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An experimental study of factors related to participation in health awareness with seniors between ages of 60 to 75St. Onge, Anna Marie Antoinette January 1990 (has links)
Society's dramatically mounting population of Seniors is creating a demand to increase our knowledge of senior health program participation and of what promotes 'Healthy Aging'. This thesis is concerned with factors that affect seniors' participation in health promoting programs. There are two distinct aspects to this study, one is an experiment and the other is a survey.
The experiment component of the thesis predicts that potential program participants' giving advice on a projected program topic, more than giving information will increase self-esteem, internal locus of control and thus program participation. The survey aspect of the thesis is designed to discover other factors which affect participation and health concerns. The project deals with psychological constructs such as locus of control, self-esteem and life satisfaction put to the use of social work concerns such as increasing program participation, health awareness and resource use.
One hundred and twenty persons aged 60-75 were randomly selected from the files of Matsqui-Abbotsford Community Services and randomly assigned to 3 groups of 40 persons each. Group 1 & 2 were administered Wallston & Wallston & DeVallis' Multidimensional Health Locus of Control Scales and Rosenbergs’Self-Esteem Scale before and after the two
experimental interventions of giving advice or information on the same health topics. Both groups also responded to Diener & Emmons & Larsen & Griffin's Life Satisfaction Scale, Chapin's Organizational Participation Scale and some questions about family, friends, smoking, health and demographics. Group 3, the control group, was not interviewed. After regular intervals all groups were invited to participate in three progressively involving 'Healthy Aging' pursuits.
Statistical analysis does not support the hypothesis that giving advice increases self-esteem, life satisfaction, participation or 'internality' of health locus of control. Participation in formal organizations correlates with other forms of sociability and knowledge about prevention, while smoking co-relates positively with social isolation. Health internality is associated with greater self-reported health, life satisfaction, more contact with family and not associated with sociability outside of the home. / Arts, Faculty of / Social Work, School of / Graduate
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Adult offspring of alcoholic parents: development and investigation of the psychometric properties of the behavior role scaleSchneider, John Donald 11 1900 (has links)
The primary objective of this study was the development and investigation of the
psychometric properties of a measurement instrument based on the integrated model of
behavior roles of offspring of alcoholic parents (Schneider, 1989,1995). The Behavior
Role Scale was developed utilizing Crocker and Algina's (1986) 10 step instrument
development process and deals directly with the concepts of the original models of
behavior roles of offspring of alcoholic parents (Black, 1981; Booz-Allen & Hamilton,
1974; Deutsch, 1983; Kritzberg, 1985; Wegscheider, 1981). The first three steps of the
instrument development were completed in an earlier investigation (Schneider, 1989). In
this investigation, steps 4 - 8 were completed.
The following activities were undertaken: step 4, the construction of an initial
pool of items; step 5, the review and revision of the items with the assistance of a panel
of experts; step 6, a preliminary tryout of the items in a pilot test; step 7, a field test of
the instrument with a nonclinical sample of offspring of alcoholic parents and offspring
of nonalcoholic parents; and, step 8, initial investigation of the psychometric properties
of the behavior role scale.
This investigation contributed the following findings. The field test yielded
reliability estimates of .72 for the Caretaker, .67 for the Super Achiever, .86 for the
Invisible One, .89 for the Jester, .78 for the Rebel, and an overall alpha of .88. Initial
validity was indicated by the emergence of a five factor model as the most interpretable
factor analysis solution. The performance of the Behavior Role Scale was also
investigated using six validity issues identified in the literature. Offspring of alcoholic
parents, offspring of nonalcoholic parents who had experienced a significant family
disruption, and offspring of nonalcoholic parents who had not experienced a significant
family disruption had significantly different scores with the Super Achiever, Invisible
One, and Rebel roles. The three groups did not demonstrate significant differences with the Caretaker or Jester roles. Additional significant differences were discovered with the
Jester and Rebel roles among offspring of alcoholic fathers when they were compared
according to their fathers' pattern of drinking.
The findings of this investigation add to the research evidence which suggests that
refinements need to be made to improve the clinical and psycho-educational uses of the
behavior roles of offspring of alcoholic parents. Recommendations for future research
include submitting the Behavior Role Scale to construct validation studies in order to
further refine its ability to measure behavior roles and to be of assistance to researchers
seeking to unravel the complexities of life for more than 28 million offspring of alcoholic
parents. / Education, Faculty of / Educational and Counselling Psychology, and Special Education (ECPS), Department of / Graduate
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The manifestations of perfectionistic self-presentation in a clinical sampleHabke, Amy Marie 11 1900 (has links)
Perfectionism has long been recognized as an important personality trait that has a significant
impact on emotional and social well-being. More recently, it has been recognized that there is a
stylistic aspect to perfectionism that focuses on a desire to appear perfect. This perfectionistic
self-presentation, and in particular, the desire for concealment of imperfections, has been related
to psychopathology in past research. However, it is proposed that perfectionistic self-presentation
presents a particular concern from a clinical perspective because of it's indirect
effects on pathology; a desire to conceal imperfections is especially problematic to the extent that
it impacts the experience of therapy and the therapy relationship. The current study examined the
cognitive, affective/physiological, and behavioral manifestations of perfectionistic self-presentation
in a clinical sample. Ninety clinical subjects completed self-report measures of
perfectionistic self-presentation, trait perfectionism, impression management, mood, appraisals,
and self-handicapping. A brief structured assessment interview that included a discussion of past
mistakes, was conducted by trained clinical interviewers. Physiological monitors recorded heart
rate and skin conductance level throughout the interview, and the interview was videotaped.
Post-interview measures of mood, appraisals, and self-handicapping, were also completed.
Results at the bivariate level showed that the self-protective dimensions of perfectionistic self-presentation
were associated with more distress both prior to and following the interview, higher
heart rate and greater change in heart rate when discussing mistakes (and greater skin
conductance for men), greater claims of disability from self-handicaps, and appraisals of the
interviewer as both threatening (wanting more than the participant could provide) and
disappointed following the interview. Regression analyses showed that the desire to avoid
disclosing imperfections was a unique predictor of appraisals of threat over and above
demographics, trait perfectionism, and other measures of distress (interaction anxiety and
depression) and impression management, and of appraisals of the interviewer as disappointed
following the interview, over and above demographics and trait perfectionism. The block change
score for perfectionistic self-presentation predicting interviewer satisfaction was marginally
significant over and above emotional distress and impression managment. The desire to avoid
displaying imperfections was a unique predictor of lower threat appraisals. Perfectionistic self-presentation
also predicted higher heart rate when discussing errors, over and above
demographics and other measures of distress and impression management, and greater change in
heart rate from relaxation; this relation held when controlling for demographics, trait
perfectionism, and emotional distress and impression management. Perfectionistic self-presentation
did not predict defensive behaviors and was not a unique predictor of self-reported
negative affect. The results are discussed in terms of the implications for therapy and the
therapeutic alliance. / Arts, Faculty of / Psychology, Department of / Graduate
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Expatriates in Papua New Guinea: constructions of expatriates in Canadian oral narrativesUpton, Sian Reiko 11 1900 (has links)
Despite social scientists' interest in globalization, mobility, the effects of colonialism, and the intercultural
situations that result, little attention has been devoted to expatriates as a contemporary transnational group.
This thesis is an enquiry into the ways eight individuals define themselves as expatriates, through their oral
narratives of life in Papua New Guinea. The paper focuses on expatriates' characterizations of themselves
in terms of: their communities; their relationships with locals; their status as foreigners in post-colonial
Papua New Guinea; arid their experiences of mobility. Set against social scientific notions of expatriates
and contemporary ideas of mobility and its relation to identity, expatriates' personal narratives indicate that
scholarly depictions are too simplistic to access contemporary expatriates or the complex situations in
which they live. / Arts, Faculty of / Anthropology, Department of / Graduate
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The role of oral language in the practicum classroomDerksen, Harold Kenneth 05 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to investigate the praxis (theory and practice) of
oral language by student teachers during their practicum. Specifically, this study
identified and described the factors which 13 British Columbia student teachers
perceived of as affecting the establishment of an orally interactive environment
within their practicum classroom. Through the analysis of dialogue journals,
interviews, and questionnaires, 24 factors in 5 categories were identified and
described that affect the development of orally interactive teaching. The factors
were grouped into categories of knowledge, position, expectations, structures, and
assumptions. This study concludes that the identification of factors affecting orality
in the practicum can assist teacher education programs and teachers to more
effectively address the potential of orality as a medium for negotiation and
meaning making in the classroom. / Education, Faculty of / Curriculum and Pedagogy (EDCP), Department of / Graduate
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The relationship between school size and school organizational climate in the Vancouver, B.C., Canada, School District, 39Bennett, Fred H. January 1977 (has links)
Application after application of the Organizational Climate Description Questionnaire (OCDQ) has revealed that the majority of urban core school climates seemed to be "closed" rather than "open". Efforts on the part of school administrators to alter the "closed", "unhealthy" organizational climates in their systems to more "open", "healthy" climates are premature because so little is actually known about how to change a climate. Since "closed" climate conditions seem to be almost synonomous with "large" school size, the purpose of this study has been to contribute some small measure of knowledge as to how to change a school climate by determining the relationship between organizational climate measured by the eight OCDQ subtests—Disengagement, Hindrance, Esprit, Intimacy, Aloofness, Production Emphasis, Thrust, Consideration—and four objective organizational size characteristics—School Area, Staff Members, Enrolment, and Human Density.
The impact of these size variables is examined based on data obtained through a field study involving 20 schools and 116 teachers in the Vancouver, British Columbia school system. The data were subjected to factor analytic techniques. The results subsequently suggested that a five-factor pattern of climate dimensions—Principal as Leader, Teacher "qua" Teacher Group Perception, Non-Classroom Teacher Satisfaction, Working Conditions, Hindrance V—was as suitable as an eight-factor pattern. Consequently, the study design was expanded to accomodate the unanticipated results.
In terms of its purpose, the study's findings can be briefly summarized as follows: 1) Reduction of Enrolment may prove useful in providing conditions related to the type of leadership behaviour—as described by the Principal as Leader dimension of school organizational climate—normally associated with a more "open", "healthy" climate. 2) Reduction of Staff Members may influence the Principal as Leader dimension of school organizational climate in much the same manner just described for Enrolment. Further investigation of this relationship could well reveal that the reduction of Staff Members, would increase Esprit for the remainder. A smaller staff with higher Esprit will, tend more toward the "open", "healthy" climate; 3) There is a hint in the findings that the association between Density and Principal as Leader and Area's association with both Teacher "qua" Teacher Group Perception and Hindrance (V) is strong enough to justify further research; 4) There Is little Indication that manipulation of any of the four size variables will influence either, the Non-Classroom Teacher Satisfaction or the Working Conditions dimension of a school's organizational climate.
Three basic implications are drawn from the findings and related empirical evidence provided by the literature: 1) Smaller schools are imperative if the principal's leadership is not to be smothered by too many pupils and teachers, 2) School size in terms of its Area and its Density, i.e., the number of square feet available to its occupants, may not have as much impact on the climate dimensions as a reduction in Enrolment and Staff Members, but nevertheless, sufficient evidence does exist to. imply that altering Area and Density might prove useful in providing conditions similar to those which are normally associated with an "open" climate, 3) Even though considerably more research is required with respect to gaining much more knowledge concerning the relationship between school size and school climate, the difficulties encountered by this study and several others reported in it, imply that the OCDQ itself should be subjected to further refinement before continuing to subject it to such extensive use. / Business, Sauder School of / Graduate
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Decision processes in rural developmentHale, Sylvia Marion January 1976 (has links)
This thesis develops a general theory of choice behaviour which
is applied to the analysis of response to development programmes in
rural India. The theory focuses on the social processes which structure
perceived choice parameters for individuals differentially situated
within the village communities. It examines those mechanisms which
influence the range of alternatives likely to be considered, appreciation
of their varied consequences, or the likely outcome of new proposals,
and their perceived and actual feasibility. A basic concept in the theory
is "power", defined here as "the ability to influence the structuring
of choice parameters of others", through control over critical mechanisms
of information flow, persuasion, and access to input facilities. Ten
hypotheses are derived from the basic theoretical axiom of rational
action, concerned with how such control will be exercised, and the
implications which this has for the scope of choices open to others.
Rural development programmes in India provide the substantive context
for testing the utility of these hypotheses. These programmes are
directly concerned with promoting innovation among villagers, and they
incorporate a wide range of specific choices.
The theory predicts that within the highly stratified village
communities, first hand access to new information, and further diffusion at second hand, will be concentrated among members of the same faction and* social stratum as initially privileged informants. Vertical diffusion of information across strata will be minimal, and its content strongly biased by the particular interests of initial informants. The theory further predicts that evaluation of the merits of any new proposals will be strongly influenced by the character of relations between informant and recipients. As information flows vertically between strata, its persuasive impact will decline, as a function of relatively poorer quality information, the extent of tensions and conflicting interests between strata, and perceived economic disparities. Lastly, the theory predicts that access to any input facilities will be concentrated among members of the same faction and social stratum as those persons responsible for their distribution. Access by members of other strata will decline with increasing social distance, and their preferences are progressively less likely to be considered in the investment of resources for community projects.
The study succeeds in demonstrating the utility of these hypotheses in predicting response to development projects within the five village communities. / Arts, Faculty of / Sociology, Department of / Graduate
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Comparison of thermal process evaluation methods for conduction heating foods in cylindrical containersSmith, Trudi January 1981 (has links)
Five formula methods and three numerical general methods for determining thermal process lethality were compared with a reference method to demonstrate their applicability to conduction heating foods in cylindrical containers. Hypothetical centerpoint temperature history curves for cans with height to diameter (H/D) ratios of 0.1 to 3.0 were generated for a range of processing conditions using computer simulation. A finite-difference model based on Teixeira et al. (1969b) was used as the basis of the simulation program.
The delivered lethality to an organism characterized by Z=10C° was evaluated using each of the methods and compared to the lethality calculated using the reference method. For each of the test methods, simulation data were provided for one minute intervals, but for the reference method, data were provided for intervals of 0.05 min.
Each of the selected formula methods was adapted to allow calculations to be done by computer without operator intervention. The most significant part of this adaptation was the development of a system that enabled the computer to select the linear portion of the heat penetration curve to facilitate calculation of the parameters f and j which are required by all of the formula methods. A method for handling large tables was also developed for use with some of the formula methods.
For the general methods, the deviations from the reference method were greatest when the heating rate index (fh) and H/D were small and the unaccomplished temperature difference (g) was large. Whereas the the value of fh was the most significant factor affecting the accuracy of calculations done using the general method, it did not greatly affect the performance of the formula methods. The factors that most significantly influenced deviations between the formula methods and the reference method were H/D and g. The largest deviations in all cases occurred when g was large and H/D was close to unity. These errors were mostly on the "safe" side, but the energy use implications could be significant, especially for high retort temperature processes. / Land and Food Systems, Faculty of / Graduate
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Charting the territory of cross-gender friendship : conceptions of friendship and the selection of friendsMcDougall, Patricia Anne 05 1900 (has links)
To date, cross-gender friendships in childhood and adolescence have been virtually
ignored in the peer relationships literature. The purpose of the present investigation
was to chart the territory of cross-gender friendship by examining the domains of
friendship conceptions and the selection of friends. Accordingly, 176 students (91 girls,
85 boys) in grades 3, 6, 9, and 12 participated in individual sessions and were asked to
describe their beliefs about, and expectations for, both same- and cross-gender
friendship. In addition, students participated in a hypothetical decision-making task
using a series of information boards on which they were asked to search for, and
select, a same- and cross-gender friend. Findings revealed that beliefs and
expectations for both same- and cross-gender friendships were observed to follow a
common developmental sequence with little evidence that cross-gender friendships lag
behind. Although the pattern of gender differences in conceptions of cross-gender
friendship was consistent with previous research, the results of this study suggest that
for several features of friendship, participants made distinctions on the basis of what is
expected in friendships involving girls versus boys. The differential emphasis placed
on various expectations in friendship provides support for the notion that same- and
cross-gender friendships may represent different types of personal relationships. As
compared to conceptions of friendship, observations in the friendship selection task
revealed that students engaged in similar predecisional searching regardless of the
gender of the target friend. Findings suggest that the process of same- and crossgender
friendship selection was somewhat different at different grade levels but did not
vary markedly for boys and girls. Indeed, boys and girls at all ages were observed to
select same- and cross-gender friends who were highly similar to themselves. The
present discussion concludes with a description of the cross-gender friendship
experiences of children and adolescents in this sample including consideration of the
potential challenges and benefits associated with having a friend of the other gender. / Education, Faculty of / Educational and Counselling Psychology, and Special Education (ECPS), Department of / Graduate
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Embodying culture : gurus, disciples and tabla playersNuttall, Denise Irene 05 1900 (has links)
This dissertation is an ethnography about the men and women who take up the practice and
performance of a Hindustani (North Indian) drum called tabla, as a way of life. Learning tabla
means that percussionists must find a guru, a learned master of the tradition who will guide
them in their life long study of this instrument. The relationships formed between gurus and
disciples are distinctively different in kind from teacher-student relations in Western knowledge
systems. The guru-disciple tradition is a very specific, culturally dependent mode of learning
originating from the Indian Brahmanical tradition of religious study. Discipleship is a form of
apprenticeship which offers no easy translation, philosophically, culturally or spiritually. My
ethnography and analysis of tabla as a way of life is presented from my own situated
perspective as a tabla disciple of two tabla masters, Ustad Alia Rakha Khan, his son Ustad
Zakir Hussain and as a visiting tabla enthusiast with another teacher of tabla, Ritesh Das. I
offer a multi-local ethnography which centres on tabla communities based in Bombay, India,
Toronto, Ontario, Vancouver, British Columbia, Seattle, Washington and the Bay Area of
California.
As tabla travels around the globe, outside of India, the learning and teaching of this tradition
changes somewhat in its new environments. However, learning to play tabla whether in Indian
or diaspora cultures necessitates adopting Indian ways of knowing, learning and being. For
those musicians of non-Indian ethnicity who become dedicated to this art form learning tabla
also means learning to embody Indian cultural ways of doing and knowing. I posit that learning
the cultural, as in learning tabla, begins in the body and the embodied mind. Knowing through
and with the body requires re-conceptualizing anthropological concepts of culture, memory and
tradition. Grounding an analytic concept of the body in the emerging critical Anthropology of
the Body and the Anthropology of the Senses allows for an examination of the social as
something more than cognitive and language based. / Arts, Faculty of / Sociology, Department of / Graduate
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