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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
211

Examining partnerships in amateur sport : the case of a Canadian national sport centre

Babiak, Katherine M 11 1900 (has links)
This study explored the dynamics, challenges, and complexities encountered in forming, managing, and evaluating the interorganizational relationships of a nonprofit organization and its partners in the public, nonprofit, and commercial sectors. Using a partnership process model developed from various theoretical frameworks (Kouwenhoven, 1993; Oliver, 1990; Provan & Milward, 2001; Wood & Gray, 1991), this study examined three phases of partnership relationships (i.e., formation, management, and evaluation) to gain a better understanding of the interactions among partnering organizations in Canadian sport. Qualitative research methods were employed to investigate partnerships of one National Sport Centre (NSC). Data were collected from three sources: 28 interviews, 110 organizational documents, and attendance at three organizational meetings. Interviews, relevant document passages, and field notes were transcribed and analyzed using Atlas.ti, a qualitative analysis software program. Results indicated that environmental and organizational conditions facilitated the formation of partnerships. Interdependence among organizations, presence of a broker, presence of a network, and convergence of objectives were evident. Specific reasons for partnership formation included efficiency, stability, necessity, legitimacy, reciprocity, and asymmetry. Partnership management structures and processes were central to interactions between organizations. Partners struggled to find a balance between pressures to compete and pressures to collaborate. Power imbalances, political dynamics, and control issues primarily related to resource concerns existed, and in some cases weakened the bonds among partners. Some partnerships were formalized, while others were loosely structured and primarily based on mutual trust, previous history, and personal interest. Ambiguities regarding roles and responsibilities, and 'representativeness' influenced how partners interacted and contributed to challenges in managing partnerships. Allocating resources was a prime concern for the organizations. Several levels of analysis for outcome evaluation existed. At the community level, the performance of NSC athletes at international competitions' was a key measure of success. At the network level, effective coordination of programs and services contributing to improved performances of athletes was perceived as an important measure of effectiveness. Finally at the organizational level, factors including ability to attract and retain partners, ability to remain economically viable through resource acquisition, and achieving legitimacy were all viewed as criteria to evaluate partnership effectiveness.
212

The Meaning of therapeutic change within the context of a person’s life story

Adler, Michal 05 1900 (has links)
This study is aimed at elucidating the meaning of therapeutic change within the context of a person's life story. The author believes that delineation of therapeutic change within this context may help to overcome the incongruence among counselling theory, research, practice, and the experience of counselling clients. After reviewing the traditional literature on therapy outcome and change, the new options coming from narrative approaches were considered. The qualitative method of a multiple-case study was chosen as the most appropriate for the posed question. Three participants in this project completed either individual (1 woman) or group (1 woman and 1 man) therapy, and believed that they achieved a substantial therapeutic change; all of them had written their autobiography in the beginning of their therapy. In each case study, the autobiography was interpreted, the interpretation refined in the Life story interview, and validated in another interview with the participant. Then the Current life interview and the Interview with a significant other were conducted, and the Portrait of change was construed; again, the product was reviewed and validated with the participant. All interpretations, and the videotapes of interviews were reviewed by two independent judges. The three Portraits of change were mutually compared, and the working delineation of the therapeutic change within the context of a person's life story was abstracted from this comparison. In all 3 cases, the change seemed to be connected with a substantial reinterpretation of the individual's life story. This reinterpretation seemed to be based on the change of the individual's fundamental beliefs about self and others in-the-world, on greater and more flexible acceptance of self and others in their relational complexity, and on positioning one's Self as an agentic hero in his or her own life story. These changes were also reflected in the genre, the formal structure, and the explanatory reasoning of the new stories the participants told about their current lives, and lived by. The limitations of this study, and the implications of the findings for counselling theory, practice, and future research are discussed.
213

The ultimate alternative : a single case study understanding Jason's journey from addiction to self-recovery

O'Brien, Siobhan January 2012 (has links)
The purpose of this research was to understand the lived experience of a person with a substance addiction that uses or has used alternative therapies for treatment. A single-case study approach was used to understand the lived experiences of Jason, a male in his mid-forties who is healing from a substance addiction. Through in-person interviewing and reading personal manuscripts written by the participant, data were collected. The data were analysed and interpreted using phenomenological and integral hermeneutics. Through the interpretations, it was clear that a major contributing factor to Jason’s drug use was the negative experiences he was carrying from his past. Once he was able to let go of the negativity and let his higher power guide him, his healing journey took a positive turn. Today, Jason lives in the moment and does not need drugs to heal the hurt he is feeling inside. He uses his ultimate alternative method, derived from within himself, to guide his journey in recovery. / viii, 155 leaves ; 29 cm
214

Teaching outside of the box : studying a creative teacher

Lilly, Frank R. January 2001 (has links)
The following is a qualitative portrait of a creative teacher and her teaching process. It has been written as chronological narrative using an evolving systems approach as a methodology for an instrumental case-study design. The creative teacher is a 47-year-old female with over 20 years experience with elementary, secondary, college, and university students. Five interviews were conducted with the teacher before, during, and following the course. Data sets include classroom observations revealed in field notes, documents such as course materials and audiotaped interviews. Two interviews were conducted with six students at the beginning and end of the course. One interview was conducted with the teacher's husband at the end of the course. The research context was an undergraduate university classroom of 146 preservice teachers studying how to plan curriculum and instruction for diverse learners. All interviews were audiotaped and transcribed verbatim. The overarching themes represented constructs involving intense and thorough course preparation, teacher-student connections, and reflective teaching. Overlapping subthemes guiding the process of creative teaching emerged including constraints placed on preparation and reflective teaching, an awareness of self and students within the process of preparation and connection, feedback from colleagues and students guiding the connection and reflective teaching, and the values and goals formed from personal history and philosophy of life shaping all three major themes. The teacher's personality acted as a conduit for expressing her creativity in the classroom. Her creative process was directed by her personality to choose the materials and methods of developing curriculum and instruction, and to guide her in her reflective teaching. This revelatory case example of creative teaching possesses characteristics resembling studies of creative giants, however presents a model of the process of creative teaching that can be ins
215

The effect of varying times of ischemia on the levels of glutathione in the cytosol and mitochondria of the rat kidney

Taylor, Matthew A. January 2002 (has links)
Ischemia caused by the disruption of blood flow results in kidney damage and dysfunction. This study investigated the effects of 30, 60 or 120 minutes of renal ischemia on the levels of glutathione (GSH), the major antioxidant inside cells. Kidneys from anesthetized female Lewis rats (9 months old) were clamped to induce ischemia and then homogenized and separated into cytosolic and mitochondria fractions by differential centrifugation. The levels of GSH and oxidized glutathione (GSSG) in the fractions were measured spectrophotometrically or by capillary electrophoresis. A significant reduction in GSH levels in the cytosol and mitochondria was seen only after the kidney underwent 60 minutes of ischemia. The significant decrease in GSH was accompanied by an increase in the GSSG/GSH ratio and an alteration in the glutathione redox ratio (i.e., GSH/total glutathione). This study demonstrates that an ischemic time of 60 minutes or longer is necessary to cause depletion of GSH levels in the rat kidney. / Department of Physiology and Health Science
216

Auditory and visual perceptual patterns of paranoid and nonparanoid schizophrenics

Greene, Curtis Pat January 1968 (has links)
There is no abstract available for this thesis.
217

Gender norms and taboos as manifested in dichotomies of space

Chaudhary, Anindita R. January 2009 (has links)
Dichotomies are a way we simplify interconnected hierarchical complexities of race, class, ethnicity, gender and power plays in our society. The division between male and female has been the primary dichotomy I have focused on in this discussion. My argument is that dichotomies create a cyclical loop which reinforces social injustice between genders in societies cross culturally and across time. This cycle of gender division includes cultural, built and activity patterns. There is no single point of origin of these patterns, but rather a constant loop of reinforcement from one pattern to the other. What I am trying to do here is not judge or criticize these societies and their values; rather I am evaluating them comparatively with other societies based on the status of women. I have found these cultural, built and activity patterns by documenting examples that exist cross culturally and across time. In order to do this I had to set up some criteria for selecting my case studies. I have divided the examples into four categories: 1. Egalitarian subsistence societies having equal status for women with respect to men and other women in similar cultures. 2. Hierarchical societies having lower status of women with respect to men and other women in a similar culture. 3. 19th and 20th century case studies in urban societies having lower status of women with respect to men. 4. 19th and 20th century case studies in reforms and utopian proposals that aimed at making egalitarian societies with equal status among men and women. I found that the public/private cultural pattern was the most recurring pattern. It is present in egalitarian, hierarchical and 19th and 20th century Victorian society. This pattern exists cross-culturally and across time. In the egalitarian subsistence societies, dichotomies are not understood as a set of oppositions such as superior and inferior. Their belief in harmony and balance in nature emphasized equality, unlike the hierarchical societies. In hierarchical subsistence societies, dichotomies divided people by assigning them public or private roles. In 19th and 20th century Victorian society an ideal gentleman was supposed to have serious, dignified, chivalrous qualities and an ideal lady was supposed to be moral, beautiful, cheerful and elegant. This shows that the cultural patterns were enforced upon individuals and they had to act accordingly in the society. I also looked at the utopian solutions of making childcare, laundry, and food preparation community activities. These radical solutions were focused on improving the cultural, built and activity patterns simultaneously. I have evaluated these case studies comparatively based on the status of women. While it’s difficult to state a solution to accommodate the layers of gender segregation that exist within cultural, built and activity patterns, I don’t think proposing an overtly radical solution is the right direction either. I would strongly recommend more awareness of feminist education in architecture and engineering schools. There should be more incentives and scholarships for women in traditionally male dominated professions like architecture and engineering. Learning about these patterns of gender segregation in different societies is also a way to begin this cultural progress. / Historical case studies of gender segregated patterns in egalitarian subsistence societies -- Case studies of gender segregated patterns in hierarchichal subsistence societies -- 19th and 20th century case studies for gender segregated patterns in urban societies -- 19th and 20th century case studies in reforms and utopian proposals. / Department of Architecture
218

The effect of a relationship-driven teaching style on the academic performance of at-risk ninth graders in the English content area classroom : a case study / Effect of a relationship driven teaching style on the academic performance of at-risk ninth graders in the English content area classroom

Schlichte, Jacqueline M. Perrine January 2005 (has links)
The purpose of this qualitative study was to determine the nature of the response of ninth grade English students to a Relationship-driven Teaching Style. Explored was the effect of Relationship-driven Teaching Style on the academic and lived experiences of four ninth grade At-risk English students. Additionally, the study allowed room to study the nature of other areas of perceived growth that resulted from exposure to this affective style. This exploration was conducted in a rural junior/senior high school setting.Data collection employed: 1) Participant-observer field notes (researcher as primary instrument); 2) Reading, Writing, and Non-Verbal Behaviors as recorded on field notes by the participant-observer. (Inquiries were informal in nature, except for simplistic reading questionnaires); and 3) The Corporation made available archival records inclusive of a. NWEA (Northwest Evaluation Test Scores); and b. Corporation Pilot Study data from a reading study conducted the previous year. Students were observed a minimum of two times per week during the time-span allowed for this exploration.Use of the Constant/Comparative Method (Merriam, 1998; Yin, 2002) yielded the following thematic areas: 1) Self- efficacy; 2) Perceptions toward others and self; 3) Internal changes, such as attitudinal metamorphosis toward education; 4) Importance of family approval, 5) Personal responsibility and "trying;" 6) Mutual Respect; 7) Non-verbal and verbal communication; 8) Physical or emotional reactions; 9) Teacher Characteristics; and 10) Academic achievement (as connected to all other categories).Data were interpreted to discover impact of Relationship-driven Teaching on said students and effectiveness in light of instruments as well as lived experience in the home. It was found that three, of four participants, significantly enhanced achievement and personal affective responses to Relationship-driven Teaching Style. Small gains were made by the fourth student, attributed to lived experience. Relationship-driven Teaching Style was thought to be effective. / Department of Elementary Education
219

Characterizing writing tutorials

Standridge, Emily J. 24 January 2012 (has links)
The purpose of this qualitative dissertation was to seek characteristics common to writing tutorials because current discussions and assessments of tutorials rely strongly on specific pedagogical approaches that may or may not be present in all tutorials. This dissertation seeks characteristics common to all tutorials. A second purpose of this dissertation was to explore differences in those characteristics based on levels of flow, a measure of how much a person is likely to repeat an experience, felt by both students and tutors. The dissertation begins with a review of literature to establish where current understandings of tutorials developed. It then progresses to an examination of six total cases. The cases are made up of individual tutorials; the data points included observation notes from the tutorials, survey results from student and tutor participants, interview data from students and tutors, and video and transcript data from the tutorials themselves. Grounded theory was used to analyze the data, meaning data was reviewed many times and coded through open coding, axial coding, and selective coding. Data analysis revealed eight characteristics in verbal and nonverbal categories. The verbal categories are questions, praise, mentions of time, negotiating an agenda, and postponing. The nonverbal categories are writing on the text, gaze, and smiling/laughing. These characteristics, with the exception of postponing, are common to all of the tutorials examined. The fine details of how each characteristics is displayed in each tutorial differ depending on the flow score of the session. The dissertation is able to present general characteristics of all writing tutorials that differ in fine detail based on high and low flow scores. / Department of English
220

Marriage continuance : compatibility in marriage partners' personality characteristics, needs, and energy commitments

Van Doren, Richard Witt January 1975 (has links)
The research was a pioneering descriptive exploration investigating the relationship between marital continuance and the psychological needs and energy commitments of graduate student couples. The writer assumed that individuals have certain psychological needs for which they expend energy in one or more specific directions. The writer also assumed that certain attempts to meet needs could lead to conflict and separation between marital partners. For purposes of the study, separation was defined as couples having a period of separation for more than one week due, in part, to marital disharmony. Separation had to take place during the six month interval between the first and second data collections.The population consisted of 86 couples living in university housing at a Midwestern university. One member of the couple had to be registered as a graduate student with the university graduate school. The sample consisted of 50 couples who volunteered to participate. Age of the sample individuals ranged from 20 to 41 years. Length of marriage ranged from 2 months to over 14 years with the mean length of marriage at about 3 years. For 87 of the individuals, their present marriage was their first. For the remainder, all of whom were on the second marriage, 9 were males and 4 were females. During the study 5 of the 50 couples separated.During the first data collection, couples provided demographic information and received a battery of inventories. The Edwards Personal Preference Schedule (EPPS) was used to measure personality needs and interests. To measure the directions of energy commitment, the Energy Commitment Survey (ECS) was administered. Three marital adjustment scales were administered: the Locke Short Marital Adjustment Scale, the Kentucky Marital Adjustment Scale (KMAS), and a modified Renne Likert scale. During the collection of data, husband and wife were seated separately to ensure confidentiality of answers. Following was a six month interval during which the couples were given interpretations of their results. Results of an individual were not revealed to his or her spouse. After the six month interval of time, a second administration of the Renne Likert scale was mailed to the subjects. Separate stamped, pre-addressed envelopes were provided to ensure that spouses would not compare answers. At that time, the couples were also asked whether they had had a period of separation, of what length, and for what reasons.Statistical correlations were performed on all demographic and inventory variables with respect to whether the individuals had separated during the study. Correlations were made on individual scores as well as scores of couple differences. Additionally, a series of t-tests was also performed between those individuals that had separated and those that had not. Analysis of data revealed several significant items at the p<.05 level. Individuals that separated were noted to be older and had had fewer previous separations. With respect to the EPPS variables, females who separated had much less of a need for help, assistance, and concern from others than did those females that did not separate. Significant differences between females and males who separated were found on the variable of Intraception with the females having a greater need to examine the motives of the behavior of themselves and others. Differences on the variable of Achievement between males and females who separated approached significant levels with males showing a higher need for achievement and success. There were no significant results obtained in analyzing the data on the ECS. Analysis of the data obtained on the three marital adjustment scales revealed that loneliness and isolation were directly related to separation (p<.05). In addition it was discovered that the Renne Likert scale had equal or better power to distinguish marital adjustment at the p<.0l level than did the much longer KMAS or Locke scale.

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