• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 870
  • 332
  • 54
  • 28
  • 20
  • 16
  • 16
  • 11
  • 10
  • 10
  • 10
  • 10
  • 10
  • 9
  • 9
  • Tagged with
  • 1671
  • 1671
  • 471
  • 420
  • 326
  • 316
  • 303
  • 223
  • 142
  • 140
  • 134
  • 130
  • 122
  • 117
  • 113
  • 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.
271

Children's conceptions of pride

Zwiers, Michael Lee 05 1900 (has links)
One of the major concerns of counselling psychology is to foster development rather than to simply remediate problems. One of the emotions through which proactive development might be facilitated is pride. Pride has potential connections to achievement motivation, care and attention toward work, task persistence, self-competence, esteem, and general productive well-being within a social context. The purpose of this study was to describe children's conceptions of pride in the anticipation that knowing about these conceptions would help indicate ways for counsellors to intervene. Using phenomenography, a descriptive research methodology that emphasizes conceptions of things experienced, child participants in Grades 2, 4, and 7 were interviewed to determine their conceptions of pride. The children were invited to talk about pride, mainly by telling stories of experiences with pride. The resulting narratives were analyzed to sift out all qualitatively distinct categories of meaning for pride, mapping the general domain of the emotion. Eight distinct conceptions emerged, including three active or doing conceptions (achieving, acting ethically, and acting independently) and five having conceptions (possessing, having a desired attribute or ability, belonging, having special status, and pride by association). All conceptions were represented in all three grades sampled, with no outstanding age- or gender-related differences. Research results contribute to our knowledge of how children experience and comprehend pride, and point toward educational and psychological implications for those who parent, educate, or counsel children.
272

The development of event clusters in autobiographical memory

Svob, Connie Unknown Date
No description available.
273

Children's behavioral and evaluative reactions to a disagreeing peer

Sougavinski, Marc. January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
274

The effects of self-concept treatment on global and specific areas of self-concepts of first and third graders

Wilson, Rebecca Jo January 1991 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to determine whether global and area specific self-concept decreased as students advanced in the elementary grades and whether an educational program to increase self-concept affected global and area specific self-concept in a positive way. The participants were 154 first and third grade students from eight intact classrooms in two public elementary schools in a rural midwestern school district.An altered Non-Equivalent Control Group Design was utilized in which the self-concept treatment was administered to School A between Test One and Test Two and to School B between Test Two and Test Three.A repeated measures design and a MANOVA were used to test the seven null hypotheses at the .05 level of significance. The three hypotheses that were rejected dealt with increased self-concept scores for first and third graders after the treatment was given and differences in specific areas of self-concept.The following results were reported:1. There was a decline in global self-concepts from first to third grades, but the difference was not significant.2. Self-concept scores for first and third graders increased after the treatment.3. The only significant difference on the six specific area subtest scores between first and third grade students existed on the intellectual and school status subtest.The researcher concluded that the treatment may have been related to the increase in self-concept scores for both first and third graders.Recommendations for further research included replication and expansion of this study with various grade levels, different self-concept tests and interventions. / Department of Elementary Education
275

Visual-motor development and the emergence of emotional indicators : a reexamination of the Bender gestalt test with young children

Morrongiello, Michael A. January 1989 (has links)
The purpose of this investigation was to determine the extent to which visual-motor maturity influenced the emergence of diagnostic emotional signs on the Bender Gestalt Test. The Bender Gestalt Test was administered to 400 first and second grade students from lower middle class homes in Wisconsin. The subjects were in regular education classes and were, therefore, not identified as having learning or emotional problems. Each subject was given a Bender Gestalt Test, which was subsequently scored for developmental errors and emotional indicators according to the Koppitz system. Pearson product moment correlation coefficients were computed for all emotional indicators and all developmental errors. This was referred to as the omnibus correlation coefficient. Correlations were also computed for all developmental errors and each emotional indicator. A coefficient of determination was computed for all developmental errors and all emotional indicators. Finally, the frequency of each emotional indicator was plotted at each developmental age. The omnibus correlation and the following emotional indicators attained statistical significance confused order, wavy line, increased size, and small size. All of the correlations indicated little if any relationship exists between emotional indicators and developmental errors. In addition, little if any variance is shared by the two above named entities. While the appearance of confused order and increasing size can be attributed to developmental factors, the emergence of small size cannot. Several emotional indicators appear almost unrelated to visual-motor development, specifically dashes for circles, large size, and expansion. When these emotional indicators appear in the protocols of young children further investigation regarding emotional functioning seems warranted. Wavy line and confused order do appear frequently. This suggests that it is not unusual for children to render these emotional indicators. / Department of Educational Psychology
276

Perceptions of what children need from their fathers : an empirical investigation of generative fathering / Generative fathering

Novack, Gerald J. 21 July 2012 (has links)
This study examines recommendations regarding what children need from their fathers at various ages and what men can do to help their children with those needs. Data collected in this study do not support recommendations as they appear in the conceptual ethic of Generative Fathering (Dollahite & Hawkins, 1998). However, trends in the data suggest that, across the lifespan, children have a primary need for overt displays of love and nurturing. There is evidence that young children need their fathers to be physically present. Young children also seem to need support and acceptance from their fathers, though how exactly fathers demonstrate that support and acceptance might change as the child develops. The data suggest that as the child transitions out of childhood and into adolescence and adulthood, the need for physical presence diminishes and the needs for support and acceptance, and advice and guidance emerge as more primary. / Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services
277

The effects of ego-involvement and role-taking in the moral judgment decision making process of first grade children / Moral judgment decision making process of first grade children

Berg, Myrna Gail January 1980 (has links)
The analysis of variance procedure was used to test each of the hypotheses. Three of the hypotheses were rejected at the .05 level of significance. Under the neutral story format, ego-involved subjects rated their behavior more positively than did role-taking subjects. Under the positive story format, ego-involved subjects rated their behavior more negatively than role-taking subjects. This difference was not in the anticipated direction. Under the positive story format, intentional story subjects rated their behavior more positively than accidental story subjects.The following null hypotheses for the neutral story condition failed to be rejected: there would be no statistically significant difference between the behavior ratings of subjects presented an intentional story format and subjects presented an accidental story format; and there would be no statistically significant difference between behavioral ratings of male and female subjects.One null hypothesis for the positive story condition failed to be rejected: there would be no statistically significant difference between the behavioral ratings of male and female subjects.All three null hypotheses for the negative story conditions failed to be rejected: there would be no statistically significant difference between the behavior ratings of ego-involved subjects and role-taking subjects, there would be no statistically significant difference between the behavioral ratings of subjects presented an intentional story format and subjects presented an accidental story format, and there would be no statistically significant difference between the behavioral ratings of male and female subjects. The results of the study suggest that affect does play a greater role in the moral judgment decision making process than has been previously recognized.
278

La senda oscura : determinismo biológico y determinismo social en cuatro novelas de Miguel Delibes

Guilhamet, Margaret R. January 1989 (has links)
No description available.
279

The Effects Of Traditional Playground Equipment Design In Children&amp / #8217 / s Developmental Needs

Metin, Pinar 01 January 2003 (has links) (PDF)
In this research, concept of play and types of outdoor playgrounds were explored in the light of the relevant literature. A field study was conducted in order to determine the attributes of traditional type playground equipment in children&amp / #8217 / s developmental needs. KurtuluS Park of Ankara was determined as the research area whereas, 70 children, aged between 6 to 12, were randomly selected and observed. Data on age, sex, favourite type of playground equipment and play behaviour of the child were collected by means of an observation sheet. A short interview with the child was also conducted after the observation session. Collected data were encoded, analyzed and interpretted by using Pearson&amp / #8217 / s Chi-square Test and Fisher&amp / #8217 / s Exact Chi-square Test with 95% ( &amp / #945 / = 0.05 ) confidence intervals. The results of the field study revealed that today&amp / #8217 / s playgrounds have little value in terms of play. Limitations of fixed playground equipment directly affect children&amp / #8217 / s developmental needs. The findings of the research study indicates that traditional type play structures support physical and social development of the child to a certain extent. However, this kind of equipment do not foster cognitive and emotional development of children.
280

Attention Regulation and Social Competence in Younger Siblings of Children with Autism

Mohapatra, Leena 14 December 2011 (has links)
Younger siblings of children with autism (Sibs-ASD) are at risk for the development of an Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) or subclinical social and cognitive deficits better known as the Broader Autism Phenotype (BAP).The current study utilized a multi-level approach to examine executive attention and social competence in preschool-aged Sibs-ASD and a comparison group of age-, sex-, and Verbal IQ-matched younger siblings of children without autism (Sibs-COM). Forty-two participants (24 Sibs-ASD, 18 Sibs-COM) completed a modified version of the Children’s Attention Network Task (ANT), with electroencephalograph (EEG) collected simultaneously, and a peer interaction paradigm with an unfamiliar peer.Overall, Sibs-ASD and Sibs-COM displayed comparable performance on behavioral indices of the Children’s ANT, P3 amplitude and latency, and measures of observed social functioning. Surprisingly, Sibs-ASD displayed a reduced (less negative) N2 amplitude and shorter N2 latency, most evident at Fz compared to FCz, a finding not observed in Sibs-COM. Furthermore, on a parent-report index of social functioning,Sibs-ASD reportedly displayed greater social impairments than Sibs-COM. Interestingly, post-hoc analyses indicated that differences in N2 amplitude and social functioning were most apparent between affected Sibs-ASD and Sibs-COM. Therefore, results of this study provide support for social and cognitive deficits consistent with theories of the BAP.

Page generated in 0.414 seconds