scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Institution

University of North Carolina at Wilmington

EducationWilmington, North Carolina, United States
About: University of North Carolina at Wilmington is a education organization based out in Wilmington, North Carolina, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 3329 authors who have published 6797 publications receiving 186308 citations.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article explored the effects of peer coaching on the classroom practices of pre-service teachers and found that peer coaching altered current teaching practices, but a trend of making suggestions for improvement without affirming strengths was also evident.

91 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a qualitative interview with patients prematurely discharged from six methadone treatment programs in Baltimore highlighted factors patients describe as contributing to their reasons for being discharged within the first 12 months of the treatment.
Abstract: Longer retention in drug abuse treatment is associated with better patient outcomes, and research indicates the first 12 months of methadone treatment are critical to patient success. Nevertheless, large-scale multisite longitudinal studies over the past three decades indicate that the majority of patients drop out during the first year of methadone treatment. Through an examination of 42 qualitative interviews with patients prematurely discharged from six methadone treatment programs in Baltimore, this study highlights factors patients describe as contributing to their reasons for being discharged within the first 12 months of the treatment. The two most consistent themes are program-related factors and incarceration. The former factors are richly described through patients' words and underscore the ways in which patients' perceptions of control exerted by the program and by the medication and misunderstandings of program structure can lead to premature discharge. Patients' reasons for discharge were compared to counselors' reasons as indicated in discharge summary forms. An analysis of the patterns of agreement and disagreement are presented. Patient-centered program and policy implications are discussed.

90 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the abundances of the xanthid crabs Panopeus herbstii and Eurypanopeus depressus were examined relative to surface shell cover, surface oyster cluster volume, subsurface shell content, substrate sand and silt composition, and oyster reef elevation.
Abstract: The abundances of the xanthid crabsPanopeus herbstii andEurypanopeus depressus were examined relative to surface oyster shell cover, surface oyster cluster volume, subsurface shell content, substrate sand and silt composition, and oyster reef elevation. During August 1986 through July 1987, xanthid crabs were collected monthly from twelve 0.25 m2×15 cm deep quadrats, during low tide, from intertidal oyster reefs in Mill Creek, Pender County, North Carolina, USA, with respective quadrat details recorded. The abundance ofP. herbstii, and to a lesser degreeE. depressus, was positively correlated with surface shell cover. The abundance ofE. depressus, and to a lesser degreeP. herbstii, was positively correlated with surface cluster volume. The majority ofP. herbstii inhabited the subsurface stratum of the oyster reef, whereas the majority ofE. depressus inhabited the cluster stratum. Seasonality (i.e., temperature) appeared to influence the strata habitation of both species, with a higher incidence of cluster habitation during warmer months and a lower incidence during colder months. Crab abundance was not related to other factors examined, such as subsurface shell, substrate sand and silt composition, or elevation within the oyster reef. The analyses show thatP. herbstii andE. depressus have partitioned the intertidal oyster reef habitat, withE. depressus exploiting surface shell clusters andP. herbstii the subsurface stratum.

90 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study demonstrates the utility of logic modeling for environmental planning and management, and suggests that the process of setting specific pollutant reduction goals is a useful proxy measure for reporting progress towards improvements in environmental outcomes when long-term environmental data are not available.

90 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that the market is only weakly integrated, that this degree of integration is time varying and that it differs as between returns and volatility, and that each metal is a substitute for the other.
Abstract: Much academic and investor analysis and commentary see the four main precious metals as a single market, integrated and to some degree with each metal a substitute for the other. This proposition, which can be explicit or implicit, can be challenged on economic and statistical grounds. Using the Diebold and Yilmaz (2009) methodology, we show that the market is only weakly integrated, that this degree of integration is time varying and that it differs as between returns and volatility.

90 citations


Authors

Showing all 3396 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Henry F. Schaefer111161168695
David P. White9936344403
Christopher J. Cramer9356550075
Robin D. Rogers9043243314
Xuemei Chen7628124252
Thomas C. Baker6733617050
Yang Song6664621184
Kevin E. O'Grady6431613770
Gary L. Miller6330613010
Randall S. Wells6224212142
Frank C. Schroeder582499821
C. Nathan DeWall5717716492
Kevin E. O'Shea5614210881
Joseph R. Pawlik551559290
Jerrold Meinwald5541111344
Network Information
Related Institutions (5)
University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee
28K papers, 936.4K citations

89% related

Florida International University
31.1K papers, 934.2K citations

89% related

University of New Hampshire
24K papers, 1M citations

89% related

Florida State University
65.3K papers, 2.5M citations

89% related

University at Albany, SUNY
21.3K papers, 886K citations

88% related

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202328
2022102
2021464
2020452
2019372
2018332