Many Things (many + thing)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Content Validation Is Useful for Many Things, but Validity Isn't One of Them

INDUSTRIAL AND ORGANIZATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY, Issue 4 2009
KEVIN R. MURPHY
Content-oriented validation strategies establish the validity of selection tests as predictors of performance by comparing the content of the tests with the content of the job. These comparisons turn out to have little if any bearing on the predictive validity of selection tests. There is little empirical support for the hypothesis that the match between job content and test content influences validity, and there are often structural factors in selection (e.g., positive correlations among selection tests) that strongly limit the possible influence of test content on validity. Comparisons between test content and job content have important implications for the acceptability of testing, the defensibility of tests in legal proceedings, and the transparency of test development and validation, but these comparisons have little if any bearing on validity. [source]


Centripetal Thinking in Curriculum Studies

CURRICULUM INQUIRY, Issue 4 2010
PETER HLEBOWITSH
ABSTRACT After years of generating divergent approaches to scholarship, cast mostly as reactions against a historical orthodoxy, the curriculum studies community is now looking at a new dialectic,one marked by a physics that pull ideas inward toward some centripetal center. The tension between looking for unifying ideas as they articulate with a multiplicity of incommensurate ones has, in fact, marked the nature of most scholarly thinking. Isaiah Berlin personified such a tension in his use of the Greek aphorism, "The fox knows many things, but the hedgehog knows one big thing." In recent years, the curriculum field has been dominated by foxes, who have resisted any attempt to even consider the role of hedgehog. But several projects have recently been launched in the field that might signal a new age for curriculum studies, as a new dialogue has been opened that considers possibilities of finding some semblance of canon or disciplinarity in the field. The search for canon or disciplinarity is less likely to yield a hard-and-fast verifiable outcome as much as an inconclusive discussion. But, as Plato reminds us, such a discussion is precisely the point because the knowing of canon is doing the knowing of canon. [source]


The Mercian Connection, Harold Godwineson's Ambitions, Diplomacy and Channel-crossing, 1056,1066

HISTORY, Issue 313 2009
AD F. J. VAN KEMPEN
It is supposed that the Vita Ędwardi contains some information about Harold's dealings with William of Normandy in 1064. This article links these covert references with William of Poitiers' statements about Harold's diplomatic activities in France. The combination turns out to be fruitful. Harold's Channel-crossing was meant as a tour of diplomacy to win support for his candidacy for the throne of the English. This statement has implications for the sequence of events. Harold's expedition was a mere continuation of his diplomacy in the Midlands earlier in 1064, when he concluded a cunning deal with the rulers of Mercia. Part of the secret arrangement was the acquisition of Northumbria, so far ruled by his self-willed brother Tostig. Harold's unintended landfall in Ponthieu and captivity in Normandy set many things in motion. His explaining-away of his presence on the continent and his fabrications about a state mission revived William's latent interest in the English succession. After his return to England, Harold's extenuation of his inglorious, illegitimate promises to William did raise suspicion about the true nature of his Channel-crossing. Eventually, the full facts of his Mercian connection were revealed, resulting in Queen Edith's and Tostig's desperate moves to prevent the take-over in Northumbria. [source]


Privileged position: preparing nurses to work in the community

NURSING INQUIRY, Issue 2 2001
Clare Carberry
Privileged position: preparing nurses to work in the community Nurses nurse, end of story, but is it? Is nursing any one thing? Nursing is many things and the positions that nurses occupy in any particular setting are multiple. In an educational project aimed at facilitating student learning, I set out to expose the multipositionality of community nursing and to acknowledge that discursive pressures shape and limit practice. A set of resources using story method was produced for use in educational settings. Story method was chosen as an emancipatory vehicle for learning. A worrisome question that arose from reflection on the project was that although the educational aim of the project was emancipatory, did the singularity of the professional voice offered through the stories sabotage that goal? [source]


The urethral Kock pouch: long-term functional and oncological results in men

BJU INTERNATIONAL, Issue 4 2003
A.A. Shaaban
The Department of Urology in Mansoura has a well-known experience in, among many things, urinary tract reconstruction in patients with bladder cancer. They review their results in 338 male patients who had a radical cystectomy and Kock pouch. They found good functional and oncological outcomes in properly selected patients. However, they also drew attention to several valve-related complications. OBJECTIVE To evaluate our experience with men who underwent radical cystectomy and urethral Kock pouch construction between January 1986 and January 1996. PATIENTS AND METHODS Complications were classified as early (within the first 3 months after surgery) or late. Continence was assessed by interviewing the patient; they were considered continent if they were completely dry with no need of protection by pads, condom catheter or medication. The patients were followed oncologically and Kaplan-Meier survival curves constructed. Urodynamic studies were used to define the possible causes of enuresis. RESULTS Three patients died after surgery from pulmonary embolism. There were 67 early complications in 63 patients. The mean (sd) follow-up was 87.8 (49.1) months. There were 111 treatment failures from cancer; of these, four men only had an isolated local recurrence in the urethra. Late complications included 72 pouch stones in 55 patients, and 36 deteriorated renal units caused by reflux (17), uretero-ileal stricture (11), nipple valve eversion (four) or stenosis (four). Interestingly, 65 renal units that were dilated before surgery improved significantly afterward. Ileo-urethral strictures occurred in seven men and anterior urethral strictures in six. Nine patients were totally incontinent and two had chronic urinary retention. Daytime continence was complete in 94% of men, with nocturnal enuresis in 55; the latter had significantly more residual urine, and a higher amplitude and duration of phasic contractions. CONCLUSIONS Orthotopic bladder substitution after cystectomy for cancer is feasible, with good functional and oncological outcomes in properly selected patients. Nevertheless, the use of a hemi-Kock pouch is associated with many valve-related complications. [source]