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What helps and what hinders in cross-cultural supervision : a critical incident studyWong, Lilian Chui Jan 11 1900 (has links)
The present study investigated what helped and what hindered multicultural supervision. The participants consisted of 19 females, and 6 males, including Asian-Canadians, Indo- Canadians, First Nations, Latin-Canadian and Afro-Canadian. They were individually interviewed, following an expanded version of Flanagan's (1954) Critical Incident Technique. There were 340 relevant meaning units related to positive incidents and 386 meaning units related to negative incidents. Forty-two meaning units were associated with coping efforts, and 87 meaning units were on recommendations. Categories extracted from these meaning units were grouped as follows: (a) 20 positive categories, (b) 15 negative categories, (c) 15 coping categories, and (d) 33 recommendations. The reliability of classifying meaning units according to these categories was satisfactory, based on inter-judge agreement (80% and higher). The validity of content analysis was established by (a) confirmation by participants, (b) crossvalidation by other participants, (c) cross-validation by an independent judge, and (d) cross-validation by other researchers. The most frequently cited positive categories were subsumed under five key areas: (a) personal attributes of the supervisor, (b) supervision competencies, (c) mentoring, (d) relationship, and (e) multicultural supervision competencies. The most frequently reported negative categories were associated with the following five areas: (a) personal difficulties as a visible minority, (b) negative personal attributes of the supervisor, (c) lack of a safe and trusting relationship, (d) lack of multicultural supervision competencies, and (e) lack of supervision competencies. The coping efforts employed were grouped into four areas: (a) help seeking, (b) existential coping, (c) active coping, and (d) emotional coping. Finally, recommendations were also grouped into four broad areas: (a) needs to improve the quality of supervision, (b) needs to improve multicultural supervision competencies, (c) needs for educational institutions to make changes, and (d) needs for minority students to make changes. The study provided a comprehensive picture of what works and what does not work in multicultural supervision. The results support a mentoring model, which posits that supervision is effective to the extent that the supervisor takes on the role of a mentor. The practical implications of the study include the need for cross-cultural supervision competencies and mentoring graduate students.
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Pirbhai’s blessings : a narrative quest towards a pedagogy of virtuesVellani, Al-Munir 11 1900 (has links)
Metaphors of "journey" or "rootlessness" are often used to describe
movements of people across cultural and social spaces, and physical geographies.
Such journeys whilst revealing stories that speak of a people's voice, are rarely
seen as embodying an implicit quest for a narrative unity with a teleology and
pedagogy, sui generis. This inquiry focuses upon the narrative journey of one
such community of "travellers," the Indian Ismailis, who left their timeworn
homeland in the North Western region of the Indian Subcontinent at the end of
the nineteenth century and travelled to colonial Eastern Africa to make the land
their new home. In the early 1970' s , however, political unrest in this now
"postcolonial" region prompted the succeeding generations of the earlier pioneers
to once again uproot their African home and undertake yet another journey, this
time towards the so-called modern societies of Canada and other Western
countries. This historical and often turbulent intergenerational voyage of over a
hundred years is also a continuous journey of a modern selfhood in aporia as it
experiences and traverses the various institutions, practices, and milieus of
modernity, while attempting to engage with or update its own biographical
narrative.
Using the important and primary genre of shared conversations implicit
within a narrative and hermeneutical inquiry, this project acts as witness and
delves into the narratives of a diverse group of individuals from four generations
of these travellers. It is proposed that in these intergenerational conversations
and stories lie experiences and expressions of praxis that also reveal or point
towards moral enablements of practices and virtues, and arguments that make
present a "living tradition." This tradition, it is felt, can act as a significant and
inescapable horizon - a robust historical consciousness - from which a modern
selfhood in aporia can once again begin to update its own narrative as part of a
continuous story of a community with a teleology, and which the current and
future generations of these "travellers" can recognize, argue, update, and
ultimately possess as they venture purposefully into the community's shared
future.
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The relationship between pain appraisals and coping strategy use and adaptation to chronic low back pain: a daily diary studyGrant, Lynda D. 11 1900 (has links)
Data from daily diaries were used to examine the relationships between
daily pain appraisals (Catastrophizing, Self-Efficacy, and perceived control over
pain) and coping strategy use (Distraction, Ignoring Pain, Praying and Hoping, and
Reinterpreting Pain Sensation) and nighttime negative mood and pain intensity for
88 women (mean age 46.83 years, SD 11.90) with chronic low back pain who
were not attending a specialized pain treatment program. These relationships were
examined at two levels using the Hierarchical Linear Modeling program (Bryk &
Raudenbush, 1992). The first level of analyses examined whether pain appraisals
and coping strategy use during the day predicted levels of nighttime depressed and
anxious mood, and pain. This analysis was based on 30 days of monitoring for
each participant. The second level of analyses examined whether these daily
processes could be predicted by psychosocial and functional variables important to
the experience of chronic pain. This analysis was based on the Mutidimensional
Pain Inventory (Kerns, Turk, & Rudy, 1985) completed prior to participants
beginning the daily monitoring.
There were four major findings in this study. First, pain appraisals were
more predictive of negative mood and pain intensity than coping strategy use, with
Catastrophizing the strongest predictor of depressed and anxious mood, and
control the strongest predictor of pain intensity. Second, general affective distress
predicted higher levels of negative mood on a daily basis. Third, women who perceived their pain to be interfering a great deal in their lives were more anxious
on a daily basis. Fourth, punishing spousal responses predicted nightly negative
mood and pain more than solicitous or distracting spousal responses.
These results are similar to findings based on patients attending pain
treatment programs. This suggests that some of the same processes identified in
clinical pain patients may apply to low back pain sufferers in the community who
are comparable to study participants. The implications of these findings for pain
research and treatment are discussed.
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Lived experience in the initial period of adaptation: a longitudinal multi-case study of the experience of recent immigrant students at a Canadian secondary schoolMansfield, Earl Alfred 11 1900 (has links)
While educators have recognized that students from other countries often
face traumatic experiences in their initial period of adaptation to the
receiving country's schools and society, little attention has been devoted to
understanding the nature or educational significance of these experiences.
Traditionally, educators have equated adaptation difficulties with host
language deficits, while other, possibly more consequential dimensions of the
adaptation experience have gone unrecognized, and have not been represented in
educational policy and funding decisions. Accordingly, this study is directed
toward providing a more comprehensive understanding of the adaptation
experiences of adolescent students who have recently arrived in Canada from
other countries, and addresses a critical need for understanding these
experiences from the perspectives of the students themselves.
Inquiry is advanced within a descriptive, exploratory, and explanatory
study which predominantly utilizes a phenomenological, qualitative
methodology. The study's principal methodology builds upon Edmund Husserl's
philosophical foundation by incorporating the existential perspectives of
Maurice Merleau-Ponty, the life-world social dimensions of Alfred Schutz, and
the historical-contextual and interpretive elements of Max van Manen's
hermeneutic phenomenology. Fieldwork occurred over a six month period in a
suburban Canadian secondary school. Study findings and recommendations derive
from analysis of interviews, observations, and self-reports of three male and
three female grade 10 students who arrived in Canada not more than 20 months
prior to the outset of the study.
Initial adaptation experiences of study participants point to three
principal findings. The study's finding that despite adaptation challenges,
students from abroad often achieve at or above receiving society norms within
a short period after arrival, suggests that educators should consider how
successful academic patterns of newcomers might be adopted by receiving
society members. Participant experience indicates that host language
acquisition is but one dimension of a multidimensional adaptation experience,
and that it is seldom the student's most critical adaptation concern, even in
terms of host communication skills. Participants experienced establishing friendships as their most critical and difficult adaptation concern, and
looked to friendship to provide uncertainty reduction, access to and inclusion
in the receiving society.
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The adjustment of international secondary students in the Vancouver school districtPopadiuk, Natalee Elizabeth 11 1900 (has links)
This research examines what facilitates and hinders the adjustment of adolescent
international students attending public secondary school in Vancouver, British Columbia.
The purpose of this study is to determine a set of categories that can be used by school
personnel to, better assist newly arriving international students in their adjustment process.
The critical incident technique developed by Flanagan (1954) is used for this
research to discover what events facilitate and hinder the adjustment of these international
students. Twenty-one secondary students, ages fifteen to eighteen, are interviewed from
three different public schools in the Vancouver School District. From the interviews, a
total of 352 critical incidents are used to develop seventeen categories which answer the
question: What facilitates and hinders adolescent international student adjustment? To
test for reliability and validity, four tests are carried out in order to establish the
soundness and comprehensiveness of the categories including independent rater
agreement, comprehensiveness of categories, participation rate, and expert validation.
The results show that adolescent international student adjustment can be
facilitated or hindered in the following ways: receiving encouragement or support,
receiving advice or information, receiving help, appreciating others, being accepted,
making friends, having fun, participating in activities, learning English, communicating
effectively, speaking own language, performing well academically, experiencing less
demand at school, making decisions, impressed with environment, experiencing
dilemmas, and experiencing local annoyances. Portraits of adjustment and maladjustment
are given as well as case studies in order to highlight the categorization system in both a
general and specific way. The findings of this study contribute to the body of knowledge regarding
international student adjustment because of its use of an adolescent, rather than adult,
international student population. This research is also very practical in that it can be
useful as a basis for individual and group counselling, various school-based and district
programs, and general support and information for school personnel and newly arriving
international students. Ideas for further research using this subject population are also
suggested.
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Individual differences in needs and learning goals as moderators of college adjustment and attritionVan Hein Judith Lynn 12 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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The effects of exercise, hobbies, and social support on teacher burnout /Palesch, Katherine Elizabeth. January 1999 (has links)
The primary purpose of this study is to determine if three coping strategies (exercise, hobbies, and social support) were related to some or all of the three dimensions of burnout (Emotional Exhaustion, Depersonalization, and Personal Accomplishment). One hundred and forty-three secondary school teachers from schools in urban and suburban areas of Eastern Canada participated in this study. The Maslach Burnout Inventory was used to assess burnout scores and a coping strategies questionnaire was used to assess participation in activities. Exercise and social support were positively related to the Personal Accomplishment dimension of burnout.
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Coping strategies of children with an intellectual disability in regular and special classroomsCohen Gazith, Karen. January 1996 (has links)
Adaptive coping behaviors of children with a mild to moderate intellectual disability educated in regular and special classrooms were examined using a comparative design incorporating both quantitative and qualitative analyses. Children's coping behaviors were examined using the Coping Inventory (Zeitlin, 1985) and their behavior was assessed using the Child Behavior Checklist (Achenbach, 1991). Children with an intellectual disability integrated in regular classrooms were found not to exhibit more adaptive coping behaviors than their counterparts in special classrooms. Descriptive analyses delineated several factors within both environments that influence children's coping efforts such as dependency on adults, external control, the quality of instruction, the social organization of the classroom, and the lack of direct instruction in developing children's adaptive coping efforts. Recommendations from the current study focus on the need for children with an intellectual disability to be provided with direct instruction of adaptive coping behaviors and facilitated opportunities to learn through trial and error in order to become more autonomous copers.
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Voluntary and involuntary migration in a selected South African Black settlement : adjustment problems and psychological correlates.Magwaza, Adelaide Simangele January 1987 (has links)
No abstract available. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of Durban-Westville, 1987.
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Stress in the workplace : a comparison of stress, coping, and strain levels among manufacturing personnelMcKinniss, Tamera L. January 1996 (has links)
Osipow and Spokane (1984) developed a model which divides occupational stress into the three main areas of stress, coping, and strain. In the past, this model has been empirically tested by the Occupational Stress Inventory (081). However, the Occupational Stress Inventory - Revised (OSI-R) has recently been developed in order to include some of the more recent developments in occupational stress literature. In addition to the original scales of the OSI, the OSI-R also contains five new experimental scales. The present study used the OSI-R to investigate differences in scale scores among management, trade/skilled, and direct labor personnel in two manufacturing plants. Although significant differences were found on the Role Insufficiency, Responsibility and Family Instrumental Support scales, the findings of this study should be questioned due to the unacceptable reliability levels on many of the OSI-R scales. / Department of Psychological Science
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