3,575 research outputs found
âWhen normal words just arenât enoughâ: the experience and significance of creative writing at times of personal difficulty
Section A consists of a review of the literature relating the therapeutic use of creative writing. It highlights gaps in the literature and suggesting potential avenues of further research.
Section B presents the findings of a phenomenological study which aimed to explore the experience and significance of creative writing at times of personal difficulty through the analysis of written accounts.
Method. Twenty one people who had personal experience of creative writing in the context of difficult life experiences submitted written accounts. These were analysed using Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) (Smith, Larkin & Flowers, 2009).
Results. Four main themes were identified: 1) Struggle with a difficult experience, 2) Turning to creative writing, 3) Dealing with it âas a matter of wordsâ and 4) Rejoining the world. A conceptual model illustrating how these master themes are related is presented.
Conclusion. Creative writing was deemed to have played an important and meaningful role in helping participants to integrate and move beyond difficult life experiences. Limitations and clinical implications of the study are discussed and suggestions are made for future research.
Section C involves a critical appraisal of the study presented in Section B. Reflections on the process of the study, as well as further implications and clinical applications are discussed
Inventory of water storage types in the Blue Nile and Volta River Basins
Water storage / River basins / Reservoirs / Ponds / Tanks / Groundwater / Soil moisture / Wetlands
Karl George Emeléus (1901-1989) and physics in Belfast 1927-1966
Karl George EmelĂ©us was educated at Cambridge and after a short period at Kingâs College, London, he spent the remainder of his career as lecturer (1929-33) and then professor (1933-66) of physics at Queenâs University, Belfast. At Queenâs he set the direction of experimental research (gas discharge and plasmas) for a generation and oversaw the growth of the department. He also acted as a spokesman for physics in Northern Ireland and was involved in public responses to concerns about the use of nuclear weapons and nuclear energy in the late 1940s and 1950s. This paper summarises EmelĂ©usâs life and work and sets it in the context of physics at Queenâs University in the mid-twentieth century
A trio of maps: chaos on an ellipse, a sharkâs fin, and Sluzeâs pearls
Three one-dimensional maps are presented. The maps are analysed with a combination of Feigenbaum diagrams, the calculation of global Lyapunov exponents, and the evaluation of fixed points. It is shown that in certain cases period two orbits can be evaluated by careful observation of the form of the related pairs of equations.A range of classroom exercises are provided to enable students to investigate the maps further
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