PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Flexible classroom design saves money, improves flexibility, accessibility of instruction

2013-02-05
(Press-News.org) Researchers at North Carolina State University have developed a classroom design that gives instructors increased flexibility in how to teach their courses and improves accessibility for students, while slashing administrative costs.

Specifically, the new classrooms take advantage of the fact that students are bringing their own technology – such as laptops – to class. The classrooms also include mobile infrastructure, where whiteboards, desks and tables can be reconfigured according to the needs of students and instructors.

"These classrooms work really well in terms of engaging students, particularly in regard to helping students bridge the gap between in-class instruction and out-of-classroom assignments," says Dr. Susan Miller-Cochran, an associate professor of English and director of the First-Year Writing Program at NC State and lead author of a paper on the flexible classroom design. "It was also important to us administratively because it lowered the costs for our department."

The cost of equipping a traditional computer classroom, including laptop computers, is approximately $34,700, whereas the cost of equipping the flexible classrooms using students' technology is approximately $14,500. Students who don't have their own laptops are able to sign out laptops from a central repository near the classrooms.

In addition to lowering costs and giving instructors more options for how to conduct their classes, the flexible design significantly improves access for students with special needs.

"You can adjust the classroom layout to serve the needs of students with physical disabilities, students on the autism spectrum and students who use technology to address visual or other challenges," Miller-Cochran says.

Since launching the flexible classroom program in 2011, Miller-Cochran has helped other universities in North Carolina, Virginia and South Carolina pursue similar concepts in their classrooms. "Our next steps include developing guidance materials on how to incorporate this concept into classrooms for students in a variety of settings," Miller-Cochran says.

### The paper, "Making peace with the rising costs of writing technologies: Flexible classroom design as a sustainable solution," is published online in Computers and Composition. The paper was co-authored by Dana Gierdowski, a Ph.D. student at NC State. END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Chest pain prior to a heart attack can protect the heart

2013-02-05
MINNEAPOLIS, MN – Feb. 5, 2013 – Patients who experience chest pain in the 24 hours preceding a heart attack, also called preinfarction angina, have smaller heart attacks and improved cardiac function in the contemporary cardiac stenting era, researchers found in a study published Jan. 22 in Circulation: Cardiovascular Interventions. "Even before we began treating heart attack patients with angioplasty and stenting, physicians recognized that patients with chest pain prior to their heart attack seem to have better outcomes," says the study's senior author, Jay H. Traverse, ...

Precise Point Positioning and real-time positioning accuracy for COMPASS satellite navigation

Precise Point Positioning and real-time positioning accuracy for COMPASS satellite navigation
2013-02-05
COMPASS uses the Geostationary Earth Orbit (GEO) and Inclined Geosynchronous Satellite Orbit (IGSO) satellites, which are more suitable for regional services. Its constellation is composed of 14 satellites, including 5 GEO, 5 IGSO satellites and 4 Medium Earth Orbit (MEO) satellites. As of 2012, 13 satellites have been launched. Except for G2 (unusable) and M1 (testing only), the remaining 11 satellites, including 4GEO+5IGSO+2MEO, have successfully transmitted signals and broadcasted navigational messages, to prepare for full operation starting in 2013. Positioning accuracy ...

The zebrafish revealed a central regulator for the development of the brain histamine system

2013-02-05
Research has shown that mutations in the psen1 gene are common in the familial forms of Alzheimer's disease, and the Presenilin-1 protein that the gene encodes is known to be involved in the cleavage of the amyloid precursor protein. In Alzheimer's disease the amyloid precursor protein is not cleaved the normal way, and the protein accumulates in the brain damaging neuronal tracts and neurons. It is still unknown if the psen1 gene is involved in the etiology of Alzheimer's disease via another mechanism. Professor Pertti Panula's research team at the University of Helsinki ...

Growth arrest in prostate cancer

2013-02-05
A previously poorly investigated signalling pathway is crucial for the growth and proliferation of prostate cancer cells. An international research team discovered this when studying the enzyme "soluble adenylyl cyclase" that produces the second messenger molecule cAMP. When the scientists inhibited the enzyme, the cancer cell proliferation was suppressed. The team led by Dr. Yury Ladilov from the Department of Clinical Pharmacology at the Ruhr-Universität Bochum reported together with colleagues from the Department of Urology at the RUB and the Cornell University in New ...

A review of the rapidly evolving field of topological insulator hybrid structures

2013-02-05
Topological insulators are novel materials that are insulating in the bulk but have surface states that are conducting. These surface states are topologically protected and possess several intriguing properties with the promise of potential applications. As a result, topological insulators have attracted many theoretical and experimental studies in the last few years. More recently, the potential of interfacing topological insulators with other materials with quantum states to make hybrid structures has been recognized and a slew of new studies are underway. Professor Jian ...

1 out of 4 lung cancer patients in Andalusia does not receive the radiotherapy they need

2013-02-05
A study conducted by University of Granada and Virgen de las Nieves U.H. researchers has revealed that in Andalusian public hospitals radiotherapy is provided to lung cancer patients with a frequency 25 % below that established by clinical protocols. Failure to provide such treatment results in a total of 3,000 survival-day loss for all lung cancer patients. To carry out this study –recently published in the Journal of Thoracic Oncology–, the researchers reviewed the medical records and radiotherapy provided to all lung cancer patients in 2007 in the 12 Andalusian public ...

Seeing the software world from a dependency perspective

2013-02-05
Software development is a complex and difficult task. Software developers and researchers try to deal with software development in a simple way from multiple perspectives. This leads to the use of various kinds of models, including informal, semi-formal, and formal models, and all kinds of development methods, including informal and formal methods. In fact, every software development method contains multiple models from different perspectives. In contrast to an informal method, a formal method is considered to be a set of tools and notations (with formal semantics) used ...

Researchers use new molecular inhibitors to successfully hit difficult cancer target

2013-02-05
CINCINNATI – Early laboratory tests are the first to successfully use an experimental molecular therapy to block a hard-to-target part of a protein complex linked to several types of invasive cancer. Scientists report online Feb. 4 in PNAS Early Edition the rational design of a small-molecule inhibitor they call Y16. In laboratory tests, the inhibitor helped stop the spread of cultured human breast cancer cells, especially when it was used with another compound known as Rhosin/G04. The study was conducted by researchers in the Cancer and Blood Diseases Institute at ...

Exposure to pesticides in food, air and water increases risk of type 2 diabetes

2013-02-05
A study conducted at the University of Granada has revealed that there is a direct relationship between exposure to pesticides (Persistent Organic Pollutants, CPOs) in food, air and water and prevalence of type 2 diabetes in adults, regardless of age, gender and body mass index. These substances tend to concentrate in body fat, and they might be one of the reasons why obese people are more likely to develop diabetes, since the more fat the higher the COP concentrations in the body. In a paper recently published in the journal Environmental Research, researchers demonstrate ...

RNA promotes metastasis in lung cancer

2013-02-05
The vast majority – approximately 80 percent – of our DNA does not code for proteins, yet it gets transcribed into RNA. These RNA molecules are called non-coding and fulfill multiple tasks in the cell. Alongside a well-studied group of small RNAs, there is also a class of so-called long non-coding RNAs consisting of more than 200 nucleotides. Long non-coding RNAs regulate cellular processes such as cell cycle, growth and cell death. Therefore, it came as no surprise that many of these controlling molecules are linked to the progression of cancer. An example is the non-coding ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

500-year-old Transylvanian diaries show how the Little Ice Age completely changed life and death in the region

Overcoming nicotine withdrawal: Clues found in neural mechanisms of the brain

Survey: Women prefer female doctors, but finding one for heart health can be difficult

Leaf color mysteries unveiled: the role of BoYgl-2 in cabbage

NUS Medicine study: Inability of cells to recycle fats can spell disease

D2-GCN: a graph convolutional network with dynamic disentanglement for node classification

Female hoverflies beat males on long-distance migrations

Study finds consumer openness to smoke-impacted wines, offering new market opportunities

Why we need to expand the search for climate-friendly microalgae

Fewer forest fires burn in North America today than in the past—and that's a bad thing

Older people in England are happier now than before the COVID pandemic, new national study suggests

Texas A&M chemist wins NSF CAREER Award

Micro-nano plastics make other pollutants more dangerous to plants and intestinal cells

Study of female genital tract reveals key findings

Pitt Engineering Professor Fang Peng elected to National Academy of Engineering

Short-course radiation therapy effective for endometrial cancer patients

Breast cancer treatment advances with light-activated ‘smart bomb’

JSCAI article at THT 2025 sets the standard for training pathways in interventional heart failure

Engineering biological reaction crucibles to rapidly produce proteins

Minecraft: a gamechanger for children’s learning

Presidential awards spotlight naval research excellence

SETI Institute names first Frank Drake Postdoctoral Fellow

From photons to protons: Argonne team makes breakthrough in high-energy particle detection

Cancer’s ripple effect may promote blood clot formation in the lungs

New UVA clinical trial explores AI-powered insulin delivery for better diabetes care

New technology could quash QR code phishing attacks

Study reveals direct gut-brain communication via vagus nerve

MSU expert: Using light to hear biology 

“I can’t hear you, I’m too stressed”: Repeated stress in mice reduces sound perception

Chronic stress affects how brain processes sound in mice

[Press-News.org] Flexible classroom design saves money, improves flexibility, accessibility of instruction