3,408 research outputs found

    Adopting a stance

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    This contains work by the artist including paintings, drawings and collages from 1979-2004

    Evidence-based Family Strengthening Training in Maine: A Resource Assessment and Proposal to Reduce Barriers and Increase Facilitators

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    The purpose of this research is to conduct a resource assessment of family strengthening training programs in the state of Maine. The primary focus of the resource assessment is to identify the agency and provider-level barriers and facilitators that impact their capacity to provide caregivers with awareness of and access to programs. Prior to presenting the resource assessment, this thesis reviews data about key child and family issues in Maine and examines how family strengthening training is applied as an evidence-based tool to prevent child maltreatment, foster healthy attachments within the family, and nurture positive caregiving skills. The methodologies used to collect data are internet searching, surveys, personal communication, and interviews. The data collected points to the conclusion that interagency and intersectoral collaboration and information-sharing needs to be increased because provider referrals are of critical importance in facilitating access to family strengthening training. The thesis concludes with recommendations that collaboration and information-sharing be increased through network and coalition models, additional training is offered to providers on how to use available tools to access information about family strengthening training programs, and agencies and providers work to increase their outreach and engagement to community-based stakeholders

    Disarming: Strategies to Build Rapport with All Students

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    Appreciative Advising teaches advisors that in order to discover, dream, design, deliver, and not settle with students they must first disarm them. A safe and predictable environment must be established in order to effectively disarm all students and provide them with opportunities to build a positive relationship with their advisor. This article discusses how to provide this environment before, during, and after advising sessions

    Pictures are necessary but not sufficient: Using a range of visual methods to engage users about school design

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    It has been argued by both educationalists and social researchers that visual methods are particularly appropriate for the investigation of people's experiences of the school environment. The current and expected building work taking place in British schools provides an opportunity for exploration of methods, as well as a need to establish ways to achieve this involvement of a range of school users, including students. This article describes a consultation that was undertaken in a UK secondary school as part of a participatory design process centred on the rebuilding of the school. A range of visual methods, based on photographs and maps, was used to investigate the views of a diverse sample of school users, including students, teachers, technical and support staff and the wider community. Reported here is the experience of using these tools, considering the success of different visually-based methods in engaging a broad cross section of the school community and revealing useful information. Using a range of visual methods allows a complex, but coherent, understanding of the particular school environment to be constructed and developed. It is further argued that such a range of visual and spatial methods is needed to develop appropriate understanding. The study, therefore, contributes to knowledge about specific visual research methods, appreciation of the relationship between tools, and a general methodological understanding of visual methods' utility for developing understanding of the learning environment
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