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A study of the effectiveness of the Oregon DUII (driving under influence of intoxicants) mandated educational program in changing knowledge and attitude concerning driving after drinkingConkey, Judith A. 26 April 1984 (has links)
The primary purpose of this study was to determine the
effectiveness of the Oregon Level I Diversion Program in changing
knowledge and attitude concerning driving after drinking.
A secondary purpose was to determine the effect of the eight
different class-time schedules used to teach the required 12-hour
curriculum on the clients' test scores. An additional purpose was to
determine if a significant correlation existed between gain in
knowledge scores and selected instructional variables.
The 61 Item Drinking and Driving Inventory was administered to
all 965 individuals in the sample. Pretest and posttest scores were
analyzed using a Paired T and Analysis of Covariance. Data from
questionnaires administered to teachers in the Oregon Diversion
Program were correlated with students' gains in knowledge scores.
The Pearson r and Spearman rho were used in the correlation analyses.
Results of the statistical analyses at the .05 level of
significance were:
1. There was a significant difference in pretest and posttest
scores for all four dependent variables (knowledge score, two
attitude scores and the behavioral intention score).
2. There was a significant difference in the adjusted means
among the eight time spans for three of the dependent
variables (knowledge score, one attitude score and the
behavioral intention score).
3. The instructional variable identified as Cultural Differences
on the questionnaire correlated significantly with students'
gains in knowledge scores.
An additional finding was gathered from the Oregon Department of
Motor Vehicles' statistics. There was a lower re-arrest rate for the
clients who completed the Level I Diversion Program than for the
persons who chose to be processed through the court system.
Selected recommendations included:
1. A long range study of recidivism to include correlation of
personal and demographic variables of clients should be conducted.
2. A demographic analysis of program instructors, including
their educational background correlated with
performance, should be undertaken. / Graduation date: 1984
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Population attributes and habitat selection of recolonizing mountain beaver (Aplodontia rufa)Hacker, Amy L. 12 August 1991 (has links)
I investigated the population attributes and habitat
selection of mountain beaver (Aplodontia rufa) recolonizing
clearcuts in the Coast Range mountains of Polk and Lincoln
counties, Oregon between June 1989 and August 1990. The
population characteristics of colonizing mountain beaver
were evaluated in 12 stands of 3 types: 1-year-old
clearcuts assumed to be inhabited entirely by immigrants,
4- to 5-year-old clearcuts inhabited by immigrants and
their descendants, and 40- to 60-year-old forest stands
assumed to support stable mountain beaver populations.
Mountain beaver rapidly recolonized vacant habitat created
by previous trapping efforts; after only 1 year, densities
in clearcuts were statistically indistinguishable from
forest sites (P = 0.7). Populations in 1-year-old
clearcuts had more juveniles (P = 0.03) and had a female
bias (P = 0.02) when compared with the predominantly adult
male populations in the other two stand types. Individuals
from clearcuts were heavier than those from forest sites (P
< 0.05). Approximately half of the juvenile females in
clearcuts reproduced; no juvenile females were found to be
reproductively active in forest stands. Among juvenile
females that conceived, those in 1-year-old clearcuts had
larger litter sizes than those in 4- to 5-year-old
clearcuts (P < 0.05).
The 8 clearcuts were used to identify habitat features
selected by recolonizing mountain beaver. Clearcuts were
colonized irrespective of distances < 400 m from edge (R² =
0.01). Six habitat variables were selected by stepwise
logistic regression model colonized versus non-colonized habitat.
Mountain beaver selected areas with high amounts
(<25-cm) and large (>25-cm) woody debris, forage
plants, and uprooted stumps; they were likely to colonize
areas that had highly penetrable (soft) soils and areas
near drainages. The logistic function that included these
6 variables had a correct classification rate of 85% based
on a jackknife procedure. Forest managers may find these
habitat features useful in predicting mountain beaver
recolonization and damage. / Graduation date: 1992
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A descriptive study of Oregon schools/school districts to investigate how they planned to implement Oregon Administrative Rule 581-22-413Denevan, James P. 12 July 1990 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to investigate how
schools/school districts plan to implement Oregon Administrative
Rule 581-22-413, specifically: (1) How schools plan to integrate
alcohol and drug abuse prevention into the Comprehensive Health
Program. (2) How schools plan for age appropriate annual
instruction at the senior high level. (3) How schools plan for
the alcohol and drug abuse prevention education of the district's
staff.
An examination of the related literature revealed concerns
about the proper type of planning schools/school districts would
need to do to effectively satisfy this OAR. The literature
further indicated School Health Programs were encouraged by the
experts in the field, but few schools had achieved the entire
concept. Staff education was an area that the literature
indicated needed greater definition and implementation.
A survey questionnaire was prepared with the help of a
Delphi group to investigate the concerns. The questionnaire was
sent to 180 randomly chosen administrators. The data were
collected and descriptive analyses were performed.
It was determined from this study that most of the Oregon
schools administrators are concerned about OAR 581-22-413 and are
attempting to meet these regulations. However, they are facing
time and financial constraints which make it difficult to fit the
new requirements into the curriculum. Staff in-service is
becoming a reality for administrators and certified staff but
other school personnel have been left out. There are indications
that alcohol and drug abuse prevention education is being
integrated into senior high school classes such as Science,
Social Studies and Physical Education, in addition to
comprehensive health courses. This approach can work providing
the teachers of those subjects are well prepared to teach alcohol
and drug prevention effectively. It was recommended that all
college graduates seeking a teaching certificate be required to
take a course in alcohol and drug abuse prevention in order to
qualify. / Graduation date: 1991
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Measurement of microbial biomass phosphorus in Oregon soilsClaycomb, Peter T. 21 April 1992 (has links)
Graduation date: 1992
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Cumulative effects of land use on salmon habitat in southwest Oregon coastal streamsFrissell, Christopher Andrew, 1960- 30 April 1992 (has links)
As part of a hierarchical approach to classifying watersheds and stream habitats
based on geomorphic and geologic criteria, we defined ten classes of fluvial and
lacustrine habitats at the scale of valley segments. Valley segments are landscape units
which encompass surface waters and the adjacent floodplains and hillslopes with which
they interact over time frames of thousands of years. They form a large-scale template
that constrains the character of aquatic habitat, controls the effects of disturbances in
riparian areas, and mediates responses of streams to upland and upstream events. The
regional distribution of valley segment types in southwest Oregon reflects bedrock
geology and tectonic history of the landscape. Fluvial segment types differ in stream adjacent
landforms, slope erosion processes, floodplain and valley morphology, channel
slope, riparian vegetation, streambank texture, gravel bar morphology, and pool-forming
features. Studies that do not carefully account for inherent differences between valley
segment types could fail to detect critical changes in stream habitat caused by human
disturbance. Alluvial valley and alluviated canyon segment types, which have extensive
floodplains, low channel slopes, abundant woody debris, and ample gravel beds, are of
greatest direct importance for salmon and other native fishes. Virtually all alluvial valleys
in the study area have been heavily disturbed by logging, agriculture, and residential
development. Alluviated canyon segments located in the few drainage basins where
human activity has been limited probably serve as habitat refugia for the last diverse
assemblages and productive populations of salmon in the region. Alluviated canyons in
extensively-fogged basins exhibit increased abundance of large woody debris, fewer
cross-channel debris jams, more extensive bank erosion, reduced pool area and
increased riffle area, shallower riffles, and increased surface concentration of fine
sediments in pools and other habitats, compared to similar segments in lesser-disturbed
basins. These changes in channel morphology and stability appear to be driven by
increased sediment load, caused by logging-related landslides and other erosion
sources. Field studies in Sixes River basin indicated that abundance and diversity of
salmonid fishes declines as maximum stream temperature increases. Changes in
summer distribution of juvenile chinook and coho salmon since 1970 are related to
changes In water temperature. Although some tributaries have cooled, a decline in
rearing distribution in mainstem areas could be caused by long-term loss of channel
complexity and associated coolwater refugia. Analysis of fish habitat structures
constructed by federal and state agencies indicated that failure rates are high. Recovery
of anadromous fish runs in southwest Oregon will require protection of remaining habitat
refugia and reduction of sediment yield from disturbed watersheds. / Graduation date: 1992
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Emergence and growth of nine accessions of diclofop-resistant Italian ryegrass (Lolium multiflorum L.) and multiple resistance to other herbicidesKunjo, Ebrima Madi 04 August 1992 (has links)
Graduation date: 1993
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The career of Joseph Lane, frontier politician ...Kelly, Margaret Jean, January 1942 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Catholic University of America, 1941. / Bibliography: p. 195-201.
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The career of Joseph Lane, frontier politician ...Kelly, Margaret Jean, January 1942 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Catholic University of America, 1941. / Bibliography: p. 195-201.
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Winning Oregon; a study of an expansionist movement,Jacobs, Melvin Clay, January 1938 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Columbia University, 1938. / Vita. Thesis note on verso of half-title. Published also without thesis note. Bibliography: p. [243]-254.
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The measurement of economic diversification with reference to regional unemploymentEl-Haimus, Adil H. 01 January 1982 (has links)
Over the past four years, considerable attention has been focused on the problems of high unemployment in the State of Oregon. The percentage of jobless continued to be higher than that of the nation. The depressed housing market, caused by high interest rates, coupled with an increase in the import of Canadian timber managed to reduce the demand for Oregon lumber and wood products drastically. This has resulted in an abnormally high unemployment rate in many of Oregon's counties which are dependent on the wood industry; for example, the 1980 jobless rate in Harney County reached a record high of 29 percent. On the other side of the spectrum, less dependent counties such as Gilliam and Morrow continued to grow during the same period, with unemployment rates of merely 4.9 and 5.8 percent respectively. These rates are approximately half the state average. Community leaders, including the Governor, seem convinced that the only solution is economic diversification. It is an argument that makes a great deal of sense at first glance. The notion here is that if you diversify you will become less vulnerable to outside forces and hence will have a more stable economy. But what is diversification? How can we tell that one region is more diversified than another? Furthermore, having a diversified economy, does this ensure a lower rate of unemployment? The thrust of this dissertation deals with providing answers to these questions. Three schools of thought--ogive-norm, portfolio variance and entropy--were examined in an effort to determine a more proper measure of economic diversification. Various statistical procedures of hypothesis testing were employed together with stepwise regression and analysis of variance. The research findings indicate that there is a definite relationship between economic diversification and regional unemployment. However, only 28 percent of the change in the rate of unemployment is explainable by changes in the levels of diversification. (The necessary data were provided by the State of Oregon - Employment Division).
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