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Virtuella arbetsplatser förutsätter tydlig målstyrning : En studie av Baby boomers och Generation X i 'Det nya arbetslivet'.Hou, Chun Fung, Jonsson, Christoffer January 2013 (has links)
Det nya arbetslivet’ är ett koncept utvecklat för de kommande medarbetarna från Generation Y som efterfrågar ett arbetssätt med möjlighet till balans mellan arbete och fritid. Arbetssättet ska ge ökad flexibilitet genom digitala hjälpmedel och även bidra till reducerade kontorsytor inom företaget, vilket innebär minskade utgifter. Övergången till arbetssättet kan dock upplevas som en svårighet för dagens medarbetare som främst består av den äldre generationen; Baby boomers och Generation X. Forskning visar att generationer har olika synsätt och värderingar som präglats av deras samtid. Detta medför att de har olika behov, exempelvis finns det skillnader i hur generationerna ser på arbete, förändringar eller preferenser i att arbeta självständigt eller i grupp. Idag är konceptet implementerat hos Microsoft som till störst del består av den äldre generationen. Vi vill därför studera dessa åldersgrupper och se hur de upplever konceptet då det i grunden är utvecklat för Generation Y. Studien är en fallstudie hos företaget Microsoft Sverige som infört ’Det nya arbetslivet’. Vi kommer att studera vilka hinder och möjligheter generationerna Baby boomers och Generation X upplever i ’Det nya arbetslivet’ utifrån de valda faktorerna; tillhörighet, förtroende och handledning. Arbetet har en deduktiv ansats, vilket innebär att faktorerna ligger som underlag för den empiriska studien. Empirin har vi därefter samlat in genom kvalitativa intervjuer hos medarbetarna på Microsoft Sverige. Slutsatserna från studien visar bland annat att Generation X såg fler möjligheter med ‘Det nya arbetslivet’ i jämförelse med Baby boomers som upplevde det svårare. Störst hinder var den minskade tillhörigheten till de närmsta kollegorna på grund av öppna kontorsytor. Respondenterna såg även tillhörighet som en utmaning för de nyanställda eftersom risken var stor att de kunde känna sig vilsna i ’Det nya arbetslivet’. Respondenterna ansåg att det fanns möjligheter för faktorerna; handledning och förtroende och största anledningen till det, var användningen av Microsofts målstyrning. Målstyrningen bidrog till att förtroendet var lättare att skapa och underhålla mellan medarbetarna. Den regelbundna handledningen gjorde även att medarbetarnas målsättning alltid var tydlig. Vidare upptäckte vi att många respondenter uppskattade det flexibla arbetssättet men de hade svårigheter att finna balansen mellan arbete och fritid.
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Vaikiškosios kalbos registras amžiaus ir lyties požiūriu / The register of baby talk in relation to gender and sexGrigutienė, Agnė 14 August 2009 (has links)
Lietuvių kalbotyroje yra tyrimų, skirtų vaikiškajai kalbai, tačiau dažniausiai dėmesys skiriamas motinos bendravimui su vaiku. Šiame darbe analizuojamas vaikiškosios kalbos registras amžiaus ir lyties požiūriu. 7 mėnesius buvo įrašinėjamas vienos šeimos bendravimas su mergaite – užfiksuoti tėvų ir senelių pokalbiai. Įsisavinant kalbą, leksika yra laikoma pirmine. Su žodyno vartojimu glaudžiai susijusi ir morfologija, todėl šiame darbe yra aptariamas kalbos dalių vartojimas, žodingumas, dažniausiai vaikui skirtoje kalboje vartojamos žodžių formos. Tėvų ir senelių pokalbiai su vaiku teikia medžiagos daiktavardžių, veiksmažodžių, būdvardžių, įvardžių, prieveiksmių ir jaustukų bei ištiktukų leksinių semantinių grupių analizei. Kaip specifiniai vaikui skirtos kalbos reiškiniai darbe analizuojami deminutyvai, kreipiniai, draudimai (neigiama liepiamoji nuosaka arba forma negalima), autoįvardijimai (savęs nurodymas vardu). Gauti rezultatai yra nauji ir svarbūs kalbos raidos tyrimams, nes atskleidžia ne tik vaikų kalbos formavimosi aplinką, bet parodo vaikiškosios kalbos registro ypatybes, nulemtas lyties ir amžiaus. / In Lithuanian linguistics there are many studies, doing research on Baby Talk, however, the most attention is often given to the communication between mother and her child. This work analyses the register of Baby Talk in terms of age and sex. For 7 months the communication of one familly with their little girl was being recorded. Conversations of parents and grandparents were captured. While mastering the language, lexicon is reputed as one the most important. The usage of vocabulary has tight relation with morphology, that is why this work presents the usage of parts of the speech and word form, that are mostly used in Baby Talk. Conversations of parents and grandparents with a child give material for analysing nouns, verbs, adverbs, interjections of lexical semantics. As a specific expressions of Baby Talk here are analysed diminutives, address forms, injunctions (negative imperative form or form cannot), self-reference. The results are new and important for the analysis of language asquisition, because they reveal not only the setting of the formation of child language, but also, show the importance Baby Talk register, determined by age and sex.
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Successes and challenges of the Baby Friendly Hospital Initiative in accredited facilities in the Cape Town Metro Health DistrictHenney, Nicolette M January 2011 (has links)
<p>Breastfeeding impacts on the health of both the mother and infant and has been noted as being influenced by physiological, physical, socio-economic and environmental factors. The undisputed benefit of exclusive breastfeeding for both the mother and child has led to the global prioritisation of the promotion, protection and support of breastfeeding with the adoption of the Baby Friendly Hospital Initiative (BFHI) strategy. Baby Friendly Hospital (BFH) status is awarded to a maternity unit when they are found to be complying with set criteria (&ldquo / Ten Steps to successful Breastfeeding&rdquo / ). South Africa has implemented a re-evaluation system for retention of accreditation status, by reassessing accredited facilities every three years. The respective provinces are tasked with monitoring the implementation of BFHI in their public health facilities. Internal monitoring reports, completed by the Western Cape Provincial Department of Health, reflect erosion of key steps between national reassessments. Aim: To describe the experiences, challenges and successes of BFHI implementation in the BFH accredited facilities in the Cape Town geographical health district. Methodology: An explorative qualitative study was conducted. One key informant interview, ten in-depth interviews with champions for BFHI in the maternity facilities and two focus group discussions with frontline staff working at these facilities were used to collect data. The data was analysed using thematic content analysis to identify the main themes related to the successes and challenges experienced with the maintenance of the required practices related to BFHI accreditation. Results: Participants reported that the implementation of the BFHI impacted positively on the health of both mothers and infants. Fewer children were being admitted for common childhood illnesses such as diarrhoea subsequent  / to BFHI implementation. Mothers were recovering more quickly after delivery and less complications related to delivery, such as postpartum bleeding, were observed after the implementation of BFHI. BFHI implementation had a positive impact on the attitudes of maternity staff to breastfeeding promotion, protection and support. Subsequent to being awarded BFH status, facilities are tasked with maintaining the implemented practices. Challenges to maintaining the practices included lack of implementation of BFHI practices at clinics, lack of support from facility managers and support staff such as counsellors. The internal assessments implemented as supportive monitoring structures are considered by participants to be a demotivating process and concerns were raised about non nursing staff assessing  / nursing practices. Conclusion: The potential impact of this strategy on infant and maternal health must be realized by the implementers of BFHI, before the strategized aim is achieved. Co-ordination and support by all role players is vital to the success and elimination of challenges experienced with implementation and maintenance of the BFH strategy.</p>
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Social engagement as a predictor of health services use in baby-boomers and older adultsMcArthur, Jennifer Meghan 28 August 2013 (has links)
Purpose: To examine the relationship between social engagement (SE) and health care use (HCU) in baby-boomers (age 45-64) and older adults (65+).
Methods: Data from the Wellness Institute Services Evaluation Research III was used. SE was assessed using measures of formal, informal, and civic activities. HCU was assessed using administrative health care records (hospital use and length of stay, overall general and family physician use).
Results: Higher formal SE indicated higher contact with physicians in general, higher hospital visits, and longer lengths of stay in hospital. Higher informal SE indicated shorter lengths of stay. Results were found while controlling for demographic variables, chronic conditions, and self-rated health. Older adults had higher HCU overall, compared to baby-boomers.
Conclusion: While further research is necessary, this study has implications in determining the impact that certain types of SE can have on the health care system for different age groups.
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Baby boomers and retirement : how will this landmark generation redefine retir[e]ment community design?Chapman, Leslee K. January 2006 (has links)
With the first of the 77 million (www.census.gov) Baby Boomers turning 60 this year, the impact on retirement and retirement communities has suddenly become a vital and pressing issue. The massive numbers of Baby Boomer cohorts have amplified and intensified the importance of whatever experiences they've had at each new moment in their lives. When they reach any stage of life, the issues that concern them — whether financial, interpersonal, or even hormonal — become the dominant social political, and marketplace themes at the time. (www.agewave.com 2006) Retirement will be no different. Using this understanding of the Baby Boomer generation, this study examined their impact on retirement community design.Data specific to Baby Boomer retirement preferences was analyzed, an expert in the field of gerontology at Ball State University was interviewed, research was completed in retirement community design and age related health concerns, and case studies in a range of established retirement communities in southwest Florida were visited, all in an effort to determine what the current trends are in the retirement community market today and how Boomers would effect them.Research showed that Boomers want to pursue new and exciting experiences in their retirement years. They are not willing to settle for a retirement tucked out of the way, out of sight out of mind. They want to be in the middle of activity and enjoyment. They are looking to make a difference and have an impact in this next phase of life.The result of these endeavors is a conceptual design for an active adult retirement community, in northeast Lee County Florida, that will attract Baby Boomers by appealing to their sense of fun, their sense of purpose and their social and environmental conscience. / Department of Landscape Architecture
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The evolution of radical rhetoric : radical Baby Boomer discourse on Facebook in the 21st centuryFaunce, Edwin E. 23 May 2012 (has links)
This thesis examines how Baby Boomers utilize Facebook to promote radical political ideology. A convenience sample of 51 Baby Boomer Facebook profiles were selected and critically analyzed for radical content using Bernard L.Brock’s (1965) A Definition of Four Political Positions and a Description of their Rhetorical Characteristics, and Making Sense of Political Ideology: The Language of Democracy (Brock, et al., 2005). The rhetoric from these profiles was then categorized using James W. Chesebro’s (1972) Rhetorical Strategies of the Radical Revolutionary. Conclusions from the research indicate that radical Boomers on Facebook seem to have moved from real world activism to symbolic action on Facebook through the liking and sharing of radical articles and posts. Though consistent in posting radical content in their profiles, radical Boomers using Facebook in this study utilized profiles more to promote radical culture online than to foment political revolution offline. / Department of Telecommunications
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Encomium, agency, and subversion : the feminist recovery of baby books as women's domestic rhetoricHaley, Jennifer M. January 2007 (has links)
In this dissertation I conduct a feminist recovery of the baby book as one kind of ordinary women's domestic rhetoric. I analyze the ways in which the baby book's evolution reflects changes in cultural practices over time and the means by which the baby book constitutes acts of potentially subversive agency in its power to resist patriarchal structuring. I classify the baby book within the ancient rhetorical genre of encomium, allowing us to perceive how a culture, situated in time and place, values the perception and presentation of an infant and the culturally-assigned role of the mother in the formation of that presentation. The genre of encomium must be redefined as an ongoing, dynamic, adaptive genre.I conduct an interpretation of more than the mere artifact, but of the production and experience of that artifact as well. Thus, this study establishes a unique and significant role for a de-reading methodology as a viable introduction and theoretical foundation to approaching domestic texts, involving self figuration on the part of the researcher and an empathic approach to reading that privileges a loving, appreciative standpoint.My analysis of over fifty baby books from 1885 through 2007 reveals that the role of the baby books and the role of the mother are assigned, to a great extent, by the definition of "family" and shaped by socioeconomic forces. Mothers subvert or comply with the directives from the publishers, thereby implying rejection of or compliance with the maternal script through such strategies as appropriation of space, inclusion of artifacts, and omission. This discovery expands our notion of agency in terms of the power of form, the role of the audience, and the connections to material and symbolic cultural context.My research establishes a line of inquiry into the material practices of production and simultaneously brings into view an array of texts that have been outside the conventional purview of rhetorical scholarship. For those who want to recover women's rhetoric and to extend an understanding of rhetorical praxis, baby books are a valuable primary and, until now, untapped source, as well as a "new" type of rhetorical evidence. / Department of English
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Older adults' intentions to utilize mental health services : the effects of cohort membershipSeyala, Nazar D. 24 January 2012 (has links)
Older adults have the lowest mental health utilization of any age cohort. This study compared baby boomers, born between 1946 and 1964 versus older adults born in 1944 or earlier, on attitudes and intentions to utilize mental health services. Ajzen’s theory of planned behavior and its related constructs of attitudes, subjective norm, perceived behavioral control, and intentions were used as a theoretical model. The Inventory of Attitudes toward Seeking Mental Health Services (IASMHS) and Beliefs About Psychological Services (BAPS) were used for measuring the constructs in the theory of planned behavior. Gender and previous mental health service utilization were also measured. Participants (n = 401) included current and retired faculty and staff from a mid-sized Midwestern University. Statistical analysis, using MANOVA, found main effects for previous mental health experience and age cohort, but not for gender. Those with previous mental health service experience expressed more positive attitudes, intentions, and perceived behavioral control over receiving mental health services. Contrary to the primary hypothesis, the older adult cohort expressed more positive attitudes, greater intentions, was less affected by the subjective norm, and had more perceived behavioral control than baby boomers. Regression analyses, using gender, previous mental health service use, attitudes, subjective norm, and perceived behavioral control accounted for 55.7% of the variance in intentions for the older adult cohort and 58.2% for baby boomers. For both cohorts, attitudes accounted for the greatest amount of variance. Promoting positive attitudes through reducing environmental and economic barriers and increasing education regarding mental health services is likely to increase mental health service utilization in baby boomers and older adults. / Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services
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Social engagement as a predictor of health services use in baby-boomers and older adultsMcArthur, Jennifer Meghan 28 August 2013 (has links)
Purpose: To examine the relationship between social engagement (SE) and health care use (HCU) in baby-boomers (age 45-64) and older adults (65+).
Methods: Data from the Wellness Institute Services Evaluation Research III was used. SE was assessed using measures of formal, informal, and civic activities. HCU was assessed using administrative health care records (hospital use and length of stay, overall general and family physician use).
Results: Higher formal SE indicated higher contact with physicians in general, higher hospital visits, and longer lengths of stay in hospital. Higher informal SE indicated shorter lengths of stay. Results were found while controlling for demographic variables, chronic conditions, and self-rated health. Older adults had higher HCU overall, compared to baby-boomers.
Conclusion: While further research is necessary, this study has implications in determining the impact that certain types of SE can have on the health care system for different age groups.
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'Should I stay or should I go?' : Retirement age triggers of sworn members of the Queensland Police Service entitled to access voluntary retirement at age fifty-fiveMarcus, Benjamin Roland Derek January 2007 (has links)
At the time this study was conducted, Queensland police officers were offered a five year age range in which retirement was possible. These officers were permitted to retire from age 55 and were forced to retire at age 60. The Queensland Police Service had previously identified that only 13% of all police officers were staying in their employment until the mandatory retirement age of 60. Retirement of these officers at the earliest possible opportunity presented a considerable loss of human resource investment. This study was undertaken to investigate some possible triggers influencing the decision to retire. Three specific research questions associated with the retirement intentions of Queensland police officers of the baby-boomer generation were formulated and subsequently investigated. These questions were: * How do the demographic characteristics of individual police officers relate to their retirement intentions? * What are the triggers that are associated with the retirement age intentions of baby-boomer police officers in Queensland? and, * How are these triggers associated with officers' intentions to retire earlier or later? While considerable work had been previously done on retirement triggers, the issue of police retirement triggers is under-researched. The situation was further compounded by the fact that the major study of police retirement was American, with retirement in that system based on years of service, and not age as in Australia. A list of possible retirement triggers was compiled from the literature and then focus groups of Queensland police officers were used to discuss some aspects of these possible retirement triggers and generate others that were specific to the Queensland Police Service. The study obtained the views of 641 members of the cohort through a questionnaire and utilised a quantitative research methodology to achieve findings. Demographic aspects showed little overall influence on an officer's retirement age decision. The demographic items that did have a direct association with retirement intentions were gender, length of service, and the method of admission to the organisation. Female officers, officers with the greatest length of service and those admitted to the organisation as Cadets were more likely to seek earlier retirement, that is retirement at or soon after age fifty-five. Whilst not conclusive, the education level of the individual indicated a trend towards later retirement for those with higher levels of education. Importantly, operational status, shift worker status, rank, and qualification for promotion had no association with the retirement decision. A factor analysis of the questionnaire items used in the study identified five factors, of which four contributed significantly to a police officer's retirement timing decision at the later end of the retirement window spectrum. These factors were 'appropriateness', 'worth and belonging', 'influences and relationships' and 'financial' issues. A fifth factor 'flexibility' was also determined but found to have no statistical significance. Three recommendations were made from this study: the formation of a Queensland Police Service alumni; the adoption of a n employment re-engagement policy called 'procruiting'; and the introduction of an assisted retirement education package for exiting members.
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