24 research outputs found
The effect of perception of teacher characteristics on Spanish EFL Learnersâ anxiety and enjoyment
The present study explores the relationship between Foreign Language Enjoyment (FLE) and Foreign Language Classroom Anxiety (FLCA) and a number of teacher-centered variables within the Spanish classroom context. Participants were 210 former and current EFL learners from all over Spain who filled out an online questionnaire with Likert scale items. A moderate negative relationship emerged between FLE and FLCA. Participants who had a L1 user of English as teacher reported more FLE and less FLCA than those with a foreign language user of English. Teacher characteristics predicted close to 20% of variance in FLE but only 8% of variance in FLCA. The strongest positive predictor of FLE was teacherâs friendliness while teacherâs foreign accent was a weaker negative predictor. Teacher-centered variables predicted much less variance for FLCA. Participants experienced more FLCA with younger teachers, very strict teachers and teachers who did not use the FL much in class. The findings confirm earlier research that FLE seems to be more dependent on the teachersâ pedagogical skills than FLCA (Dewaele & MacIntyre, 2019a; Dewaele et al., 2018)
Beliefs and traditions related to a childÂŽs first year of life : a study of the Northwest of Portugal
In this paper we propose an approach to investigate, in the North-west of Portugal, the
parentsâ behaviour at birth and during the first year of life of their children. We compare
the heritage, specifically the beliefs and traditions, with the changes that resulted from
the recent and deep cultural transformations that have taken place in Portugal in the last
few decades. In parallel, we tried to determine if the parentsâ behaviours, based on beliefs
and traditions, can affect the childrenâs health. We based our investigation on
standardized interviews with 76 mothers of one-year-old children (born between January
and December 2001) who lived in two parishes of Vizela city. This is a territory where
a more traditional way of life prevails than in other territories of the centre and south of
the country, where there is a strong attachment for religious and social values and where
the influence of the ancestral traditions is still alive. The paper concludes that cultural
heritage can have important impact on individual health. Health professionals, who
work in primary care and in hospitals, must be aware of the responsibility they have to
change this scenario.(undefined
Vivre chez soi aprĂšs 65 ans: Atlas des besoins et des acteurs Ă Bruxelles: Atlas des besoins et des acteurs Ă Bruxelles
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishe
Vivre chez soi aprĂšs 65 ans. Atlas des besoins et des acteurs Ă Bruxelles
Cet atlas est le rĂ©sultat dâune collaboration entre le Centre de Documentation et de Coordination Sociales et lâObservatoire de la SantĂ© et du Social, soutenue par les trois commissions communautaires bruxelloises. AprĂšs un chapitre dĂ©crivant la situation socio-sanitaire des Bruxellois ĂągĂ©s, on trouve un inventaire de lâoffre de services sociaux et de santĂ© permettant aux plus de 65 ans de vivre le plus longtemps possible Ă domicile. Le chapitre suivant est consacrĂ© Ă lâanalyse de cette offre par rapport aux besoins et des pistes pour lâavenir sont dĂ©gagĂ©es
Parentsâ age at birth of their offspring and child survival
This study presents some new results on parental age as a risk factor for child survival. The study is based on individual registration forms for live births and infant deaths collected in Hungary from 1984 to 1988. Logistic regression models have been fitted for early neonatal and neonatal mortality on the one hand, and post-neonatal mortality on the other hand. Children of older males and females have significantly higher early neonatal and neonatal mortality rates compared to those of younger males and females. The impact of age of both parents remains, however, slighter than that of other biological characteristics such as previous number of fetal deaths, induced abortions, or live births. The authors discuss possible biological explanations
Complete sequence and comparative genome analysis of the dairybacterium Streptococcus thermophilus
The lactic acid bacterium Streptococcus thermophilus is widely used for the manufacture of yogurt and cheese. This dairy species of major economic importance is phylogenetically close to pathogenic streptococci, raising the possibility that it has a potential for virulence. Here we report the genome sequences of two yogurt strains of S. thermophilus. We found a striking level of gene decay (10% pseudogenes) in both microorganisms. Many genes involved in carbon utilization are nonfunctional, in line with the paucity of carbon sources in milk. Notably, most streptococcal virulence-related genes that are not involved in basic cellular processes are either inactivated or absent in the dairy streptococcus. Adaptation to the constant milk environment appears to have resulted in the stabilization of the genome structure. We conclude that S. thermophilus has evolved mainly through loss-of-function events that remarkably mirror the environment of the dairy niche resulting in a severely diminished pathogenic potential