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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
31

THE INCLUSION EXPERIENCE OF STUDENTS WITH MODERATE AND SEVERE DISABILITIES IN GENERAL EDUCATION CLASSROOMS

Kovacs, Denise 25 October 2006 (has links)
No description available.
32

Lunch and Learn - Intercultural Communication for Deaf, Deafblind and Hard of Hearing

Horvath, Stephanie 01 January 2023 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
33

Sarcoplasmic body myopathy /

Hedberg, Birgitta. January 2005 (has links)
Licentiatavhandling (sammanfattning) Stockholm : Karolinska institutet, 2005. / Härtill 2 uppsatser.
34

Assessment of the extent to which policies and strategies are designed to promote financial inclusion in Malawi

Mpata, Hope Patience January 2020 (has links)
Financial exclusion remains a challenge in Malawi despite government efforts to increase financial inclusion through the development of policies and the implementation of financial inclusion strategies. Limited information exists on the contribution of these policies and strategies to the promotion financial inclusion. The overall purpose of this study was to determine the extent to which policies and strategies in Malawi promote financial inclusion. The specific objectives of the study were to identify the relevant policies and strategies, determine their objectives, design, strengths and weaknesses, and their contribution to promoting financial inclusion. The study used the Global Microscope 2019 tool on enabling environments for financial inclusion to assess the following policies and strategies: the microfinance policy, the National Strategy for Financial Inclusion – NSFI I (2010-2015), the National Strategy for Financial Inclusion – NSFI II (2016-2020), the National Agriculture Policy – NAP (2016), the National Agriculture Investment Plan – NAIP (2018-2023), the Malawi Growth and Development Strategy – MGDS III (2017-2022), and the National Multi-sector Nutritional Policy (2018-2022). Further, various conceptual frameworks were reviewed, which led to the development of a conceptual framework on the contribution of policies and strategies to financial inclusion. It was determined that the extent to which policies and strategies promote financial inclusion in Malawi varies from high to low. The study concluded that policies and strategies that promote financial inclusion had action plans that focused closely on infrastructure development and government coordination and support. Policies and strategies that lacked stability and integrity in implementation, including those that failed to define financial inclusion clearly and describe the target groups, did not promote financial inclusion. The study recommended that financial inclusion should be mainstreamed in other development policies and strategies to ensure holistic support to the same cause. Key Words: Financial Inclusion, National Financial Inclusion Strategy, policies and strategies, Malawi. / Dissertation (MAgric (Rural Development))--University of Pretoria, 2020. / Mastercard Foundation Scholarship Programme / Agricultural Economics, Extension and Rural Development / MAgric (Rural Development) / Unrestricted
35

Struvite Recovery From Source-Separated Urine Utilizing Fluidized Bed Technology

Gagnon, Alexandria Augusta 06 September 2016 (has links)
Source-separating urine for nutrient recovery may provide multiple benefits with regards to wastewater management, water conservation, and an impending phosphorus fertilizer shortage. Municipal wastewater systems are designed to treat the combination of urine, feces and graywater produced in household applications. Urine accounts for 1% of wastewater by volume, but provides 70-90% of nitrogen, 35-70% of phosphorus and 50% of the contaminants of emerging concern entering municipal wastewater treatment (Larsen and Gujer 1996). Research has shown managing source-separated urine for nutrient recovery is a more cost effective and less treatment intensive method than using traditional systems found in municipal wastewater plants. Phosphorus fertilizer shortages are projected as current sources diminish and become increasingly difficult to extract and refine. Phosphorus based-fertilizer recovery, in the form of 99.9% pure struvite (MgNH4PO4•6H2O), has been demonstrated successfully in full-scale sidestream treatment using dewatering liquor from anaerobically digested solids (centrate) processed through upflow fluidized bed reactor technologies (Britton et al. 2005). Prior research determined the influence of pH, magnesium to phosphorus (Mg:P) molar ratio, and age of urine on purity, pharmaceutical content and pathogen inclusion in struvite precipitated from source-separated urine. This is the first known example of an attempt to produce a commercially viable struvite product from source-separated urine in a fluidized bed reactor of a design that has been used successfully for struvite recovery in conventional wastewater applications. In order to assess the feasibility of nutrient recovery of phosphorus-based fertilizer recovery from source-separated urine, the first office-based urine separation and collection building was implemented in the U.S. Urine was collected, in a 400 gallon capacity underground sealed manhole, from HRSD's Main office building beginning in March 2015 from 5 men's waterless urinals and one women's separating toilet. Urine was collected from the manhole on a monthly basis in 275 and 330 gallon plastic totes stored at the HRSD Nansemond WWTP in Suffolk, VA. Collected urine was allowed to age while in storage to encourage the precipitation of excess multivalent cations that may interfere with struvite precipitation and inactivation of pathogens that may be present. An upflow fluidized bed reactor (UFBR) was used to recover struvite as a slow-release phosphorus based fertilizer (prill), the reactor was loaned to HRSD by the University of British Columbia. A magnesium solution was injected at the bottom of the reactor to facilitate precipitation along with the recycle urine stream and feed urine as shown. Prill production design for the reactor was 0.5 kilograms per day, but while using centrate to determine best operations practices, under loading the reactor to 0.25 kilograms per day maximized struvite recovery while minimizing particulate phosphorus loss. Urine was fed into the reactor for struvite removal based on phosphorus loading with recovery determined through removal of orthophosphate and harvesting of the struvite product. Consistency, size and quality of product including compactness, crystal structure, purity and presence of pharmaceuticals and pathogens were assessed. The UFBR was run for 50 days total; 10 days for a short term run to compare to operation of the reactor under the same conditions with centrate from anaerobically digested solids as a feed source, 30 days to assess consistency of operations over long term with respect to struvite recovery, and a 10 day test with urine spiked with pharmaceuticals and bacteriophage to evaluate inclusion of trace organics and viruses in recovered struvite. In total 2,040 gallons of urine were fed to the reactor targeting 12.45 kilograms of struvite recovery, a mass of 7.54 kilograms of prills were harvested from the reactor with 1.90 kilograms of phosphorus lost as particulate struvite (representing an recovery efficiency of 60.5%). Overall reactor operation using urine as a feed solution behaved similar to centrate, with slightly less removal of phosphorus. Urine-derived prills were lower in quality due to the lack of compact density seen in struvite recovered during full scale operation but had a visible orthombic pattern seen in precipitated struvite. Pharmaceuticals that were present in urine feed solution were found in struvite but at less than 1% of the feed mass. Some of this inclusion may have occurred due to porous characteristics of the small-scale UFBR recovered struvite rather than through actual inclusion in the mineral crystal itself. Spiking of caffeine and ibuprofen to high concentrations in the urine yielded no statistical difference from the non-spiked tote. Urine was non-detect for bacteriophage pathogen indicators leading to the assumption that no pathogens were present in urine-derived struvite. Spiking the urine with double-stranded DNA (T3) and single-stranded RNA (MS2) bacteriophage capable of infecting bacterial cells such as Escherichia coli yielded 10^6 plaque forming units per milliliter in source separated urine. Creating urine-derived struvite prills with minimal inclusion of pharmaceuticals using upflow fluidized bed technology is feasible on a small scale. Large-scale application, recovering 500 kilograms per day of struvite or more, will most likely create a higher quality prill with regards to compactness and diminished presence of pharmaceuticals and virus inclusion. Pretreatment of urine and post-treatment of prills with heat will aid in inactivation of virus that may be present. ' / Master of Science
36

Community Voices Magazine - Volume 1, Issue 1

East Tennessee State University, Office of Equity and Inclusion 29 April 2022 (has links) (PDF)
Take an informative walk through the history of race in the United States that ends with a ray of hope. Find out what Equity and Inclusion really mean at ETSU in a conversation with Doctors Johnson and Cooper. Dive in to our cover story. Listen to a beautiful tale of trans life, lyrics, and love from an ETSU Old Time Country Music Program graduate. / https://dc.etsu.edu/community-voices/1000/thumbnail.jpg
37

Community Voices Magazine - Pushing Back Against Hate

East Tennessee State University, Office of Equity and Inclusion 01 July 2022 (has links) (PDF)
Talk a walk through hatred in the United States with a historian who still hopes for positive change. Next, dig deeply into Feminism from the Point of View of an Africana Womanist who tells us all how to be a better ally. / https://dc.etsu.edu/community-voices/1001/thumbnail.jpg
38

Community Voices Magazine - Celebrating and Remembering Our Way Toward Change

East Tennessee State University, Office of Equity and Inclusion 01 November 2022 (has links) (PDF)
Walk back in time with Title IX and its pioneering days at ETSU, and then take a look at women in sports here today. Learn the complete story of Thanksgiving Day; Take a walk through history with a member of the Eastern Band of the Cherokee Indians to be a better ally. / https://dc.etsu.edu/community-voices/1002/thumbnail.jpg
39

Community Voice Magazine - Putting Pressure on Wounds; How to Help and Restore Hope in Turbulent Times

East Tennessee State University, Office of Equity and Inclusion 01 April 2023 (has links) (PDF)
MMIWG...Step up and correct this long term epidemic-protect indigenous women and girls! This Means War...read about our local LGBTQ+ neighbors who are staring down the barrels of erasure and genocide. Control is the Goal...Learn about the troubling and racialized history of the police in the United States. / https://dc.etsu.edu/community-voices/1003/thumbnail.jpg
40

Community Voices Magazine - Begin by Believing!

East Tennessee State University, Office of Equity and Inclusion 01 July 2023 (has links) (PDF)
Walk through what freedom means with a local political historian. Learn how to respectfully attend a Powwow this summer or fall. Look at locals working tireless to end gender based violence. / https://dc.etsu.edu/community-voices/1004/thumbnail.jpg

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