4,151 research outputs found
Comment on Gergen's "Social Psychology as History"
A recent article by Gergen suggests that social psychology cannot reasonably aspire to the general time-independent laws that are characteristic of the physical sciences. Consideration of this thesis suggests that the underlying rationale may place undue reliance on the effects of psychological enlightenment, and on the individual's needs to demonstrate his behavioral freedom and uniqueness. A tentative generali zation suggests that the processes underlying social behavior may be relatively stable, but that they operate on an endless variety of social contents (conditions) to yield the diverse social behaviors and relation ships that we observe.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/68537/2/10.1177_014616727500100207.pd
The Anatomy of International Studentsâ Acculturation in British Universities
The diversity of the student population in the UK Higher Education (HE) sector in recent times accentuates the notion of the world being a global village. The effect of this on the British economy is considerable in terms of scale and significance. Nevertheless, research attention that specifically explore how overseas students integrate into the UK culture in the extant literature remains inadequate. Accordingly, this interpretive research fills the lacuna by exploring the acculturation of overseas students in the UK using a London-based University as the contextual platform. It shows the challenges faced by overseas students in the country, which include culture shock, discrimination, and limited opportunity for interpersonal relationships, and pinpoints how they could be addressed. It offers HE Institutions strategic directions for creating value for their target students in the highly competitive education sector
Exploring parents' experiences of promoting physical activity for their child with intellectual disabilities
Introduction:
Children and adolescents with intellectual disabilities participate in low levels of physical activity and have a greater reliance on their parents to provide activity opportunities. This study explored parentsâ experiences of promoting physical activity for their child with intellectual disabilities.
Methods:
Semiâstructured interviews were conducted with eight parents of children and adolescents with intellectual disabilities. Interviews were independently coded and analysed by two researchers using thematic analysis.
Results:
Four themes and nine subthemes were identified. Overall, parents had positive views of physical activity. However, parents face numerous barriers that limit their ability to promote physical activity for their child with intellectual disabilities.
Conclusions:
Parents experience high levels of exclusion and stigma that negatively affect their promotion of physical activity for their child with intellectual disabilities. Overcoming the barriers faced by parents could therefore be an indirect method to increase physical activity in children and adolescents with intellectual disabilities
Child Well-being in the Pacific Rim
This study extends previous efforts to compare the well-being of children using multi-dimensional indicators derived from sample survey and administrative series to thirteen countries in the Pacific Rim. The framework for the analysis of child well-being is to organise 46 indicators into 21 components and organise the components into 6 domains: material situation, health, education, subjective well-being, living environment, as well as risk and safety. Overall, Japan, Singapore and Taiwan have the highest child well-being and Thailand, Indonesia and the Philippines the lowest. However, there are substantial variations between the domains. Japan and Korea perform best on the material well-being of children and also do well on health and education but they have the lowest subjective well-being among their children by some margin. There is a relationship between child well-being and GDP per capita but children in China have higher well-being than you would expect given their GDP and children in Australia have lower well-being. The analysis is constrained by missing data particularly that the Health Behaviour of School-Aged Children Survey is not undertaken in any of these countries
Mediation, translation and local ecologies: understanding the impact of policy levers on FE colleges
This article reports the views of managers and tutors on the role of policy âleversâ on teaching, learning, and inclusion in colleges of Further Education (FE) in our research project, âThe impact of policy on learning and inclusion in the Learning and Skills Sector (LSS)â.i Using data from five research visits conducted over two years in eight FE learning sites, we explore the processes by which colleges âmediateâ and âtranslateâ national policy levers and how this affects their ability to respond to local need. The paper tentatively develops three related concepts/metaphors to explain the complexity of the policy/college interface â âthe process of mediationâ, âacts of translationâ and âlocal ecologiesâ. We found that policy levers interacted with a complex set of national, local and institutional factors as colleges responded to pressures from the external environment and turned these into internal plans, systems and practices. We conclude by suggesting that national policy-makers, who design national policy levers, may not be fully aware of these complexities and we make the case for the benefits of greater local control over policy levers, where these interactions are better understood
The Differentiation and Promotion of Studentsâ Rights in Portugal
This investigation includes a differential study (Study 1)
and a quasi-experimental research (Study 2). In Study 1, the objective
was to establish to what extent studentsâ rights existed and analyse
the differentiation between studentsâ rights with Portuguese and
immigrant mothers, throughout school years. The sample consisted of
537 students with Portuguese and immigrant mothers, distributed by
different school years (7th, 9th and 11th grades). The Childrenâs Rights
Scale (Hart et al., 1996; Veiga, 2001) was used. In Study 2, the purpose
was to analyse the effects on studentsâ rights of the use by teachers of a
communicational intervention program, supervised by school psychologists.
The sample involved 7th and 9th grade students, in a total of
four classes, two forming the experimental groups (n = 36) and two the
control groups (n = 43); as in Study 1, the Childrenâs Rights Scale was used. The results indicated the effectiveness of the communicational intervention program on studentsâ rights and are consistent with previous studies. An implication is that psychologists and teachers, working together and taking a human rights perspective, may develop an important role in projects to promote the studentsâ rights
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