4 research outputs found
Educating for anti-racism: producing and reproducing race and power in a university classroom
In this paper I explore some of the issues associated with teaching about race, culture and ethnicity in a psychology program. These curriculum initiatives are part of a broader agenda of raising awareness about racialised oppression and exclusion and contributing to the development of ways of researching and practising psychology that are transformative and culturally sensitive. I overview the broader context and describe our subject and the guiding principles. This is followed by a description and analysis of two events in the classroom that illustrate the ways in which students differentially respond to the challenges posed by writings that challenge taken for granted understandings of race. Part of the analysis shows that students can often engage in the reproduction of oppressive practices and invest in whiteness. It is suggested that more than single semester subjects are required to promote and support the development of critical capacities for anti-racism practice
Constructing identity as a second-generation Cypriot Turkish in Australia: the multi-hyphenated other
This article explores how Cypriot Turkish people in
Australia construct their multi-hyphenated identity and the
implications this has for their sense of belonging. Ethnic identity
is conceptualized as a set of social and cultural understandings,
shaped by historical processes, positions of power and patterns of
privilege, which people draw on to understand and experience
themselves. Ten Cypriot Turkish peopleâs identities were explored
through semi-structured interviews. Discourse analysis was used
to identify the discursive constructions of identity and
belongingness. Discourses that constructed the Cypriot Turkish
Australian identity were: modern Muslim, language, phenotype
and ancestry and generation discourse. These discourses give rise
to the multi-hyphenation of this identity, positioning them as
either Cypriot Turkish Australians or Cypriot Turkish in
Australia. The discourses have highlighted not only the current
socio-political context as shaping subjectivities, but also the
historical and political collective memory that continues in the
construction of ethnic identities
Predictive validity and cut-off scores in four diagnostic tests for falls â a study in frail older people at home
Artikkelen rapporterer en studie hvor hensikten var Ă„ undersĂžke validiteten og treffsikkerheten for instrumentene Downton Fall Risk Index, Timed Up and Go og Romberg test, nĂ„r det gjelder prediksjon av fall hos hjemmeboende eldre.No study has investigated the predictive validity and cut-off scores in diagnostic tests for falls used in in-home assessment in frail older people. The objective was to investigate the predictive validity for falls in the Downton Fall Risk Index (DFRI), Timed Up and Go (TUG) and Romberg test (RT) used in in-home assessment of frail older people (65+ years). Data on the diagnostic tests were collected at baseline (N = 153) and fall frequency were collected at six- and twelve-month follow-ups. The optimal cut-offs were 3 p in DFRI and 12 s in TUG. However, the validity indexes were generally low and only 40â50% were correctly classified. The RT showed low sensitivity. To increase the predictive validity for falls in this context, the use of DFRI and/or TUG as a part of a comprehensive fall-risk assessment tool, should be investigated in future studies