427 research outputs found
A Community-Wide Restorative Practices Programme: Implementation Guide
This Implementation Guide describes the steps involved in establishing a community-wide Restorative Practices (RP) Programme. This is not a manual for delivering RP training; rather, this Guide will explain the recommended steps for setting up and implementing an RP programme aimed at establishing a cohesive, community-wide approach, and what is required in terms of ongoing support to ensure both effective service delivery and ongoing sustainability of the programme
Psychosocial Impacts of the COVID-19 Pandemic: The Role of Men’s Gender-Related Attitudes, Employment and Housework, and Demographic Characteristics
Background and objective: Globally, men are at greater risk of mortality and serious physical consequences from COVID-19 infection than women, but are less impacted by the pandemic’s impact on labor force participation and increased childcare responsibilities. Outside of gender identity, however, it is unclear whether men’s beliefs about gender may be related to the kinds of COVID-19-related impacts they report. This study sought to describe the employment, income, and household responsibility-related impacts of the pandemic on a sample of young men in the U.S. and to examine relationships between the men’s gender ideologies and attitudes toward gender equity with self-reported stress impacts of the pandemic.
Methods: The data are from an online survey of 481 young men from across the U.S. Measures included scales assessing masculinity ideology, modern sexism, support for traditional divisions of labor by gender, and attitudes toward gender equity. New items developed for this study assessed COVID-19-related changes in employment, household responsibilities, and childcare duties as well as levels of stress. Hierarchical regression examined the relative roles of demographic characteristics, changes in employment and household work, and gender-related attitudes on COVID-related stress.
Results:
Descriptive findings showed that under 50% of the men in the sample experienced negative COVID-related impacts on employment, but that a majority of the men reported at least some COVID-related stress. Results of the hierarchical regression suggest that higher levels of stress were predicted by having a minoritized sexual identity, less religiosity, experiencing employment or household responsibility-related changes, and not endorsing modern sexism or a traditional, gendered division of labor.
Conclusions: Experiencing COVID-19-related stress was normative in this sample of young men. However, endorsing traditional notions of a gendered division of labor was slightly protective against higher levels of COVID-related stress. These findings add to existing evidence that gender analysis must be a central component of ongoing COVID-related policy and programming development
Predictors and Effects of E-Cigarette Usage
This panel presentation will address Juul\u27s e-cigarette marketing campaign and the Truth Initiative\u27s counter campaign. In addition, our Communication 346 Capstone class will discuss overall e-cigarette usage on campus, known predictors of usage, general attitudes toward e-cigarettes, and potential health related outcomes. We will conclude with suggestions for an upcoming health promotion campaign addressing the information needs of students regarding the effects of e-cigarette usage
Predictors and Effects of E-Cigarette Usage
This panel presentation will address Juul\u27s e-cigarette marketing campaign and the Truth Initiative\u27s counter campaign. In addition, our Communication 346 Capstone class will discuss overall e-cigarette usage on campus, known predictors of usage, general attitudes toward e-cigarettes, and potential health related outcomes. We will conclude with suggestions for an upcoming health promotion campaign addressing the information needs of students regarding the effects of e-cigarette usage
Plague Dot Text:Text mining and annotation of outbreak reports of the Third Plague Pandemic (1894-1952)
The design of models that govern diseases in population is commonly built on
information and data gathered from past outbreaks. However, epidemic outbreaks
are never captured in statistical data alone but are communicated by
narratives, supported by empirical observations. Outbreak reports discuss
correlations between populations, locations and the disease to infer insights
into causes, vectors and potential interventions. The problem with these
narratives is usually the lack of consistent structure or strong conventions,
which prohibit their formal analysis in larger corpora. Our interdisciplinary
research investigates more than 100 reports from the third plague pandemic
(1894-1952) evaluating ways of building a corpus to extract and structure this
narrative information through text mining and manual annotation. In this paper
we discuss the progress of our ongoing exploratory project, how we enhance
optical character recognition (OCR) methods to improve text capture, our
approach to structure the narratives and identify relevant entities in the
reports. The structured corpus is made available via Solr enabling search and
analysis across the whole collection for future research dedicated, for
example, to the identification of concepts. We show preliminary visualisations
of the characteristics of causation and differences with respect to gender as a
result of syntactic-category-dependent corpus statistics. Our goal is to
develop structured accounts of some of the most significant concepts that were
used to understand the epidemiology of the third plague pandemic around the
globe. The corpus enables researchers to analyse the reports collectively
allowing for deep insights into the global epidemiological consideration of
plague in the early twentieth century.Comment: Journal of Data Mining & Digital Humanities 202
School leaders reflections on their school's engagement in a program to foster health literacy development
Many health attitudes and behaviors formed during childhood are sustained through to adulthood, thereforechildhood is a critical time to develop health literacy. Primary schools provide an ideal environment to equipchildren with lifelong health skills, understanding and knowledge. Through semi-structured interviews, this studygathered primary school leaders’ reflections on the implementation of a program (HealthLit4Kids) designed tofoster health literacy development in their schools. The aim of this study was to determine how school leadersexperienced the HealthLit4Kids intervention. The results showed that leaders perceived the program had a positive effect on health literacy knowledge and understanding within the school community, as well as improvedhealth behaviors. School leaders’ statements indicated that key barriers such as parental engagement and anovercrowded curriculum would need to be navigated to ensure successful program sustainability
The Waiting And Mating Game: Condition Dependent Mate Sampling In Female Gray Treefrogs (Hyla Versicolor)
Strong sexual selection by receivers can lead to the evolution of elaborate courtship behaviors in signalers. However the process by which receivers sample signalers and execute mate choice under complex signaling conditions—and thus the realized strength of sexual section—is poorly understood. Moreover, receivers can vary in condition, which can further influence mate sampling strategies. Using wild female frogs we tested two hypotheses at the intersection of these important problems: that some of the individual variation in mate sampling is explained by (1) the reproductive urgency hypothesis, which predicts that receivers in a more urgent reproductive state will sample mates less and/or (2) the reproductive investment hypothesis, which predicts that receivers that have invested less in the current reproductive effort will sample mates less. Eastern gray treefrogs, Hyla versicolor, were collected in amplexus and repeatedly tested for phonotaxis behavior using a dynamic playback assay. To evaluate if hormonal mechanisms explained variation in the mate sampling, three steroid hormones, estradiol, progesterone, and corticosterone, were collected using a noninvasive water-borne hormone assay, validated for this species in the present study. Finally, we measured clutch size (investment) and the duration of time required for each female to oviposit after being reunited with their male mate (urgency). We found repeatability in many of the behaviors, including mate sampling. We found that females with higher concentrations estradiol and corticosterone made quicker choices, and that females with higher progesterone sampled mates more. We also found that female frogs in a more urgent reproductive state had lower concentrations of progesterone and estradiol, thereby providing the first evidence of a relationship between gonadal hormones and reproductive urgency. Collectively we found some support for the reproductive urgency but not the investment hypothesis. Thus, even though a female frog\u27s reproductive readiness is a highly transient life history stage, fine scale variation in her reproductive timeline could mitigate the strength of directional selection
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