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A Study of Teacher Turnover in the Hancock County Schools of OhioGroth, Charley E. January 1948 (has links)
No description available.
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Interaction of Loading and Feeding on Skeletal Muscle Anabolic Signaling and Protein Turnover in HumansGlover, Elisa I. January 2009 (has links)
<p> Resistance exercise and amino acids independently and synergistically stimulate muscle protein synthesis. Unloading of skeletal muscle depresses fasted state muscle protein synthesis, but the effect on the fed state response is unknown. Elucidation of the signaling pathways underlying the regulation of these processes in humans is in its infancy. Therefore, the purpose of this thesis was to determine how resistance exercise, feeding, and unloading interact to affect muscle protein turnover and its markers. In study 1 young men (N=9) underwent an acute bout of unilateral leg resistance exercise with or without feeding, with biopsies 6 h post exercise. Exercise dephosphorylated eiF2Bε and together with feeding potentiated the increase in phosphorylation of p70s6k and rps6. In study 2, 12 young people received primed constant infusions of 13C6-Phe in the fasted state and at one of two i.v. AA infusion rates (low, 42.5 mg/kg/h AA; high: 261 mg/kg/h AA) after 14 d of knee-brace mediated immobilization. Immobilization decreased fasted and fed state myofibrillar protein synthesis at both doses without obviously affecting translational signaling proteins. In study 3, two markers of muscle protein breakdown and oxidative damage were measured in 21 subjects (men, N=13, women, N=8) after 2 d and 14 d of knee-brace mediated immobilization. Protein ubiquitination was elevated after 2 d of immobilization but there was no sustained elevation in ubiquination at 14 d or increases in the 14kDa actin fragment or protein carbonyls and 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal. These studies support the concept that the responses of human muscle to changes in loading are primarily at the level of protein synthesis, and the p70 pathway appears to play a role in mediating the hypertrophic response. The currently known static markers of translational signaling and protein breakdown, however, are not very informative when attempting to account for an underlying molecular mechanism for disuse atrophy. </p> / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
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A Study of Teacher Turnover in the Hancock County Schools of OhioGroth, Charley E. January 1948 (has links)
No description available.
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A Social Network Approach to Nonfamily Employee Identification and Turnover Intentions in Family FirmsRogers, Bryan Lee 11 August 2017 (has links)
Nonfamily employees make up a substantial portion of family firm personnel and are crucial to success for these firms. Retaining these employees is complicated by the presence of family members and family-centric goals, which often results in the bifurcated treatment of nonfamily employees. However, the relationships between family and nonfamily employees could have implications for how nonfamily employees perceive the firm. This study examines how nonfamily employees’ turnover intentions are influenced by their embeddedness in family member friendship networks, family firm identification, and perceptions of organizational support. Drawing on a sample of 103 nonfamily employees working in a family firm, my analysis shows that identification fully mediates the effects of nonfamily employee degree centrality in family friendship networks and turnover intentions. Drawing on social identification theory, degree centrality in family friendship networks is theorized to influence perceptions of belongingness in the family firm, which negatively impact turnover intentions. Implications for understanding how nonfamily employees and employee retention may be influence by social networks are also discussed.
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Variables associated with burnout and turnover intentions among case managers in community mental healthEpstein, Barbara Katz January 1992 (has links)
No description available.
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Understanding the Intention to Leave the Job among U. S. Home Health AidesBhatta, Sabitri January 2014 (has links)
No description available.
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Shocks and Satisfaction Predicting Turnover in a Laboratory SettingTenbrink, Allison N. 25 August 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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GENDER DIFFERENCES IN INTENTIONS TO LEAVE ACADEMIA: SOCIAL CONTROL, WORK AND FAMILY EXPLANATIONSDRYFHOUT-FERGUSON, VICKI LYNN January 2003 (has links)
No description available.
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Intrinsic and Extrinsic Factors Affecting Job Satisfaction of Nursing Assistants in Two Long-Term Care FacilitiesSlay, Thomas A. January 2004 (has links)
No description available.
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Turnover Reasons and Employee Attitudes: Examining Linkages within the Framework of Behavioral Reasoning TheoryHammond, Gregory D. 23 September 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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