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1
Factors Predicting Identification of Giftedness Resulting from Universal Screening
In: Doctoral Dissertations and Projects (2022)
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2
A Note on Parameter Setting in Contact Situations
In: Languages; Volume 7; Issue 1; Pages: 34 (2022)
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3
Les Africains, sont-ils heureux? "Retour au rire" en temps de guerre, de famine et de misère
In: 20 (2022)
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4
Are Africans happy? 'Return to laughter' in times of war, famine and misery
In: 20 (2022)
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5
A Note on Parameter Setting in Contact Situations
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6
Demographic, socioeconomic, and sociocultural factors associated with any breastfeeding in homeless mothers
In: ISSN: 1740-8695 ; EISSN: 1740-8709 ; Maternal and Child Nutrition ; https://hal.sorbonne-universite.fr/hal-03185798 ; Maternal and Child Nutrition, Wiley, 2021, ⟨10.1111/mcn.13167⟩ (2021)
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7
Förderung ab Geburt mit dem Programm "PAT - Mit Eltern Lernen": Effekte im ersten Kindergartenjahr ; Early support with the program "PAT - Mit Eltern Lernen": effects in the first year of Kindergarten
In: Schweizerische Zeitschrift für Bildungswissenschaften 43 (2021) 2, S. 285-296 (2021)
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8
New AI lexicon : labour ; Why AI needs ethics from below
Posada, Julian. - 2021
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9
The organization of school physical education pedagogical work in a context of poverty ; A organização do trabalho pedagógico da educação física escolar em um contexto de pobreza
In: Educación Física y Ciencia; Vol. 23 No. 3 (2021); e186 ; Educación Física y Ciencia; Vol. 23 Núm. 3 (2021); e186 ; Educación Física y Ciencia; Vol. 23 N.º 3 (2021); e186 ; 2314-2561 ; 1514-0105 (2021)
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10
Nursing Students Are More Than Just “Broke College Kids”
In: Doctor of Nursing Practice Projects (2021)
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11
Producer’s culture and standards of living as causes for the growth of the innovative globalized economy ; Культура та якість життя виробника як чинники розвитку інноваційної глобалізації економіки
In: Ways to Improve Construction Efficiency; No. 46 (2020): Ways to Improve Construction Efficiency (Economics); 230-239 ; Шляхи підвищення ефективності будівництва в умовах формування ринкових відносин; № 46 (2020): Шляхи підвищення ефективності будівництва в умовах формування ринкових відносин (Економічний); 230-239 ; 2707-9376 ; 2707-501X ; 10.32347/2707-501x.2020.46 (2021)
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12
Inside Barefoot Economics
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13
Structure Here, Bias There: Hierarchical Generalization by Jointly Learning Syntactic Transformations
In: Proceedings of the Society for Computation in Linguistics (2021)
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14
Equitable Representation of Culturally Linguistically Economically Diverse Students in Intellectual Gifted Programs in School Divisions in the Commonwealth of Virginia
Wilkins-McCorey, Dornswalo Maria. - : Virginia Tech, 2021
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15
Humility in Hellenistic Poetry ; L'humilité dans la poésie hellénistique
Nardone, Claire-Emmanuelle. - : HAL CCSD, 2020
In: https://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-02613719 ; Linguistique. Université de Lyon; Università degli studi Roma Tre, 2020. Français. ⟨NNT : 2020LYSEN007⟩ (2020)
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16
Evaluation of poverty-stricken families in rural areas using a novel casebased reasoning method for probabilistic linguistic term sets
Li, Peng; Liu, Ju; Yang, Yingjie. - : Elsevier, 2020
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17
Education and language policy development as components of holistic ministry in multilingual contexts
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18
Language and Poverty: Linguistics Applied Beyond Bible Translation
Lewis, M. Paul. - 2020
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19
Do mobile phones help expand social capital? An empirical case study
In: Social Inclusion ; 8 ; 2 ; 168-179 ; Digital inclusion across the globe: what is being done to tackle digital inequities? (2020)
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20
THREE ESSAYS ON THE ECONOMICALLY DISADVANTAGED
In: Dissertations - ALL (2020)
Abstract: This dissertation examines disadvantaged students through a unique and novel lens and investigates the effects of Universal Free Meals (UFM) – a program available to schools with sizable economically disadvantaged populations – on student well-being and district financial feasibility. UFM provides free meals to all students, regardless of household income, in an attempt to increase participation in school meals and ensure all students have access to nutritious meals. The Hunger Free Kids act of 2010 expanded the availability of UFM via the Community Eligibility Provision (CEP). CEP allows schools, clusters of schools, or entire districts to adopt UFM if 40 percent or more of students are directly certified eligible for free lunch. The rapid expansion of UFM across the U.S. over the last decade has led to growing empirical evidence of UFM’s positive effect on student outcomes such as participation in school food, attendance, test scores, and disciplinary measures. This recent surge in research often characterizes a reduction in stigma as the mechanism through which UFM improves student outcomes. However, this characterization has yet to be empirically examined. As of 2019, a majority of eligible schools across the U.S. have adopted UFM via CEP. The widespread adoption of UFM causes policymakers to speculate if UFM has any unintended consequences, including deleterious effects on student health and district finances. The first essay in this dissertation sheds light on the impact of UFM on student perceptions of school climate by exploiting the staggered adoption of UFM in New York City middle and high schools. Findings reveal that UFM improves perceptions of bullying, fighting, and safety at school. Moreover, students who would have received free meals in the absence of UFM begin to participate post UFM exposure. This suggests that UFM influences participation and likely perceptions for reasons other than reductions in prices. Another essay examines CEP adoption in districts across New York State. These findings offer new insights into how districts pay for UFM via CEP while investigating the possible deleterious effects of UFM on student obesity. While the reimbursement structure of CEP is more generous in comparison to other UFM provisions, some fear that CEP exacerbates school food deficits and forces districts to foot the bill. Furthermore, UFM critics worry that students may double up on meals, thereby increasing total caloric intake and contributing to childhood obesity. However, results indicate that UFM improves obesity rates – particularly in older grades and that, on average, federal reimbursements cover increases in expenditures due to meal fee revenue losses and the additional food expenditures that follow an increase in participation. Economic disadvantage (ECD) is only one of many hurdles students encounter. The last essay in this dissertation descriptively illustrates student disadvantage by examining the prevalence and achievement gaps of the doubly disadvantaged – a group largely ignored in the education landscape. In addition to ECD, disadvantage in this context describes students with disabilities (SWD) and English language learners (ELL). Results indicate that a nontrivial share of students are doubly disadvantaged and that achievement gaps are largest among students that are both ECD and SWD. Furthermore, the essay discusses the implications of ignoring these students for district funding and federal accountability requirements. While two of the three essays evaluate the effects of providing free school meals on student well-being and district finances among largely ECD populations, the third essay emphasizes the importance of recognizing the complexities of student disadvantage. Together, these essays offer insights into the identification of disadvantaged students and the effects of policies meant to improve circumstances among disadvantaged populations. This dissertation fills gap in the literature by providing profound reflection on the populations these programs serve, as well as the financial feasibility and effects of such programs on student well-being.
Keyword: doubly disadvantaged; school finance; school food; Social and Behavioral Sciences; student poverty; universal free meals
URL: https://surface.syr.edu/etd/1216
https://surface.syr.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2217&context=etd
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