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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.
241

Working mothers, child care and the organisation : an ecosystemic exploration

Marques, Paula Alexandra de Graça 11 1900 (has links)
In this study an ecosystemic and social constructionist approach is used to understand the meanings and perceptions held by working mothers in relation to their experiences with the childcare and organisation settings. These meanings are described in terms of the influence of wider social discourses, personal epistemological assumptions, tacit knowledge, past experiences and current contexts. The working mothers, together with the researcher, form a linguistic system in which meanings about motherhood, employer-support and childcare arrangements are co-constructed and shared. The relationships between the working mothers and the researcher are not only observed within a linguistic context, but also within the ecosystemic view of mutual reciprocity, self-referentiality and double description. A qualitative and naturalistic research methodology is followed to describe the emergent design and the grounded theory. Based on the qualitative paradigm, the conclusions drawn at the end of the study are idiographic and reflective. / Psychology / M.A.(Clinical Psychology)
242

Funkce školní družiny očima dětí, rodičů a vychovatelů / The Function of After-school Club in Point of View of the Parents, children and educators

JECHOVÁ, Hedvika January 2018 (has links)
My thesis aims at the function of breakfast and after school clubs based on children's, parents and supervisors' views. The quantitative research took place in three different clubs in three different local primary schools, and the other part of the qualitative research is based on semi structured interviews with 5 different after school members of staff. The theoretical part of my thesis analyses the topic free time before and after school and two concrete sociological researches. Furthermore it describes the function of before and after school clubs based on Pavkova and Hajek literature. The next part is aimed at supervisors' and family function. The last part of my theoretical thesis is aimed at pupils milestones at primary schools. The practical part is devided into qualitative and quantitative research. In the quantitative research the questionnaires for parents and children have been analysed and seen in tables and grafs. The research questions aim at to find out what is perceived as the most important function of before and after school clubs and what they liked to be improved. The qualitative part is aimed at analysing a semi-structured questionnaire. It aims at supervisors' purpose, relationships between them and the parents, relationships between the pupils and members of staff.
243

The development of L2 emergent literacy in Hong Kong kindergarten children

Chan, Lydia L. S. January 2009 (has links)
This thesis explores the development of emergent literacy in Hong Kong Kindergarten children who are learning English as a Second Language (L2). Two interrelated empirical studies have been conducted, and both aim to examine the contribution of code-related and oral language skills to predicting early L2 reading ability, controlling for home influences. The majority of research on emergent literacy has been conducted on First-Language (L1) English-speaking children, and it is possible that these established concepts and models could also be relevant to L2 children. The first is a 2-year longitudinal study examining the continuity of L2 emergent literacy development in Hong Kong children from Kindergarten to early Primary school. The convenience sample of 51 children were initially assessed in their final or penultimate year of Kindergarten (mean age: 4;6 SD = 6.16) on 3 emergent literacy measures (receptive vocabulary, phonological awareness, letter identification) and a non-verbal cognitive measure. They later progressed onto the Primary section of the same school, and were assessed again as first or second-graders (mean age: 6;4 SD = 6.21) on a more comprehensive battery of measures. An extensive parental questionnaire on family demographics and the home literacy environment was also administered. In addition to assessing a wide range of L2 emergent literacy skills and English word reading ability, a Chinese syllable deletion task was also included, to explore the potential effects of cross-linguistic phonological transfer between the children’s L1 (Cantonese) and L2 (English). The second study sought to improve upon the first by selecting a larger, more representative sample of children from 3 bilingual Kindergartens in the Kowloon City School District. It examines the concurrent relationships between emergent literacy skills and L2 word reading ability in 137 children. They were all in their final year of Kindergarten (mean age: 5;2 SD = 5.61), and were assessed once on largely the same battery of measures as Study 1 (Time 2). Again, a non-verbal cognitive measure was administered, as well as the parental questionnaire on home support for language development. The main data analysis was carried out via multivariate statistical techniques such as multiple regression. Further analysis was conducted using structural equation modelling in Study 2, but in a cautious and exploratory manner. The overall findings suggest that like the L1 emergent literacy model, early L2 word reading ability is predominantly influenced by children’s code-related skills, especially print knowledge and phonological sensitivity. Also, the relationship between oral language and word reading seems to be mediated by code-related skills. Thus, while oral language abilities do not appear to make substantial direct contributions to early L2 reading, they do play an essential albeit indirect role. Furthermore, L2 children’s home influences seem to make their strongest impact before formal schooling begins, again in the form of indirect effects on pre-school oral language skills. In short, the development of emergent literacy and early word reading skills is similar in many ways for both L1 and L2 children, and implications for practice are considered.
244

Directors’ perceptions of parent involvement in the Early Head Start and Sure Start early intervention programs : a cross-Atlantic study

Ross, K. B. January 2010 (has links)
This research is a cross-Atlantic study of Sure Start and Early Head Start program directors' perceptions of parent involvement in their early intervention programs, with a focus on the provision and take-up of parenting and employability-focused services. The review of the literature, which informed the survey design and the later data chapters, focuses on poverty and parenting, working parents, welfare reform, and early intervention programs, including early childhood education and care policies in England and the United States. Data was collected via an online survey, administered to all those individuals directing either a Sure Start Local Programme (including those that had been designated as Children's Centres) in England or an Early Head Start program in the USA. There was a 40.3% response rate (231 English and 236 American directors, resulting in a total of 467 respondents). The survey questioned directors on their background, and also sought their views of the area in which their program operated, characteristics of their programs and their perceptions of the families accessing the parent-focused services offered by their early intervention program. The resulting data was used to address the primary theme of parenting and employability, drawing associations between reported parent involvement and directors' perceptions of area, program and family characteristics. The findings also led to the establishment of secondary themes: the targeting and catchment area approach to service provision, engaging disadvantaged families, relationships with partner agencies, issues of funding and resources, particularly for staff, and the expansion of Children's Centres. A summary report was sent to all participating directors. It is hoped that this research has benefited program directors, providing insights into the local-level experiences had by their colleagues both within their own country and across the Atlantic, particularly with respect to parent involvement in early intervention programs.
245

Différents parcours de fréquentation des milieux de garde peuvent-ils modérer le lien prédictif entre les caractéristiques socio-familiales et le niveau de préparation scolaire des enfants?

Comeau, Stéphanie 07 1900 (has links)
Le niveau de préparation scolaire des enfants est un prédicteur important de la réussite scolaire ultérieure. Les études ont montré que la fréquentation d’un milieu de garde extra-familial avant l’entrée en maternelle influence le niveau de préparation scolaire des enfants. L’objectif de cette étude est d’examiner quels parcours de garde sont associés à une meilleure préparation scolaire autant sur le plan cognitif que socio-émotionnel. Le second objectif est d’examiner si les différents parcours de garde contribuent différemment à la préparation scolaire selon les caractéristiques socio-familiales de l’enfant. Cinq cent soixante-douze enfants ont été recrutés à partir du registre des naissances du Québec et ont été suivis de l’âge de 5 mois jusqu’à leur entrée en maternelle. Trois parcours de garde ont été considérés: la garde continue en milieu familial (F-F), la garde en milieu familial durant la petite enfance suivie de la garde en installation durant l’âge préscolaire (F-I) et la garde continue en installation (I-I). Le niveau de préparation scolaire des enfants ayant suivi un de ces parcours de garde a été comparé à celui des enfants n’ayant jamais fréquenté de façon régulière un service de garde. La dimension cognitive de la préparation scolaire a été évaluée à l’aide du test du Lollipop et la dimension socio-émotionnelle à l’aide du Questionnaire des comportements sociaux. Les résultats indiquent qu’un parcours de garde favorise la dimension cognitive de la préparation scolaire de tous les enfants, sans nuire à la dimension socio-émotionnelle : le parcours F-I. On observe en outre un effet modérateur de la scolarité maternelle : lorsque les mères ont fait des études universitaires, la préparation scolaire de leurs enfants sur les deux dimensions de la préparation scolaire est aussi élevée pour ceux qui n’ont jamais fréquenté de service de garde sur une base régulière que pour ceux qui ont suivi le parcours de garde F-I. La présente étude confirme la contribution positive des milieux de garde au développement cognitif des enfants de milieux défavorisés. De plus, les résultats de cette étude précisent quel parcours de garde est associé à la meilleure préparation scolaire des enfants. Le parcours de garde F-I pourrait contribuer à réduire l’écart entre ceux qui sont prêts à entrer à l’école et ceux qui ne le sont pas et favoriser le succès scolaire pour tous les enfants, réduisant du coup les inégalités sociales. / School readiness is an important predictor of future academic success. Studies have shown that childcare before kindergarten entry influences academic readiness of children. The objective of this study is to examine which sequences of childcare type are associated with better cognitive and socio-emotional school readiness. The second objective is to examine whether the different sequences of childcare type contribute differently to the school readiness as function of social and family characteristics. 572 children from Quebec were randomly selected from the birth’s register and were followed from 5 months of age until they entered kindergarten. Three sequences of childcare type were considered: continuous home-based care (F-F), home-based care in infancy and center care during preschool period (F-I) and continuous center care (I-I). School readiness of children following one of these sequences of childcare type was compared to those of children who have never used a regular type of care. Cognitive school readiness was assessed with the Lollipop test and socio-emotional school readiness was assessed with the Social Behavior Questionnaire. The sequence of childcare type that promotes the best cognitive school readiness without compromising the socio-emotional dimension is the F-I sequence. Conversely, when the mother had a high level of education (university), children who have stayed at home are as well prepared to enter school as the ones that had followed the F-I sequence of care. Findings of this study confirm the positive contribution of childcare on cognitive development of disadvantaged children. In addition, results of this study specify which sequence of care promotes optimal child development. Attending F-I sequence could reduce the gap between those who are ready to enter school and those who are not and thus ensure that all children start school with the same chance of success. In this way, it would be possible to reduce social inequalities.
246

Perceptions du «bien manger» chez des intervenants clés agissant auprès d’enfants fréquentant des services de garde préscolaires

Baillargeon, Amélie 04 1900 (has links)
Contexte : La petite enfance constitue une période importante dans l’acquisition de saines habitudes alimentaires. Par leurs connaissances, attitudes, croyances, pratiques et perceptions en alimentation et nutrition, plusieurs intervenants influencent les jeunes enfants : parents, responsables de l’alimentation et éducatrices en services de garde. Objectifs : Cette étude décrit et analyse les perceptions du « bien manger » de 113 responsables de l’alimentation, de 302 éducatrices et de 709 parents d’enfants âgés de 2 à 5 ans en services de garde au Québec. Méthodologie : Ce mémoire porte sur une question ouverte, répétée dans trois questionnaires autoadministrés de la recherche Offres et pratiques alimentaires revues dans les services de garde au Québec. Les réponses ont été recueillies de 2009 à 2010 et analysées au moyen d’une grille de codification construite de manières déductive et inductive. Résultats : L’analyse des données recueillies montre la récurrence des thèmes de la variété, l’équilibre, la modération, des légumes et fruits, mais aussi l’émergence du plaisir, de la santé, du GAC, des qualités organoleptiques, des pratiques coercitives et de la commensalité. Cette recherche dévoile que la variété, la santé et l’équilibre sont communs aux trois catégories d’intervenants, alors que le GAC, le plaisir, la saine alimentation et les qualités organoleptiques figurent plutôt dans les perceptions d’intervenants spécifiques. Conclusion : Ce portrait illustre la compréhension du « bien manger » qu’ont des intervenants jouant un rôle important dans le développement d’enfants âgés de 2 à 5 ans. En outre, il permet d’éclairer les acteurs développant messages, interventions et politiques de santé publique faisant la promotion de la saine alimentation et favorisant la mise en place d’environnements appuyant l’adoption de saines habitudes alimentaires dans les services de garde du Québec ainsi que dans les ménages. / Context: Preschool age represents an important period for the acquisition of healthy eating habits. With their knowledge, attitudes, beliefs, practices and perceptions with regard to eating and nutrition, several stakeholders influence children: parents, but also foodservice managers and educators in childcare centres. Objectives: This study describes and analyzes the perceptions of “eating well” of 113 foodservice managers, 302 educators and 709 parents of 2 to 5-year-old children in childcare centres of Quebec. Methodology: This study focuses on an open-ended question, repeated in three self-administered questionnaires taken from the research Offres et pratiques alimentaires revues dans les services de garde au Québec. Data collected between 2009 and 2010 was analyzed using a coding grid crafted by induction and deduction. Results: Qualitative data analysis revealed the recurrence of several themes such as variety, balance, moderation, vegetables and fruits, as well as the emergence of pleasure, health, Canadian Food Guide, organoleptic qualities, coercive practices and commensality. Findings indicate that variety, health and balance are perceptions common to all three categories of stakeholders, while the Canadian Food Guide, pleasure, healthy eating and organoleptic qualities are specific to certain stakeholders. Conclusion: This portrait sheds some light on how “eating well” is understood by stakeholders who play an important role in the development of 2 to 5-year-old children. It also informs actors developing public health messages, interventions and policies promoting healthy eating and encouraging the set up of environments supporting the adoption of healthy eating habits in childcare centres of Quebec, as well as in households.
247

Discursos de mães sobre educação e cuidado do bebê de área rural

Reis, Mauricio Muniz dos 11 March 2015 (has links)
Made available in DSpace on 2016-04-29T13:31:17Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Mauricio Muniz dos Reis.pdf: 1760827 bytes, checksum: 4c46bdf29f0ea57a42da34b7d8bcb5b5 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2015-03-11 / Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior / This research has the objective to capture, describe and interpret mothers speeches in agricultural families living in rural area about education and care of babies. It integrates the Gender, Race and Age Studies Center (NEGRI) of the Post-Graduate Studies Program in Social Psychology at the Catholic University of São Paulo (PUC-SP), coordinated by Doctored Professor Fulvia Rosemberg. NEGRI has contributed to the construction of a field of study that aims to take out the early childhood, especially the baby, from the invisibility in which it is immersed and contribute to the policy statement of their right to a quality public education. In Brazil, children from 0 to 3 years of age belong to a social time discriminated by Brazilian society in academic and political field. This research discusses the Early Childhood Education in Rural Area, expanding the visibility of the small child and inserting the issue onto the agenda of public education policies, especially nursery. Based on the literature, we used theoretical social studies of childhood that helped the analysis and interpretation departing from conceptions of childhood as a social construction and the child as a social actor and subject of rights, besides the notion of habitus of Pierre Bourdieu, which allows understanding socialization and its influence on individual choices. In the socio-historical context, it is made an analysis of factors contributing to the need for specific childhood education in the rural area, as well as legislation and public policies of childhood. In the methodological field, we use the concept of Depth Hermeneutics (DH) developed by Thompson (2009), which provides guidelines for studies of symbolic forms in general. The method is the content analysis (CA) proposed by Bardin (1977) and Rosenberg (1981). The prospect of NEGRI is to observe how the various social actors understand the day-care as a space for the extra-family education for children of 0 to 3 years of age. Thus, semi-structured interviews were conducted with three mothers of babies or children of 0 to 3 years of age in the rural area of Pouso Alegre, Minas Gerais State. These mothers understand the daycare as an appropriate space for education and baby care and see nursery as a place that provides peace of mind to work without the guilt of subjecting children, still small, to a great burden of suffering. The study conclude that, in addition to gender relations, race and age, household situation also maintains relations of social inequality / Esta pesquisa tem por objetivo geral captar, descrever e interpretar discursos de mães pertencentes a famílias agrícolas e residentes em área rural sobre a educação e o cuidado do bebê. Ela integra-se ao Núcleo de Estudos de Gênero, Raça e Idade (NEGRI), do Programa de Estudos Pós-Graduados em Psicologia Social da Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo (PUC-SP), coordenado pela Prof.ª-Drª. Fúlvia Rosemberg. O NEGRI vem contribuindo para a construção de um campo de estudos que tem por finalidade tirar a pequena infância, em especial o bebê, da invisibilidade em que se encontra e contribuir para a afirmação política de seu direito à educação pública de qualidade. No Brasil, a criança de 0 a 3 anos pertence a um tempo social discriminado pela sociedade no campo acadêmico e político. Esta pesquisa discute a Educação Infantil em Área Rural, ampliando assim a visibilidade do bebê e da criança pequena e contribuindo para a inserção o tema na agenda de políticas públicas de educação, em especial a creche. Com base na literatura sobre o tema, utilizam-se como aportes teóricos os estudos sociais da infância, que têm auxiliado nas análises e interpretações que partem de concepções de infância como construção social e da criança como ator social e sujeito de direitos e a noção de habitus de Pierre Bourdieu, que possibilita entender como se dá a socialização e sua influência nas escolhas dos indivíduos. No contexto sócio-histórico, faz-se uma análise dos fatores que contribuíram para a necessidade de uma educação infantil específica para a área rural, assim como da legislação e das políticas públicas da infância. No campo metodológico, utiliza-se a noção de Hermenêutica de Profundidade (HP) proposta por Thompson (2009), que oferece orientações para os estudos das formas simbólicas em geral. O método será a análise de conteúdo (AC) proposta por Bardin (1977) e Rosemberg (1981). A perspectiva do NEGRI é observar como os diversos atores sociais compreendem a creche pública como espaço destinado à educação extrafamiliar para crianças de 0 a 3 anos de idade. Assim, foram realizadas entrevistas semiestruturadas com três mães de bebês ou crianças pequenas de 0 a 3 anos de idade na região rural de Pouso Alegre, Estado de Minas Gerais. Estas mães compreendem a creche pública como espaço apropriado para a educação e o cuidado do bebê e da criança pequena, além disso, veem a creche como local que proporciona tranquilidade para trabalhar sem a culpa de submeter os filhos, ainda pequenos, a grande carga de sofrimento. Conclui-se do estudo que, além das relações de gênero, raça e idade, a situação de domicílio também sustenta relações de desigualdade social
248

Eating Frequency and the Role of Snacking on Body Weight of WIC Preschool Children

Charvet, Andrea 19 June 2018 (has links)
The objective of this study was to understand the influence of eating episodes and snack quality on body weight of children ages 3-4.9 years participating in the Broward County Special Supplementation Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC).Additional objectives were to evaluate obesity risk factors and to examine the effect of childcare arrangements on body weight. Data was collected from 7 Broward County Health Department WIC clinics over 4 months via a researcher-administered questionnaire. Additional data was extracted from the WIC data system. BMI-for-age percentiles were used to categorize children by weight according to Centers for Disease Control (CDC) guidelines, which were further categorized into under/normal weight and overweight/obese. There were 197 participants included (45.7% boys), 3.6% of the children were underweight, 64.4% normal weight, 16.8% overweight, and 15.2% were obese. Most children consumed 3 meals (97.5%) and 2 to 3 snacks per day (33.0% and 37.1% respectively), with a significantly higher intake of snacks on the weekends when compared to weekdays (p=0.001). Children consumed more nutritious snacks more often (66%) than the nutrient-poor snacks (33.5%). We observed a marginally significant trend in which the WIC preschool children that more frequently consumed nutrient-poor snacks had a higher prevalence of overweight/obesity (p=0.090). In multivariate analyses, the children who consumed more than 4-oz of sugar sweetened beverages (SSB) per day, exercised for less than 1 hour per day, and had a higher birth weight had increased odds of being overweight/obese. Race and ethnicity were not predictive of body weight status, but Blacks or African Americans were at a higher risk for many of the risk factors. Children spent on average 20 hours per week under some type of nonparental care arrangement. There was no significant relationship between childcare and weight status. Our findings indicate that WIC children are at a greater risk for overweight and obesity, however there is potential for successful prevention interventions addressing prevalent risk factors. Longitudinal studies including a large sample of racial and ethnic diverse preschool children from low socioeconomic families could help elucidate the results from our study. This study was approved by FIU IRB (Protocol Approval #15-0369) the State of Florida Department of Health IRB (Protocol Title: Meal Frequency and the Role of Snacking on Weight of Minority Preschool Children).
249

Family resources as predictors of positive family-to-work spillover

Kempton-Doane, Gina Leah 04 April 2008
The purpose of this study was to predict the family resources that influence positive family-to-work spillover for women who are engaged in parent, partner, and paid employee roles. While much research examines the construct of work-family conflict, little examines the positive benefits for women participating in multiple roles. A conceptual framework for the study was obtained from Voydanoffs (2002) work applying ecological systems theory to the work-family interface. Several factors were hypothesized to predict positive family-to-work spillover for multiple role women, including: spousal support; perceived fairness in the division of housework and childcare; relative share of childcare and housework; and paid assistance with housework.<p>Data for this study was collected in a survey designed for a larger assessment of work, family, gender, and health in the Saskatoon area. The current study utilized data collected from women who met the following criteria: 1) spoke fluent English; 2) fell between the ages of 25 - 54 years; 3) were employed full-time or part-time; and 4) were the parent of at least one child under the age of 20 years. The dependent variable was a measure of positive family-to-work spillover. Independent variables included: spousal support; perceived fairness of the division of childcare; perceived fairness of the division of housework; relative of share of housework for respondents compared to ones partner; and paid assistance with housework. Control variables included income, presence of preschool children, number of children, educational attainment, and hours of paid employment. A sequential multiple regression was performed to predict positive family-to-work spillover from the independent variables. The final regression model predicting positive family-to-work spillover included three independent variables: 1) spousal support; 2) the perception of division of childcare as unfair to ones partner; and 3) relative share of housework for the respondent. Implications and limitations of these findings are discussed.
250

New Home, New Learning: Chinese Immigrants, Unpaid Household Work, and Lifelong Learning

Liu, Lichun Willa 28 February 2011 (has links)
Literature on lifelong learning indicates that major life transitions lead to significant learning. However, compared to learning in paid jobs, learning in and through household work has received little attention, given the unpaid nature and the private sphere where the learning occurs. The current study examined the changes and the learning involved in three aspects of household work: food work, childcare/parenting, and emotion work among recent Chinese immigrants in Canada. This study draws on data from a Canadian Survey on Work and Lifelong Learning (WALL), 20 individual interviews, a focus group, and a discussion group with new Chinese professional immigrants in the Greater Toronto Area. The results indicate that food work and childcare increased dramatically after immigration due to a sudden decline of economic resources and the lack of social support network for childcare. Emotion work intensified due to the challenges in paid jobs and the absence of extended families in the new homeland. To adapt to the changes in their social and economic situations, and to integrate into the Canadian society, Chinese immigrants learned new beliefs and practices about food and childrearing, developed new knowledge and skills in cooking and grocery shopping, in childcare and disciplining, in solving conflicts with children and spouses, and in transnational kin maintenance. In addition, the Chinese immigrants also developed new views about family, paid and unpaid work, meaning of life, and new gender and ethnic identities. However, these dramatic changes did not shatter the gendered division of household work. Both the qualitative and the quantitative data suggest that women not only do more but also different types of household tasks. As a result, it is not surprising that both the content and the ways of learning associated with household work varied by gender, class, and ethnicity. By exploring learning involved in the four dimensions of household work: physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual, this dissertation demonstrates that learning is both lifelong and lifewide. By making household work visible, this research helps make visible the value of the unpaid work and the learning involved in it.

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