachers Colleges and State Department of Education in Maryland have initiated a one-day conference titled "The Role of the Laboratory School in Teacher Education in Maryland," held on April 13, 1959 in Baltimore. This conference aims to identify the role of the laboratory school in the teacher education in Maryland. The one-day conference was led by Ohio State University Center for School Experimentation director Alexander Frazier. The evolution of laboratory schools in Maryland began when State Teachers College in Salisbury established its own new, modern laboratory school.
- Published
- 1959
7. Microbial reductive dechlorination of aroclor 1260 in Baltimore harbor sediment microcosms is catalyzed by three phylotypes within the phylum Chloroflexi.
- Author
-
Fagervold SK, May HD, and Sowers KR
- Subjects
- Base Sequence, Biodegradation, Environmental, Chloroflexi genetics, Chromatography, Gas, Computational Biology, Electrophoresis, Maryland, Molecular Sequence Data, Molecular Structure, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S genetics, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Species Specificity, Aroclors metabolism, Chlorine metabolism, Chloroflexi metabolism, Environmental Pollutants metabolism, Geologic Sediments analysis
- Abstract
The specific dechlorination pathways for Aroclor 1260 were determined in Baltimore Harbor sediment microcosms developed with the 11 most predominant congeners from this commercial mixture and their resulting dechlorination intermediates. Most of the polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) congeners were dechlorinated in the meta position, and the major products were tetrachlorobiphenyls with unflanked chlorines. Using PCR primers specific for the 16S rRNA genes of known PCB-dehalogenating bacteria, we detected three phylotypes within the microbial community that had the capability to dechlorinate PCB congeners present in Aroclor 1260 and identified their selective activities. Phylotype DEH10, which has a high level of sequence identity to Dehalococcoides spp., removed the double-flanked chlorine in 234-substituted congeners and exhibited a preference for para-flanked meta-chlorines when no double-flanked chlorines were available. Phylotype SF1 had similarity to the o-17/DF-1 group of PCB-dechlorinating bacteria. Phylotype SF1 dechlorinated all of the 2345-substituted congeners, mostly in the double-flanked meta position and 2356-, 236-, and 235-substituted congeners in the ortho-flanked meta position, with a few exceptions. A phylotype with 100% sequence identity to PCB-dechlorinating bacterium o-17 was responsible for an ortho and a double-flanked meta dechlorination reaction. Most of the dechlorination pathways supported the growth of all three phylotypes based on competitive PCR enumeration assays, which indicates that PCB-impacted environments have the potential to sustain populations of these PCB-dechlorinating microorganisms. The results demonstrate that the variation in dechlorination patterns of congener mixtures typically observed at different PCB impacted sites can potentially be mediated by the synergistic activities of relatively few dechlorinating species.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.