6 research outputs found
Longitudinal Transmission Pathways of Borderline Personality Disorder Symptoms: From Mother to Child?
Background: There is evidence that the borderline symptomatology of the mother longitudinally predicts the number of borderline criteria met by the children. However, possible underlying mechanisms have rarely been examined. In line with transactional models of borderline personality disorder (BPD), we analyzed a broad concept of maladaptive mother-child interactions of mothers with BPD symptoms towards their children, including insensitive parenting and mother-child discrepancies, in reporting the child's psychopathological behavior. Sampling/Methods: The sample was drawn from the population-based Greifswald Family Study and consisted of 295 children and their biological mothers. Both were examined at two points in time, first when the children were about 15 years old (T₀) and again 5 years later (T1), using path analyses. Results: Maladaptive mother-child interactions (especially an overprotective and rejecting parenting style and high discrepancies regarding internalizing problems) mediate the longitudinal transmission of borderline symptoms from mother to child. Furthermore, our data revealed that this result is consistent for various youth symptoms which are associated with BPD such as impulsivity or dissociation. Conclusion: The data of the current study imply that the transmission of borderline symptoms from mother to child is mediated by maladaptive mother-child interactions. For this reason early and professional support may be useful to prevent these children from developing severe psychopathology
Neuroticism developmental courses - implications for depression, anxiety and everyday emotional experience; a prospective study from adolescence to young adulthood
Background: Neuroticism is frequently discussed as a risk factor for psychopathology. According to the maturity principle, neuroticism decreases over the course of life, but not uniformly across individuals. However, the implications of differences in personality maturation on mental health have not been well studied so far. Hence, we hypothesized that different forms of neuroticism development from adolescence to young adulthood are associated with differences in depression, anxiety and everyday emotional experience at the age of 25. Methods: A sample of 266 adolescents from the general population was examined three times over ten years (age at T0: 15, T1: 20 and T2: 25) using questionnaires, interviews and ecological momentary assessment (EMA). At all measurement points, neuroticism was assessed with the NEO inventory. At T2, diagnoses of major depression and anxiety disorders were captured with a structured clinical interview (M-CIDI). Phone-based EMA was used to assess emotional experience and affective instability over a two-week period at T2. Results: The best fitting model was a latent class growth analysis with two groups of neuroticism development. Most individuals (n = 205) showed moderate values whereas 61 participants were clustered into a group with elevated neuroticism levels. In both groups neuroticism significantly changed during the ten year period with a peak at the age of 20. Individuals with a higher absolute level were at 14-fold increased risk for depression and 7-fold risk for anxiety disorders at the age of 25. In EMA, increased negative affect and arousal as well as decreased positive emotions were found in this high group. Conclusions: Other than expected, personality did not mature in our sample. However, there was a significant change of neuroticism values from adolescence to young adulthood. Further, over 20% of our participants showed a neuroticism development which was associated with adverse outcomes such as negatively toned emotional experience and a heightened risk to suffer from depressive and anxiety disorders in young adulthood. These high-risk persons need to be identified early to provide interventions supporting continuous personality maturation
Tech & Science @ School. Ein fachpraktisches Handbuch für Technik-Lehrkräfte
Kunstgegenstände & Schmuck herzustellen ist ein urmenschliches Bedürfnis. Aus diesem Kernbereich der Schmuckfertigung und des Drechselns sind die vorliegenden Projektideen entstanden. Die in dieser Handreichung vorgestellten Projektideen sind alle von Lehramtsstudierenden im Fach Technik an den Pädagogischen Hochschulen in Schwäbisch Gmünd und Ludwigsburg in offener und selbstgesteuerter Werkstattarbeit seit dem Sommersemester 2021 entstanden. Die Studierenden haben dabei ihre Idee stets fachpraktisch erprobt und fachdidaktisch in den vorliegenden Erklärfilmen und Schritt für Schritt-Anleitungen ausgearbeitet.
Der Projektrahmen umfasst das curricular verankerte, handwerklich bedeutsame Arbeiten mit den grundlegenden Werkstoffen Holz, Metall und Kunststoffen sowie den Bereich der Elektrotechnik und des Mikrocontrolling. Die Umsetzung dieser Projektideen soll unterstützend wirken, um individuelle handwerkliche Kompetenzen zu entdecken, erproben und vertiefen sowie technische Interessensbildung und vorberufliche Orientierung in Schulen fördern. Eine Schlüsselrolle für die Anfertigung der Werkstücke nimmt hierbei das Vorführen und Erklären (modellhaftes Vormachen) der notwendigen Fertigungsschritte durch Experten in Form von Erklärfilmen ein. Die zugrundeliegende didaktische Konzeption lehnt sich an die Kognitive Meisterlehre aus der gewerblich-technischen beruflich orientierten Bildung an (Collins et al., 1989).
Das Projekt KunstHandWerk wurde durch eine Kooperation zwischen der PH Ludwigsburg und der PH Schwäbisch Gmünd in Zusammenarbeit mit der Gold- und Silberschmiede-Innung Stuttgart-Heilbronn-Reutlingen initiiert und von TRAFO - dem Netzwerk transferorientierter Lehre in Baden-Württemberg gefördert. Die Projektfortsetzung Tech&Science@School mit der Uhland-Realschule Aalen wurde durch die Vector Stiftung gefördert