scholarly journals Towards the Creation of Monitoring and Evaluation Tool for Values Education: An Exploratory Survey of Values of Grade 1 Students in West I School District City Schools Division of Cagayan De Oro

Author(s):  
Melody Fe Caperida- Obrador ◽  
Renato L. Base
2016 ◽  
Vol 93 (2) ◽  
pp. 4-16
Author(s):  
Brian Kovalesky

In the late 1950s and early 1960s, during the height of protests and actions by civil rights activists around de facto school segregation in the Los Angeles area, the residents of a group of small cities just southeast of the City of Los Angeles fought to break away from the Los Angeles City Schools and create a new, independent school district—one that would help preserve racially segregated schools in the area. The “Four Cities” coalition was comprised of residents of the majority white, working-class cities of Vernon, Maywood, Huntington Park, and Bell—all of which had joined the Los Angeles City Schools in the 1920s and 1930s rather than continue to operate local districts. The coalition later expanded to include residents of the cities of South Gate, Cudahy, and some unincorporated areas of Los Angeles County, although Vernon was eventually excluded. The Four Cities coalition petitioned for the new district in response to a planned merger of the Los Angeles City Schools—until this time comprised of separate elementary and high school districts—into the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD). The coalition's strategy was to utilize a provision of the district unification process that allowed citizens to petition for reconfiguration or redrawing of boundaries. Unification was encouraged by the California State Board of Education and legislature in order to combine the administrative functions of separate primary and secondary school districts—the dominant model up to this time—to better serve the state's rapidly growing population of children and their educational needs, and was being deliberated in communities across the state and throughout Los Angeles County. The debates at the time over school district unification in the Greater Los Angeles area, like the one over the Four Cities proposal, were inextricably tied to larger issues, such as taxation, control of community institutions, the size and role of state and county government, and racial segregation. At the same time that civil rights activists in the area and the state government alike were articulating a vision of public schools that was more inclusive and demanded larger-scale, consolidated administration, the unification process reveals an often-overlooked grassroots activism among residents of the majority white, working-class cities surrounding Los Angeles that put forward a vision of exclusionary, smaller-scale school districts based on notions of local control and what they termed “community identity.”


Author(s):  
Daniel Ryczek ◽  
David Burt

Survivors of myocardial infarctions are at increased risk of recurrent infarctions and have an annual death rate of 5%, six times that in people of the same age who do not have coronary heart disease. Despite the existence of published interventions and clinical recommendations aimed at secondary and tertiary prevention their application and adherence statistics in post-myocardial infarction patients are woeful. The objective of this paper is to detail the creation of a template curriculum that gives best practice recommendations to post STEMI patients in an effort to reduce recidivism by combining current medical methodology with lessons learned from other fields currently addressing the problem of recidivism and relapse. STEMI 365 is a yearlong program that aims to reduce cardiac recidivism in STEMI survivors. STEMI 365 is composed of three parts: best practice guidelines, evaluation toolkit, and template curriculum. The best practice guidelines document is broken into sections on cardiac rehabilitation, lifestyle modification, drug therapy, patient follow-up and screening, and patient education. All guidelines are informed by the latest recommendations and research in the fields of medicine and relapse prevention. The evaluation toolkit is composed of the cardiac recidivism risk tool, the self-evaluation tool, and the global evaluation tool. The goal of the toolkits is to guide resource allocation by understanding a patient’s unique cardiac recidivism risk, internal sources of potential relapse, and external sources of potential relapse. The Federal Post Conviction Risk Assessment developed by the Administrative Office of the United States Courts informs the toolkits’ construction. The template curriculum is a summation of the programs and interventions that can be utilized by a health system to decrease cardiac recidivism in STEMI survivors. The curriculum addresses one year of time divided into three phases: inpatient, outpatient, and maintenance. The interventions rage in scope from training a patient’s family members in bystander CPR to the creation of a centralized patient monitoring program and post-myocardial infarction clinic. Each phase combines the best modalities in treatment found in the fields of post-myocardial infarction care, hospital re-admission prevention, substance abuse relapse prevention, scholastic dropout prevention, and criminal justice. Personal interviews were conducted with leaders in each field to ensure the correct application of their methodologies. STEMI 365 provides tools to identify patients at highest risk of cardiovascular relapse, to apply local and regional resources in an effective way based on patient risk, and to customize interventions to a health system’s available resources. STEMI 365 is beginning an application phase at this institution, and will be available to other health systems in the near future.


2016 ◽  
Vol 145 (1) ◽  
pp. 170-180 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. R. LILIAN ◽  
B. MUTASA ◽  
J. RAILTON ◽  
W. MONGWE ◽  
J. A. McINTYRE ◽  
...  

SUMMARYSouth Africa's paediatric antiretroviral therapy (ART) programme is managed using a monitoring and evaluation tool known as TIER.Net. This electronic system has several advantages over paper-based systems, allowing profiling of the paediatric ART programme over time. We analysed anonymized TIER.Net data for HIV-infected children aged <15 years who had initiated ART in a rural district of South Africa between 2005 and 2014. We performed Kaplan–Meier survival analysis to assess outcomes over time. Records of 5461 children were available for analysis; 3593 (66%) children were retained in care. Losses from the programme were higher in children initiated on treatment in more recent years (P < 0·0001) and in children aged ≤1 year at treatment initiation (P < 0·0001). For children aged <3 years, abacavir was associated with a significantly higher rate of loss from the programme compared to stavudine (hazard ratio 1·9, P < 0·001). Viral load was suppressed in 48–52% of the cohort, with no significant change over the years (P = 0·398). Analysis of TIER.Net data over time provides enhanced insights into the performance of the paediatric ART programme and highlights interventions to improve programme performance.


2019 ◽  
Vol 77 ◽  
pp. 101715 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susan Andrea Bartels ◽  
Saja Michael ◽  
Luissa Vahedi ◽  
Amanda Collier ◽  
Jocelyn Kelly ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Hamisi Jitta Mwaguni ◽  
John Mbugua ◽  
Charles Rambo

The purpose of the study was to assess how budgets influences performance of research projects of public universities in Coast region, Kenya. The study used a pragmatism paradigm. A descriptive survey and correlation research design were adopted. A targeted population of 1110 academic and non-academic employees for the two universities were used for this study. A sample of 285; consisting of 173 from Technical University of Mombasa and 112 from Pwani University was employed through proportionate and simple random sampling to obtain a representative sample. Primary data collection was done by use of interview guide and open and close ended questionnaires. A pilot test was conducted at University of Nairobi main campus as it would provide a representation of the study to test data collections tools reliability and validity. Data analysis was by inferential and descriptive statistics; mean, frequencies, percentages and standard deviation. Shapiro-Wilk Test was employed to establish whether data was normally distributed or not and adjustments were made to make the data normal. Durbin Watson method was also used to test autocorrelation of the variables. The findings established that budget influences performance of research projects with a composite mean of 3.93 and standard deviation of 0.747. Budget had a positive strong correlation at 0.89. The data also established a positive relationship amongst budget on performance of research projects in public universities. Further studies can be done on other monitoring and evaluation tools to ascertain which is most appropriate for monitoring and evaluation tool. Further studies should be conducted in other parastatals.


Comunicar ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 14 (28) ◽  
pp. 183-190 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marta-Mª Moro-Rodríguez

Advertising sometimes transmits opposite values to the socially and educationally desirable ones. The attraction power of the television advertisements is so strong that it has become necessary to balance it in the classroom. This paper shows the creation process of pedagogical material in order to make values education in tutorial sessions or in other subjects easier. It has been assessed with a test-retest model in control and experimental groups.La publicidad transmite valores a veces contrarios a los deseables socialmente y a los perseguidos por el currículo. El poder de atracción de los anuncios de televisión es tan fuerte que se hace necesario contrarrestarlo en las aulas. En este trabajo se narra el proceso de creación de un material educativo para facilitar la educación en valores en las sesiones de tutoría o como tema transversal. Se puso a prueba su efectividad mediante un diseño test-retest con grupo control y experimental.


2019 ◽  
pp. 097282011984523
Author(s):  
Ehsan ul Haque ◽  
Suwaibah Mansoor

Ajmal Baig, CEO of Semiotics Consultants, a development consulting firm based in Islamabad, Pakistan is in the midst of heated debates with his team members on the evolution and performance of their currently ongoing project on education in the province of Punjab. The project, ‘Collaborative Education Project (CEP)’, is an GDA funded project for which a grant of Euro 10 million was allocated. The project was launched in 2003 and is now in its mid-term stages. During the life of the project, its Logical Framework Analysis (LFA) has been revised four times in the light of feedback from stakeholders and experience on the ground. The project team at Semiotics is reviewing and debating this journey. A robust and well thought out LFA is the starting point for any good program design and it also serves as its monitoring and evaluation tool. However, learning organisations expect that changes will be made based on ground realities and changing circumstances leading to revisions in the LFA. The key question is how much deviation from the original design is kosher. Too little and too much flexibility both have the potential to adversely impact the project outcomes.


2016 ◽  
Vol 48 (3) ◽  
pp. 380
Author(s):  
P. Ntonga Akono ◽  
C. Tonga ◽  
O.E. Ngo Hondt ◽  
M.F. Peka Nsangou ◽  
R. Ngaha ◽  
...  

Baseline entomological information should be collected before the implementation of industrial projects in malaria endemic areas. This allows for subsequent monitoring and evaluation of the project impact on malaria vectors. This study aimed at assessing the vectorial system and malaria transmission in two ecologically different villages of the South-Cameroon forest bloc targeted for the creation of an agro-industrial complex. For four consecutive seasons in 2013, adult mosquitoes were captured using Human Landing Catch in NDELLE village (located along a main road in a degraded forest with many fish ponds) and KOMBO village (located 5km far from the main road in a darker forest and crossed by the Mvobo River). Morpho-taxonomic techniques were used alongside molecular techniques for the identification of mosquito species. ELISA test was used for the detection of circumsporozoite protein antigen of <em>Plasmodium falciparum</em>. Mosquito biting rate was higher in NDELLE than in KOMBO (28.18 <em>versus</em> 17.34 bites per person per night). Mosquitoes had a strong tendency to endophagy both in NDELLE (73.57%) and KOMBO (70.21%). Three anophelines species were identified; <em>An. gambiae</em>, <em>An. funestus</em> s.s and <em>An. moucheti</em> s.s.. <em>An. gambiae</em> and <em>An. funestus</em> s.s. represented the bulk of aggressive mosquitoes in NDELLE (n=10,891; 96.62%). <em>An. gambiae</em> was responsible for 62.6% and 77.72% of malaria transmission in KOMBO and NDELLE respectively. Mean entomological inoculation rate recorded in KOMBO and NDELLE were 4.82 and 2.02 infective bites per person per night respectively. Vector control was mainly based on the use of long-lasting insecticidal nets and indoor residual spraying. The degraded forest environment added to the presence of fishponds resulted in the increase of aggressive mosquito density but not of malaria transmission. The managers should use these data for monitoring and evaluation of the impact of their project; malaria control strategies should be included in their project in order to mitigate the risk of increased malaria transmission as a result of the implementation of their projects.


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