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Qatar Foundation Annual Research Forum Volume 2010 Issue 1
- Conference date: 12-13 Dec 2010
- Location: Qatar National Convention Center (QNCC), Doha, Qatar
- Volume number: 2010
- Published: 13 December 2010
1 - 20 of 166 results
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Cost analysis of road accidents in the State of Qatar
Authors: Khalifa Al Khalifa and Hamouda Abdel MagidAbstractRoad accidents generally receive less public attention than other types of transport-related accidents. This could be due to the importance placed on road safety by a country or society. In some societies, road accidents are accepted as fate. These societies fail to understand that road accidents are preventable and result in significant losses of resources. One way of bringing the importance of road safety to the attention of governments and societies is to show the real cost of accidents.
There are two main uses for estimate of crash costs in developing countries. First, an estimate of total annual costs of traffic crashes can be used for resource allocation at a national level to ensure road safety is given due recognition. Second, estimates of unit crash costs by injury severity can be used to ensure that best use is made of any investment, through economic appraisal. In evaluating the safety measures through cost benefit analysis, policy makers require a reliable monetary estimate of the benefits of reduced occurrences of crashes. The study reported in this paper is, to the authors’ knowledge, the first ever attempt to estimate the socio-economics costs of accidents in the State of Qatar. Accident data and cost figures of the years 2005, 2006 and 2007 are considered to make the estimation of annual accident cost of Qatar.
This paper aims to review accident costing methodologies which are applied in developed and developing countries. Various methods exist for costing of road accidents and the method used in this current study is the gross output (or human capital) approach. This method takes into account the loss of resources such as vehicle damage, medical treatment, police and administration cost, and damage to street furniture. It also takes into account the cost of pain and suffering of the victim and to those who care for the victim. When properly incorporated in safety project evaluation, the findings of this study should help promote investment in road safety.
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Success strategies of small states: the State of Qatar comparedto Switzerland, Singapore and Lebanon
By Mark FarhaAbstractThis study compares the rapid evolution of Qatar to that of the disproportionally influential small states of Switzerland, Lebanon and Singapore. Though set apart by history and circumstance, these states share a set of common traits, including a limited size, high vulnerability to external shocks, diplomatic dexterity, a salient presence in conflict mediation, high reliance on imported migrant labor, export-led growth, as well as a drive to maintain an efficient infrastructure and a skilled human capital base in highly competitive economies. As of 2009, Switzerland ranked as the world's most competitive economy, Singapore towered as Asia's number one, while Qatar topped the Middle East and North Africa.
Sources of success and vulnerability were two sides of the same coin. Openness to global trade and diplomacy allowed each state to market its skills and products beyond its size. At the same time, the paper contends that rapid global integration could lead to domestic dislocation, triggering compensatory governmental measures in response. The paper examines the respective responses of each state to the global credit crunch, spreading consumerism and geopolitical instabilities. The recent 2008 global recession acutely highlighted both the predicament of vulnerability, and the potential for superior resilience exhibited by these small states. The paper argues that while each state departed from country-specific comparative advantages (i.e. Qatar's hydrocarbon reserves, Singapore's port and high-tech industries, Switzerland's quality manufacturing and banking, Lebanon's financial services, education and tourism), the respective political leaders have espoused a similar paradigm of comprehensive social development. This study identifies the potential perils emanating from both within and without its borders, which, if averted, may allow Qatar to dispel the ‘rentier curse’ by establishing itself as a proactive leader in the fields of good governance and human development, further closing the gap with global frontrunners such as Switzerland and Singapore.
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Dohaland research: search for a contemporary Qatari architectural language that is ‘modern rooted in the past’
By John RoseAbstractSince its inception in early 2009, Dohaland has been tasked by its Board of Directors to support the intellectual and cultural efforts of Qatar Foundation by extending its work beyond day-to-day real estate development activities to include research projects that focus on the built form, the life patterns of Qatari residents, etc. This presentation will present and discuss current and future research-related projects and activities under the Dohaland research program including:
- Gulf architectural encyclopedia research
- Qatari architecture research
- Qatari cultural/socio research: (slavery, living/oral history, oil and gas inception, MHOD memory center)
- Coordination with Qatar Science & Technology Park re-applied research
These subjects are in early phases of work and can be tracked in the future as they further develop.
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Developing an information resource on Islamic medicaland scientific ethics
By Frieda WiebeAbstractThe Bioethics Research Library at Georgetown University and Georgetown's School of Foreign Service Library in Qatar are working together to establish an information resource covering Islamic thought on medical and scientific ethics. We plan to include both historical and contemporary writings in English and Arabic, as well as in other languages, when possible. Ultimately, we intend for this three-year initial project to produce not only an online database, but also to form a core collection within Qatar's Central Library and to enhance the Bioethics Research Library's collection in Washington. All of these efforts are focused on serving researchers and educators in the region and around the world.
Staff members who are working on the project are fluent in Arabic or Farsi, and are educated in Islamic Studies, librarianship, and information technology. A variety of professional and organizational contacts are being pursued in order to identify and acquire relevant scholarly material. Although some of the foreign-language cataloging has commenced, we continue to explore database software appropriate for displaying accurately Arabic and Farsi characters as well as related transliteration. English-language cataloging and indexing is well underway using existing software.
In the first year of the project, we identified 646 documents in English, Arabic and Farsi and began indexing them, using a specialized vocabulary to address new topics. “Keywords of Special Interest to Islamic Medical and Scientific Ethics (IMSE) Database Searchers” is available online. New terms have been integrated into the current “Bioethics Thesaurus,” offered in full as an online thesaurus database at http://bioethics.georgetown.edu/databases/bt/index.htmlAdditional access terms are suggested in the Keywords list to help searchers.
We invite you to explore the Islamic Medical and Scientific Ethics database at http://bioethics.georgetown.edu/collections/islamic/index.html and are eager for your feedback.
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Checks on nanotechnology treatment in the light of Islamiclegal purposes and outcomes
More LessAbstractIt is known that medicine, like Islamic Sharia, was designed to bring about benefits and to ward off harm; therefore Islamic Sharia made it obligatory that medicine should be learned and taught, and considered this a collective duty.
Treatment using nanotechnology is at the fore of new medical technologies; a ruling on it would thus constitute a part of understanding it, through knowledge of its methods, purposes and dimensions and exploring its future to learn the intentions of those performing it.
Islamic Sharia has placed this treatment in the framework of an ethical, objective approach governing the relationship between doctors and patients by employing means of balancing purposes.
Nanotechnology treatment revolves around the preservation of the soul from non-existence through disease prevention, the preservation of species with respect to its existence through fertility and the preservation of the mind from nonexistence by delaying the weakness of old age; in whichever way one looks at it, the purposes of Islamic Sharia are there!
This serves as an entry point to meeting objectives, using the tools of creative jurisprudence at times and constructive jurisprudence at other times, introducing the legal regulation of checks in the regular manner and using a purpose-based approach. This is so that we know whether the outcome of treatment with nanotechnology revolves around acting or failing to act or between outcome-based jurisprudence or jurisprudence on its outcomes? In this way, we come to a conclusion as to whether a compromise can be been reached between the purposes of those performing the treatment and the purposes of Islamic Sharia?
Through this approach, this study represents an attempt to renew our understanding in order to invigorate science within an intention-based vision using the preferred tools of contemporary jurisprudence.
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How effective are the student recruitment methods used by Qatar's EducationCity universities?
More LessAbstractThis paper is based on a research study conducted to explore the effectiveness of the students recruitment/marketing methods used to recruit students in Qatar's Education City branch campuses. The desire of the author is that university branch campuses in Qatar and elsewhere may be stimulated to revisit their marketing and student recruitment plans and activities to better reach prospective students. The paper also explores the difficulties and challenges of marketing and student recruitment these institutions encounter in an attempt to provide ways to overcome these problems and make marketing and student recruitment more effective.
Previous research on marketing and student recruitment methods in higher education as well as the marketing concept, effective marketing, relationship marketing, student enrolment behavior theory and collaboration in marketing are examined. Following the review of literature, data on marketing and student recruitment methods adopted by each branch campus were collected via a questionnaire. The questionnaire was sent to marketing/admissions staff of the branch campuses and semi-structured interviews were conducted for the same population in addition to a few public affairs officers and Education City officials. Detailed information about how effective each marketing method is and the challenges associated with each was collected and analyzed. Some documents and website pages were also examined.
The responses of the questionnaire and interviews revealed that some methods, such as school visits, counselor events, information sessions and a dedicated exhibition for Education City institutions are very effective in student recruitment. On the other hand, educational exhibitions and websites were found not very effective. Student activities recently adopted by some institutions are yet to be assessed. Additionally, the research indicated that the challenges marketing and admissions staff encounter are logistical, administrative, financial, cultural and language-related. Some recommendations were offered to overcome these challenges and enhance the effectiveness of marketing and student recruitment at Education City institutions.
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Female ESL teachers’ perceptions about their roles and professional development needs in Qatar's ‘Education for a New Era’
More LessAbstractResearch shows that successful educational reform is multi-faceted, requiring rigorous planning and investment in teacher professional development.
The focus of this study is female ESL teachers in Qatar's public school educational reform, Education for a New Era, which created 36 publicly funded Independent Schools with a standards-based curriculum using English as a Second Language as the medium of instruction in mathematics and science. The research investigated the perceptions of female ESL teachers regarding Qatar's reforms and their experiences using new approaches to teaching ESL. Professional development needs were also identified.
A mixed method approach was used. A questionnaire was distributed to 233 female ESL teachers and 18 semi-structured interviews conducted. Generally, teachers valued increased freedom, but expressed a lack of support, and noted increased workloads and conflicts between professional roles and private lives. Change facilitators were seen as supportive. Views about school administrators varied.
After analysis and presentation of the findings, I concluded that while educational reform in Qatar had been largely conceptualized from the top down, close attention is still needed regarding the role of female ESL teachers in the process of implementation. In particular, since reform is dependent upon sustained professional development for ESL teachers.
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A comprehensive study on disability and the conditionsof people with special needs in Qatar
By Hala Al-AliAbstractIn undertaking any study, the National Human Rights Commission starts from the reality of the people's daily life. This stems from the fact that the objective of the legal texts related to human rights is to provide protection and empowerment to those who represent their primary object, i.e. human beings.
In order to achieve this goal, this study includes academic aspects, national legislations and international standards, in addition to methodical field research.
This study begins with the definition of Article No. (4) of the International Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, which lays the foundation for the research methodology which was based on consultation with people with disabilities, their parents and specialists, in addition to teachers of special education and their assistants at the centers that deal with people with special needs.
Chapter I of the study includes an explanation of the concept of equal opportunities and the emergence of the idea of ‘integration’ as a fundamental right of persons with special needs in order to give them equal opportunities with their peers, therefore, the meaning of educational integration was explained, along with its conditions, benefits and its importance.
Chapter II includes an explanation of the types of disability through brief academic definitions, followed by statistics on disability in the State of Qatar. Further, the study demonstrates the causes of disability, such as genetic factors in the marriage between relatives, in addition to environmental and health impacts.
Chapter III of the study marks the beginning of the conducted field research for a number of institutions in Qatar, such as Qatar Society for People with Special Needs, the Shafallah Center and Al-Nour Institute for the Blind, and others.
Field research was based on spending a long time at the centers for people with special needs, conducting discussions and asking detailed questions. Disabilities discussed include motor disabilities such as polio to audio-visual disabilities, autism and mental retardation with various levels of intensity in addition to cerebral palsy and rare disabilities. This study has documented the services claimed to be provided by every center in interviews conducted with the managers and workers, then moved on to direct observations, extrapolation of answers, then comparing all such data to national legislations and international standards contained in the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities.
As a result, there were a number of positive and negative remarks regarding the activities of these centers and the services they provide. The study was not restricted to methodical criticism, but has also provided each center with recommendations and videos, in order to avoid the shortcomings found. In its final part, Chapter IV, the study has concluded with a general outcome that disability represents a concept that is still under development, and the State has made already some achievements in caring for persons with special needs, comparing to the period of time when the State began to pay attention to the issue of disability. Nevertheless, there is still a lot of work to be done in this regard. The study concluded with fifteen recommendations of a practical nature, to advance the conditions of people with special needs.
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Participation of women in Qatar's labor force
Authors: Kien Le and Abdoulaye DiopAbstractQatarization, a process to increase the number of Qatari nationals in the labor force, is considered one of the country top priorities to ensure its long-term economic development and security purpose. As 96 percent of Qatari men and 43 percent of Qatari women are currently in the labor force and women are more educated than men on average, it is clear that a significant increase in the labor force, especially in high skilled jobs, can only be achieved by increasing the participation of women in the labor force. It is therefore important to understand the factors that influence the decision of Qatari women to participate in the labor force. Using a nationally representative survey data and recent advances in the quantile regression technique, we analyze women's willingness to participate not only at the mean value (given by well known logistic regression) but also at its various quantiles. We found that the offer wage rate, age and education plays an important role in women decision to join the labor force. These factors have a positive effect on women's participation, but the effect varies across quantiles. The effects of marriage and having children, contrary to normal expectation, are not statistically significant, suggesting that once women enter the labor force they are not likely to exit because of marriage or children. We also discuss policy implications of the results to the Qatarization process.
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Attitudes toward expatriate and labor migrant workersin the Arab Gulf countries: mixed results from Qatar
Authors: Abdoulaye Diop, Kien Le and Darwish AlemadiAbstractThis paper presents an overview of Qatari citizens’ attitudes toward expatriate and labor migrant workers in Qatar. It is based on the first ‘scientific’ survey of Qatari citizens and residents (expatriates and labor migrants) conducted by the Qatar University Social and Economic Survey Research Institute (SESRI) in May/June 2010. The main objectives of this paper were threefold: first, to assess Qatari attitudes towards the presence of these expatriate and labor migrant workers in Qatar. Do Qatari citizens support or oppose the restrictions on the number of foreign workers in the country? How do they evaluate the number of expatriate and labor migrant workers present in the country? Second, to evaluate whether these attitudes translate into negative or positive attitudes toward migrant workers and their contribution to Qatar? Do Qatari citizens think that expatriate and labor migrant workers strengthen their country and help to build its economy, or do they think they weaken the country and put a strain on its resources? Finally, the paper will present and analyze Qatari citizens’ attitudes toward the sponsorship system or Kafala. Do Qatari citizens support the change of the sponsorship system to make the migrant workers more dependent on their employees, less dependent on their employees, or do they want to maintain the status quo. The paper makes use of univariate, bivariate and multivariate analyses and differences will be determined using chi-squared and t-tests. The mean number of responses to certain questions will be compared across the demographic groups to highlight subgroup differences.
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Enhancing the development impact of remittances: a study ofdirect payment and savings facilities for Filipino workers in Qatar
More LessAbstractInternational remittances are playing an increasingly important role in the economies of developing countries. Aside from being an important source of foreign exchange for many recipient countries, recent research has shown that households that receive remittances are more likely to leave poverty status, to send their children to school and to invest in small enterprises, health, education and housing. While remittances bring numerous benefits to households in developing countries, little is known about the extent to which remittance flows are reduced by the fact that migrants have limited ability to monitor and control how remittances are spent by beneficiaries. This research aims to investigate whether the introduction of new, innovative financial services can enhance the ability of migrants to save, monitor and control how their remittances are utilized. In partnership with a financial institution in the Philippines, we have designed two new financial products that will be offered randomly via a field experiment, to a sample of Filipino migrants in Qatar enrolled in this study. The first financial product is a commitment savings account that has the potential to raise household savings for clients with self-control concerns. The second financial product is a direct (bill) payment facility that allows a migrant to pay vendors in the Philippines directly. The offer of financial services to the migrant is to enable them to either save more of their remittances (using the commitment savings account) and/or make payments directly to vendors in the Philippines (with the direct payment facility), as opposed to having their families back home arrange payments. All subjects in Qatar and their origin households in the Philippines will be administered a baseline survey covering employment, income and expenses, level of remittances, financial services used and desired and savings. A follow-up survey will be administered later to the migrant and their households in order to determine the use of the new products and its impact on the level and use of remittances or more generally household expenditures.
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Qatari women and the internet: an analytical studyfor patterns of use and utilization
More LessAbstractThe State of Qatar has exerted relentless efforts towards activating the participation of Qatari women in the use of information and communication technology (ICT) in general and the use of the internet in particular. Female participation and involvement in this field is considered to be one of the priorities included in the plans and projects of the Qatar's ICT Strategy. However, research endeavors which analytically address the use of the internet by Arab women in general, and Qatari women in particular, are rather scarce.
The main purpose of this research paper, representing a national survey sponsored by Qatar's SCFA, is to investigate the patterns of use and utilization of the internet by Qatari women. In its attempt to achieve this purpose, the paper explores the impact of social, marital, educational, and economic status of Qatari women on their use of the internet. It also identifies Qatari women views and attitudes towards the internet as well as the difficulties and obstacles that impede their use. Hence, it provides a clear understanding of Qatari women's utilization patterns of the internet concerning the frequency, aims, methods of use, and the impact of this use on various aspects of their daily life.
The study adopts an analytical descriptive method. A survey instrument in the form of a questionnaire was designed and administered as the main data collection tool for the purpose of this study. The validity and reliability of this instrument were determined using referees validation and pilot trial sample respectively.
The main factions of Qatari women representing the population of the study include government employees, private sector employees, public sector employees, university students, and housewives. A total of 2367 questionnaires were distributed among a stratified random sample of Qatari women in 26 of the major employers in Qatar including: ministries, universities, banks, financial organizations, and major corporations such as QTEL, HMC, and QP. The response rate was relatively high, 1618 questionnaires were returned representing a response rate of 68.3%. Both descriptive and inferential statistics techniques were employed for the purposes of data analysis.
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Proof of concept ‘A Portable Architecture for Qatar’
Authors: Roman Turczyn and Peter ChomowiczAbstractThe proof of concept is a research-based analysis by Virginia Commonwealth University in Qatar, Center for Research in Design to evaluate the feasibility of converting surplus ISO shipping containers into housing units for migrant workers in the State of Qatar.
The project addresses the need for temporary labor accommodation associated with Qatar's rapid growth and development. The goal for this project is to identify a long-term, economical solution to this social challenge in support of Qatar's National Vision 2030 toward sustainable development.
The proof of concept evolved from its initial mandate of evaluating the feasibility of converting shipping containers for migrant worker housing into an enhanced scope of work that demonstrates how the results of our research could be used to develop a unique and innovative concept for ‘A Portable Architecture for Qatar’. This expanded agenda not only addresses the original mandate but also demonstrates the value of a holistic design approach. ‘A Portable Architecture for Qatar’ examines and identifies sustainable, economic options for application in urban, rural and remote construction site locations in Qatar and possibly for application as disaster relief where needed worldwide.
The vision of ‘A Portable Architecture for Qatar’ is to plan, design, prototype and commercialize a manufacturing system that combines best management practices of integrated, sustainable design with innovative planning concepts to serve the growing market for migrant worker housing in Qatar. ‘A Portable Architecture for Qatar’ is based on a business model that demonstrates cost effectiveness through reduced operating costs because of an integrated design approach. The concept is intended to meet and surpass international standards for migrant workers living conditions.
Taking the lead in this challenge will not only improve the lives of migrant workers but will also place Qatar in the forefront of improving the Gulf-wide image of human rights.
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How do Qatari females make it to the top? An examinationof organizational constraints to their advancement?
More LessAbstractAlthough Qatari females have increased their economic participation and reached remarkable educational attainment over the last decade, this success does not run parallel with balanced representation in management positions. Accordingly, this study was initiated with the aim of identifying the main organizational constraints encountered by Qatari females throughout their careers. The study revealed that although Qatari females have made good progress at medium and lower levels of management, they are still very poorly represented in senior management levels. It is also indicated that no discrimination is made against Qatari females in terms of selection and recruiting, working hours, training, and engagement in critical projects and compensation. Specifically, the study found that both gender specific and differences failed to explain the low representation of Qatari females in top managerial positions. However, it was reported that the promotion of Qatari females within organizations is still lagging behind. Gender-specific issues, such as females’ family commitments, were reported as the main constraint to their promotion from the male perspective, whilst gender-differences, such as uncertainty of real increased responsibilities and authority levels, were the main constraints to female promotion from the females’ perspective. In the absence of major organizational discrimination, this study concludes by recommending the greater inclusiveness of Qatari females in decision-making positions. The paper also suggests that greater accountability of organizations to advance females should be considered critically in order to ensure the advancement of Qatari females to the top.
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Road traffic accidents in rich developing countries: the caseof the State of Qatar
Authors: Abdel Magid Hamouda and Khalifa Al KhalifaAbstractQatar is a rich developing country, which suffers the consequences of explosions in both human and vehicle population. This has been accompanied by a heavy toll of deaths. Road accidents in Qatar do not only represent an important social problem but also an economic one. There is room for improving traffic safety in Qatar. A comprehensive traffic safety program is urgently needed.
In this paper an assessment of the current level of road safety in Doha, Qatar is made utilizing data obtained from secondary sources. The road safety level in Doha is assessed considering four parameters, namely, accident severity index, accident fatality rate, accident fatality risk and accident risk.
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The Role of Enlightened Leadership in Crisis Management:The Year of Famine
More LessAbstractThis study attempts to answer a key question which is the subject matter of this research problem: what are the lessons learned from the experience of the Caliph Omar Ibn al-Khattab as a model for enlightened leadership and good governance in the management of a famine crisis? The question is further subdivided into the following questions:
- 1: What is the role of leaders in crisis management?
- 2: What are the characteristics of the role played by the Caliph Omar Ibn al-Khattab in managing the crisis in the Year of Famine?
To answer these questions, the study was divided into four chapters, an introduction and a conclusion. Chapter 1 - discusses the concept of crisis management, Chapter 2 - the concept of leadership, Chapter 3 - the concept of good governance while Chapter 4 addresses the management of the crisis in the Year of Famine and the model of good governance of Caliph Omar ibn al-Khattab, and highlights the leading role of the State of Qatar and its civil society. Three methodological approaches were used: theoretical grounding of concepts, the purposes of Islamic Sharia and a comparative approach.
The study reached a number of conclusions, the most important of which are the emphasis on the importance of the political role of leadership, and that the concept of good governance was shown in the model of the Caliph ibn al-Khattab through sacrifice and responsibility.
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Simulation training for laparoscopic surgery with 3rd and 4th year medical students
Authors: Angela Brunstein, Joerg Brunstein, Anam Waheed, Davit Sargsyan and Bakr NourAbstractMedical education is characterized by apprenticeship reflected in ‘see one, do one, teach one’. This research investigated effects of practice and individual guidance by a mentor for laparoscopic surgery using a simulation engine. Based on earlier research, we expected that it would take extensive training for self-directed, experience-based learning to compensate for individual, on-time instruction that is typical for medical education.
Three groups of 3rd and 4th medical students trained to perform laparoscopic colecystectmy in 5 training sessions of 30 or 60 min. The mentored group received one-to-one individual guidance by a mentor during the complete training. A time-matched control group received exclusively feedback from the simulation engine. An extensive practice group was allotted double the time to compensate for missing guidance. Before and after training, their performance was analyzed for the first case in the system.
Mentored students performed better during the pretest than students from both control groups. After training those students performed as well without guidance as during the pretest with guidance. Participants from both control groups improved performance from pre-test to post-test. In addition, students with extensive training performed almost as well as mentored students during the post-test.
This implies that feedback provided by the simulation system is good enough for unsupervised students to reach a performance level comparable to mentored students, but it requires double the time for training. Next, we aim to improve the system's feedback to dramatically reducing training time while reaching the same level of performance.
For example, this means to provide in-time warning before committing an error instead of presenting an error message after committing it. This will prevent students from automatizing suboptimal or dangerous routines.
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What are the possibilities for taking up a physically activesubject position for young Qatari women?
Authors: Kelly Knez and Liza HunterAbstractBackground:Discourses constitute knowledge. They are multiple, contradictory and offer different ways of knowing and being that shift across time and space. Also, they offer ‘subject positions’ that can be taken up or rejected. If taken up, subject positions offer the individual a particular repertoire, a way of seeing and speaking about the world. Analysis of discursive constructions and subject positions of young Qatari women in relation to physical activity offers insights beyond a binary construction of norm and ‘other’. This is particularly important considering that dominant academic understandings of physical activity have been constructed through western systems of knowledge.
Purpose:This research explores the multiple subject positions available to young Qatari women constituting themselves as physically active. It challenges western notions of physical activity to introduce new ways of understanding physical activity and young Qatari women and the terrain negotiated in being physically active.
Methods:Grounded in feminist post-structuralism, this study employs semi-structured interviews with 10 young Qatari women aged 18-25 years. Interviews were transcribed then analyzed using discourse analysis.
Results:Young Qatari women negotiate an array of cultural discursive practices including those deeply enshrined within Qatari tradition and culture and the medicalized view of physical activity as something which ‘should’ be done for good health. The ‘physically active’ subject positions available to young Qatari women vary, but tend to be bounded by discursive practices of family, tradition and gender.
Conclusion:Opportunities for young Qatari women to constitute themselves as physically active subjects are enabled and constrained by strong discursive practices of family, gender and tradition. Understanding the impact of such practices invites discussion about new possibilities for different positions that capture being young Qatari women as well as being physically active.
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Towards a national project to plan and build cultural values and Arab personal skills for the 21st century
More LessAbstractThis study answers the following main questions:What system of concepts is related to the strategic planning and building of values? What are the reality, dimensions and outcomes of the conflict of values, and their relationship to identity and society's potential for growth and advancement? Are we suffering from a crisis in the planning and strategic construction of our values? Do we have a national project for planning and building values and preserving our identity? What are the reasons for the weakness of Arab educational products compared to their Asian and Western counterparts? What moral and educational requirements do people living in the twenty first century have? What are the most important international experiences in the planning and building of values and creating a new generation capable of actively contributing to the development and progress of society and the nation? How can we have a national project for planning and building values and preserving our own identity?
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Knowledge-based urban development paradigm: Doha asa model for a knowledge and creative city in the Middle East
By Ali Al RaoufAbstractQatar's future vision, named Qatar 2030, is forecasting an economy based on knowledge and creativity rather than depletable natural carbon resources. Knowledge and creativity are perhaps the most important factors in the future of a city's economy, and there is a growing interest in the concept of the “knowledge and creative city”. A knowledge and creative city is not just a regular city. It is a growing space of exchange and optimism in which each and everyone can devote themselves to personal and collective projects and aspirations in a climate of dynamism, harmony, and creativity. The main purpose of this research is to explore the ‘knowledge city’ concept in depth. It will discuss the principles of a knowledge city, and portray its distinguishing characteristics and processes. A solid argument will be constructed to illustrate that the concept of knowledge cities is rooted in the urban, cultural structure of traditional Arab cities. Therefore an attempt to foster this concept in today's Arab/Middle Eastern cities would not be possible by building isolated technological statements scattered around the city. Alternatively, the rise of the network society, global networks, linked cities and the existence of smart communities should construct the basis for shaping Arab Knowledge Cities. A focus on Doha as an emerging knowledge and creative city amid the Middle Eastern cities will be included to examine the main hypothesis of the research.
‘What are the qualities of future cities?’ becomes a crucial question and its answer creates a challenge for architects, urban designers, planners, developers, and decision makers around the world. This research will answer this question by articulating a new matrix for knowledge and creative city formation. Doha will be used as a model for such a new paradigm of knowledge-based urban design and development in the Middle East. The Middle Eastern cities are not only exceptions, but would require major social transformations to join the knowledge economy era.
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