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result(s) for
"Yoder, Karen K."
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A Curriculum Model for K–12 Writing Teacher Education
by
Sanders, Jennifer
,
Myers, Joy
,
Scales, Roya Q.
in
Curriculum Design
,
Curriculum development
,
Learning
2020
Writing pedagogy is too often missing from US K-12 teacher preparation programs, with one study finding that only one-fourth of programs surveyed had a writing methods course. In the study presented in this article, researchers developed a theoretical understanding of K-12 writing teacher education by examining the instructional models and practices of 15 exemplary teacher educators. Participants were diverse, US teacher educators in university-based teacher preparation programs, identified through purposive, snowball sampling and a screening survey. Data were drawn from semi-structured, individual and focus-group interviews, analyzed using constructivist grounded theory methods. Our findings include five thematic assertions, presented with descriptions of the related patterns of practice: Exemplary writing methods teacher educators design their curricula with experiential, constructivist, and critical approaches as the foundation of all learning engagements, and they implement a writing process approach with their teacher candidates. They teach writing as a tool of empowerment, convey complex conceptions of writing assessment that are grounded in analysis of student work, and are intentional and deliberate about building and maintaining connections to K-12 classrooms for themselves and their candidates. This study provides writing teacher educators with a data-driven model for developing a writing-intensive methods course curriculum.
Journal Article
Student Teachers’ Preparation in Literacy
by
Dobler, Elizabeth
,
Ganske, Kathy
,
Young, Janet R.
in
Beginning Teachers
,
Classroom communication
,
Classroom management
2017
According to research, candidates may abandon university learning during field experiences to satisfy mentor teachers, often adopting mentors' ways of teaching and focusing on classroom management over student learning (Clift & Brady, 2005). When considering mediated activity, we note that \"an inherent property of mediational means is that they are culturally, historically, and institutionally situated\" (Wertsch, 1993, p. 230). [...]in schools, mediating means may be instrumental (schedules, assessment tools, instructional materials), social (cultural practices, interactions with others, policies, procedures), or semiotic (language systems, mathematics; Moll, 2014). Enacting the International Reading Association's Standards for Reading Professionals As with signature aspects, we found that individual candidates evidenced substantial or moderate enactment of at least some of the standards. Because programs differed in centrality of each standard (Lenski et al., 2013), cross-case analysis focused on patterns in congruity between individual candidates' practices and the relative degree of emphasis placed on each standard in their preparation programs, as determined previously (Table 3). Because this standard focuses attention on employing \"a variety of assessment tools and practices to plan and evaluate effective reading and writing instruction\" (IRA, 2010, p. 39), perhaps enactment of candidates' formal knowledge related to Standard 3 was less visible during instruction and not explicitly revealed in interviews.
Journal Article
Adjustment of Older Persons in Nursing Homes
by
Jones, Shirley J
,
Yoder, Karen K
,
Simms, Lillian M
in
Adaptation, Psychological
,
Aged - psychology
,
Female
1982
Journal Article
Effects of acute alcohol exposure and chronic alcohol use on neurite orientation dispersion and density imaging (NODDI) parameters
by
Mustafi, Sourajit M.
,
Halcomb, Meredith E.
,
Wu, Yu-Chien
in
Alcohol Drinking
,
Alcohol use
,
Alcoholic beverages
2023
Rationale
Little is known about how acute and chronic alcohol exposure may alter the in vivo membrane properties of neurons.
Objectives
We employed neurite orientation dispersion and density imaging (NODDI) to examine acute and chronic effects of alcohol exposure on neurite density.
Methods
Twenty-one healthy social drinkers (CON) and thirteen nontreatment-seeking individuals with alcohol use disorder (AUD) underwent a baseline multi-shell diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (dMRI) scan. A subset (10 CON, 5 AUD) received dMRI during intravenous infusions of saline and alcohol during dMRI. NODDI parametric images included orientation dispersion (OD), isotropic volume fraction (ISOVF), and corrected intracellular volume fraction (cICVF). Diffusion tensor imaging metrics of fractional anisotropy and mean, axial, and radial diffusivity (FA, MD, AD, RD) were also computed. Average parameter values were extracted from white matter (WM) tracts defined by the Johns Hopkins University atlas.
Results
There were group differences in FA, RD, MD, OD, and cICVF, primarily in the corpus callosum. Both saline and alcohol had effects on AD and cICVF in WM tracts proximal to the striatum, cingulate, and thalamus. This is the first work to indicate that acute fluid infusions may alter WM properties, which are conventionally believed to be insensitive to acute pharmacological challenges. It also suggests that the NODDI approach may be sensitive to transient changes in WM. The next steps should include determining if the effect on neurite density differs with solute or osmolality, or both, and translational studies to assess how alcohol and osmolality affect the efficiency of neurotransmission.
Journal Article
Higher or Lower Hemoglobin Transfusion Thresholds for Preterm Infants
2020
In this open, randomized, multicenter trial involving extremely-low-birth-weight preterm infants, the use of a higher hemoglobin threshold for red-cell transfusion did not improve survival without neurodevelopmental impairment at 22 to 26 months of age, corrected for prematurity.
Journal Article
Greater ventral striatal functional connectivity in cigarette smokers relative to non-smokers across a spectrum of alcohol consumption
by
Hile, Karen L
,
Durazzo, Timothy C
,
Avena-Koenigsberger, Andrea
in
Alcohol use
,
Brain
,
Brain mapping
2024
Cigarette smoking is associated with elevated risk of disease and mortality and contributes to heavy healthcare-related economic burdens. The nucleus accumbens is implicated in numerous reward-related behaviors, including reinforcement learning and incentive salience. The established functional connectivity of the accumbens includes regions associated with motivation, valuation, and affective processing. Although the high comorbidity of cigarette smoking with drinking behaviors may collectively affect brain activity, there could be independent effects of smoking in alcohol use disorder that impact brain function and behavior. We hypothesized that smoking status, independent of alcohol use, would be associated with aberrations of nucleus accumbens functional connectivity to brain regions that facilitate reward processing, salience attribution, and inhibitory control. Resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging data from thirty-one nonsmokers and nineteen smoking individuals were analyzed using seed-based correlations of the bilateral accumbens with all other brain voxels. Statistical models accounted for drinks consumed per week. The smoking group demonstrated significantly higher functional connectivity between the left accumbens and the bilateral insula and anterior cingulate cortex, as well as hyperconnectivity between the right accumbens and the insula. Confirmatory analyses using the insula and cingulate clusters generated from the original analysis as seed regions reproduced the hyperconnectivity in smokers between the bilateral insular regions and the accumbens. In conclusion, smoking status had distinct effects on neural activity; hyperconnectivity between the accumbens and insula in smokers may reflect enhanced encoding of the reinforcing effects of smoking and greater orientation toward smoking-associated stimuli.
Journal Article
Reactogenicity and immunogenicity of tetanus toxoid, reduced diphtheria toxoid, and acellular pertussis vaccine (Tdap) in pregnant and nonpregnant women
2018
Tetanus toxoid, reduced diphtheria toxoid, and acellular pertusiss (Tdap) vaccine is recommended during each pregnancy, regardless of prior receipt. Data on reactogenicity and immunogenicity, particularly after repeated Tdap, are limited. We compared local injection-site and systemic reactions and serologic response following Tdap in (1) pregnant and nonpregnant women and (2) pregnant women by self-reported prior Tdap receipt.
Pregnant women (gestational age 20–34 weeks) and nonpregnant women receiving Tdap were enrolled in this observational study. Injection-site and systemic reactions were assessed for one week post-vaccination. Pertussis toxin, filamentous hemagglutinin, pertactin, fimbriae, tetanus and diphtheria specific IgG antibody titers were determined by standardized enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay at baseline and 28 days post-vaccination. Reactogenicity and serologic responses were compared by pregnancy status, and within pregnant women by self-reported prior Tdap receipt.
374 pregnant and 225 nonpregnant women were vaccinated. Severe local or systemic reactions or “any” fever were uncommon (≤3% for both groups). Moderate/severe injection-site pain was significantly higher in pregnant (17.9%) versus nonpregnant (11.1%) women, but did not prompt a healthcare visit. Proportions of other moderate/severe or any severe reactions were not significantly higher in pregnant compared to nonpregnant women. Moderate/severe (including pain) and severe reactions were not significantly higher in pregnant women receiving repeat versus first-time Tdap. Antibody titers increased from baseline to post-vaccination for all vaccine antigens in pregnant and nonpregnant women; post-vaccination titers against pertussis toxin and filamentous hemagglutinin were significantly higher in nonpregnant versus pregnant women (p < 0.01).
Tdap was well-tolerated in pregnant and nonpregnant women. Pregnant women were more likely to report moderate/severe pain at the Tdap injection-site compared with nonpregnant women, but did not necessitate medical visits. Prior Tdap receipt did not increase occurrence of moderate/severe local or systemic reactions in pregnant women. Serologic responses to all vaccine antigens were robust.
Clinical Trial Registration@ClinicalTrials.gov. NCT02209623.
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02209623.
Journal Article
Effects of acute alcohol exposure and chronic alcohol use on neurite orientation dispersion and density imaging
by
Mustafi, Sourajit M.
,
Halcomb, Meredith E.
,
Yoder, Karmen K.
in
Alcoholic beverages
,
Analysis
,
Evaluation
2023
Little is known about how acute and chronic alcohol exposure may alter the in vivo membrane properties of neurons. We employed neurite orientation dispersion and density imaging (NODDI) to examine acute and chronic effects of alcohol exposure on neurite density. Twenty-one healthy social drinkers (CON) and thirteen nontreatment-seeking individuals with alcohol use disorder (AUD) underwent a baseline multi-shell diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (dMRI) scan. A subset (10 CON, 5 AUD) received dMRI during intravenous infusions of saline and alcohol during dMRI. NODDI parametric images included orientation dispersion (OD), isotropic volume fraction (ISOVF), and corrected intracellular volume fraction (cICVF). Diffusion tensor imaging metrics of fractional anisotropy and mean, axial, and radial diffusivity (FA, MD, AD, RD) were also computed. Average parameter values were extracted from white matter (WM) tracts defined by the Johns Hopkins University atlas. There were group differences in FA, RD, MD, OD, and cICVF, primarily in the corpus callosum. Both saline and alcohol had effects on AD and cICVF in WM tracts proximal to the striatum, cingulate, and thalamus. This is the first work to indicate that acute fluid infusions may alter WM properties, which are conventionally believed to be insensitive to acute pharmacological challenges. It also suggests that the NODDI approach may be sensitive to transient changes in WM. The next steps should include determining if the effect on neurite density differs with solute or osmolality, or both, and translational studies to assess how alcohol and osmolality affect the efficiency of neurotransmission.
Journal Article