Decision making and the vulnerable high-risk neonate: International perspectives

1992 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 57-63 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pamela Schlomann
2021 ◽  
Vol 54 (4) ◽  
pp. 239-242
Author(s):  
Christine A. Espin ◽  
Natalie Förster ◽  
Suzanne E. Mol

This article serves as an introduction to the special series, Data-Based Instruction and Decision-Making: An International Perspective. In this series, we bring together international researchers from both special and general education to address teachers’ use (or non-use) of data for instructional decision making. Via this special series, we aim to increase understanding of the challenges involved in teachers’ data-based instructional decision making for students with or at-risk for learning disabilities, and to further the development of approaches for improving teachers’ ability to plan, adjust, and adapt instruction in response to data.


Surgery ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ana C. De Roo ◽  
Crystal Ann Vitous ◽  
Samantha J. Rivard ◽  
Michaela C. Bamdad ◽  
Sara M. Jafri ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 88 (1) ◽  
pp. 53-80 ◽  
Author(s):  
LAUREN A. TURNER ◽  
A. J. ANGULO

Lauren A. Turner and A. J. Angulo explore how institutional theory can be applied to explain variance in higher education organizational strategies. Given strong regulatory, normative, and cultural-cognitive pressures to conform, they ask, why do some colleges engage in high-risk decision making? To answer this, they bring together classic and contemporary approaches to institutional theory and propose an integrated model for understanding outlier higher education strategies. The integrated model offers a heuristic for analyzing external and internal pressures that motivate colleges to implement nontraditional strategies. Through an analysis of recent trends among outlier colleges and their approaches to the Scholastic Aptitude Test, Turner and Angulo contextualize the model and consider its potential for understanding why higher education organizations adopt characteristics that differentiate them from their peers.


2019 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 24 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jin Hong

Even experienced mountain climbers underestimate key dangers and make poor decisions in stressful, high-risk situations when climbing, leading to injury and death. My own experience indicates that effective education can play a key role in managing these risks and improving experienced climber’s decision making. Current educational approaches for climbers, however, are generally limited to textbooks and ‘on the mountain’ learning. It is vital, therefore, that new approaches and methods are developed to improve learning.    My own experience and emergent case studies indicate that AR (Augmented), VR (Virtual Reality) and MR (Mixed Reality), have affordances (possibilities offered by the technology) to underpin new forms of learning and therefore have the potential to enhance education for high-risk environments. Emergent use of MR immersive technologies includes classroom learning, firefighting and military training. An initial review of literature has indicated though that there are very limited examples of rigorous research on the design and application of MR technologies in authentic education, especially for extreme situations such as mountaineering i.e., no one has rigorously designed for these technologies for learning in extreme environments, evaluated learning outcomes and theorised about how learning can be enhanced.    In response to this gap/opportunity, this research explores the potential of MR technologies to effectively enhance learning for authentic, high-risk situations. The research will use a Design-based research methodology (DBR) to develop design principles informed by key learning theories as they offer recognised and critical approaches for a new way of learning in an extreme environment.  Underpinned by a Constructivist paradigm, initial theoretical frameworks identified include Authentic Learning and Heutagogy (student-determined learning).Herrington and co-authors (2009) recommended 11 design principles for the incorporation of mobile learning into a higher education learning environment, and Blaschke and Hase (2015)’s 10 principles of designing learning for heutagogy. Other theories and frameworks include Constructivist Learning and the ZPD (the Zone of Proximal Development), design for mobile MR learning and user-centred design. Activity Theory will also be utilised in the data analysis.   Initial design principles will be developed by the DBR methodology. These design principles will be tested through the implementation and evaluation of an MR ‘prototype’ app design solution.’ The prototype solution will be iteratively redesigned using further evaluation and feedback from sample cohorts of end-users. Data will be collected from key participant interviews, researcher observation/reflections and biometric feedback. Methodological triangulation (multimodal data approach) will be used to evaluate learning outcomes. The iterative development will lead to transferable design principles and further theorising that can be transferred to other learning situations involving preparation and decision-making as well as knowledge in high-risk contexts.    Reference   Amiel, T., & Reeves, T. (2008). Design-Based Research and Educational Technology:   Rethinking Technology and the Research Agenda. Educational Technology                & Society, 11(4), 29-40.    Blaschke, L., & Hase, S. (2015). Heutagogy, Technology, and Lifelong Learning for Professional   and Part-Time Learners. In A. Dailey-Hebert & K. S. Dennis (Eds.), Transformative Perspectives   and Processes in Higher Education (Vol. 6, pp. 75-94). Switzerland: Springer                   International Publishing.   Cochrane, T., et al., (2017) ‘A DBR framework for designing mobile virtual reality learning  environments’, Australasian Journal of Educational Technology, vol. 33,  6, pp. 27–40. doi: 10.14742/ajet.3613    Engeström, Y. (2015). Learning by expanding: An activity-theoretical approach      to developmental research (2nd ed.). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.   Hase, S & Kenyon, C. (2001). Moving from andragogy to heutagogy: implications for VET',  Proceedings of Research to Reality: Putting VET Research to Work: Australian  Vocational Education and Training Research Association (AVETRA), Adelaide,  SA, 28-30 March, AVETRA, Crows Nest, NSW.   Kesim, M & Ozarslan (2012), Y. Augmented Reality in Education: Current                 Technologies and the Potential for Education, Procedia - Social and            Vygotsky, L. S. (1978). Mind in society: The development of higher psychological  processes. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.     Behavioral Sciences volume 47, 2012, 297-302.  


2018 ◽  
pp. 1009-1022.e4
Author(s):  
Tarah T. Colaizy ◽  
Sara B. Demauro ◽  
Kera M. Mcnelis ◽  
Brenda B. Poindexter

Nowa Medycyna ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jacek Wadełek

The majority of patients undergoing emergency laparotomy have potentially life?threatening conditions that require prompt intervention. The reduced time?frames available due to surgical urgency necessitate prompt and senior decision?making to minimise delays. The time taken to correct any anomalies needs to be balanced against the need for prompt surgery, particularly in time?sensitive situations involving sepsis or hypovolaemia. Therefore, corrective measures may be performed in parallel with surgery. Patients undergoing emergency laparotomy are at a high risk of adverse outcomes. Key elements of care for these patients include repeated risk assessment, early antibiotic therapy, as well as fluid resuscitation and appropriate timely interventions provided by clinicians with the right level of experience.


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