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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.
251

Small Circles| A Parenting Adolescent Prevention and Intervention Program for Young Families in the Teen Parent Shelter Program in Massachusetts

DiCero, Kimbell E. 26 January 2019 (has links)
<p> The Small Circles program was developed as a prevention and intervention demonstration project. It was designed as a new approach to meeting the needs of a vulnerable population with barriers to necessary services, teen mothers and their infants. The goals of the program are the reduction of child abuse and/or neglect and fostering typical development in the infants. Teen parents face gaps in and barriers to services including lack of time as well as paucities of available mental health care, parent child development groups, and dependable transportation. Small Circles is designed to fill those gaps and overcome those barriers by placing the program within shelters for teen parents and their children in Massachusetts. The program has two interacting modalities: dyadic therapy with the teen and her infant and a parent child development group. Each component takes place once a week for four weeks. The program goals would be met through a focus on the development of a positive and flexible attachment relationship through a parallel process with the therapist and teen and the teen and her infant. The demonstration project was developed through an extensive review of the literature and a survey of currently available programs that serve this population. It was evaluated by four expert reviewers, each with a particular area of expertise. The reviewers&rsquo; feedback was overall favorable with relevant suggestions for revision. Feedback was provided that the program would be improved by an emphasis on developing the precursors to attachment that are measurable, a focus on intervention alone rather than a combination with prevention, and by highlighting interventions that are evidence based. These suggestions for revision will move the initial effort to a measurable, flexible program that works to meet the criteria for its targets and goals, and ultimately provides the best services and outcomes for the teen families.</p><p>
252

Dads in the workplace: How men juggle jobs and kids

January 2003 (has links)
Balancing the responsibilities of a job and a family is a critical problem for many people in contemporary society. One of the central questions researchers ask is, what job trade-offs do women make to help them balance jobs and children? The purpose of this study is to extend that question to men. Using qualitative and quantitative data collected from fathers in the United States, Canada, and Australia, I investigated how gender as a social structure influences the job trade-offs fathers make as they juggle the responsibilities of their jobs and their children. I recruited study participants through fathering web sites on the Internet and collected data via an on-line survey and standardized follow-up e-mail interviews. A content analysis of the fathering web sites reveals that web sites in the United States reflect the underlying assumption that job-family issues are a dilemma for individual fathers whereas web sites in Canada, Australia, and the United Kingdom address job-family balance as a social issue as well as an individual problem. Analysis of the survey and interview data show that fathers make career trade-offs as well as everyday job accommodations to be involved with their children. Fathers cite time, travel considerations, and flexible workplace conditions as primary reasons for changing jobs and declining promotions. Logistic regression and Ordinary Least Squares regression analyses of the survey results reveal that working long hours, having a male-dominated job, flexible working conditions, the ages of his children, his attitude toward gendered behavior, his education, his religion, and his level of involvement affect the type of job accommodations a father makes as well as the magnitude of job-family juggling he does. More importantly, my research also provides evidence that gender as a social structure constrains fathers' behaviors. For example, fathers receive encouragement and support when they are somewhat involved with their children, but disapproval and skepticism when they assume primary caregiving responsibility for their children. In addition, there are contradictory ideological assumptions regarding gender and caregiving, for example, fathers and mothers have the same caregiving capabilities but, at the same time, fathers and mothers have different caregiving responsibilities / acase@tulane.edu
253

Feminism, professionalism, and unionism among New Orleans nurses

January 1974 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
254

Gender, time, and happiness: The effects of couples joint employment schedules on men's and women's family time and relationship quality

January 1999 (has links)
Time is socially constructed and time serves as the central organizing feature of human activities. Employment time has become more diverse in the last few decades as the result of a variety of social and economic factors, especially the expansion of a service-based, technology-intensified flexible economy. To respond to these structural changes, family time has also been undergoing reorganization and redistribution. We are not clear, however, how the temporal shifts at both the workplace and at home will affect family relationships and how men and women differ in their response to these new arrangements of time This study acknowledges the macro-structural changes over the last few decades, and it systematically investigates their consequences for family relations. Using two waves of a nationally representative data set, this study assesses three different effects in the model of the relationship between employment time and the quality of intimate relationships: (1) the direct effect of employment schedules on relationship quality; (2) the intervening effect of family time; and (3) the conditional effect of earnings and gender attitudes. The analyses are limited to dual-earner families in order to capture the joint effects of couple's joint characteristics. This study adopts a multi-dimensional approach to examine various aspects of employment scheduling and different measures of relationship quality. It shows that employment schedules, as measured by job hours, nonday shift, multiple jobs, varied schedules, weekend job, and job-related travel have limited consequences for relationship quality, but the gendered nature of employment and its effects on family relationships is evident in the results. Employment time has some impact on husbands' happiness, but husbands are more affected by their own job schedules. Husbands' and wives' job disruptions and dissatisfaction have different effects on relationship quality. While husbands' job disruptions and dissatisfaction negatively affect both partners' perceived relationship quality, wives' job disruptions and dissatisfaction increase husbands' perceived relationship quality. Moreover, couple's joint job schedules, earnings, and gender attitudes seem to operate together in determining how schedules affect relationship quality, although the results do not show consistent patterns of these interactions. This study also shows that the models determining the baseline distributions of relationship quality are different from the models predicting the changes in relationship outcomes / acase@tulane.edu
255

Intergenerational work security and marital values transmission: Mothers and their children in Detroit, 1977--1985

January 2007 (has links)
This project provides an extension of a line of sociological and socio-psychological research addressing attitudinal and value formation at the interface of two life domains, employment and family. The main purpose of the present study is two-fold. First, I investigate causal mechanisms involved in economic and marriage value formation based on propositions made by the proponents of the attitudinal spill-over ('holistic') theory and Rokeach's (1973) value reinforcement hypothesis Second, I examine similarities and differences in the manifestation of these processes between two generations, mothers and their children, illustrating intergenerational value stability and change within the family. Resting on the abstract notion of 'social contract' as applied to employment and marriage, this project therefore illuminates the similarities between the two institutions and their interdomain effects Based on data from a panel Detroit Study of American Families, analyses of value formation mechanisms reveal significant differences between the two generations, providing mixed support to the value spill-over theory. Moreover, this project supplies evidence contrary to the value reinforcement thesis as developed in socio-psychological research on work/family experiences and attitudes, thus calling for continuing examination of these processes in various settings and among diverse populations in future research This study offers additional support to several propositions regarding attitudinal and value exchange within the family. Among those are the distinction between family objective characteristics and individual family members' perceptions thereof; the cross-over causal mechanisms characteristic of exchanges among family members; and the mediating role personal experiences play in the link between larger economic transitions and individual values. In light of these findings, this project underscores the need for further exploration of the work/family domains in their objective and subjective dimensions as mutually interdependent / acase@tulane.edu
256

Middle-income black fathers: family interaction, transaction, and development

January 1977 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
257

A sociological study of birth order and attitudes concerning female sex role equality

January 1976 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
258

An analysis of college men's attitudes toward the male role and toward sex-role equality

January 1982 (has links)
The purpose of this investigation is to explore the attitudes of college men toward the male role and toward sex role equality and to identify the background variables associated with traditional and modern attitudes. Two instruments were constructed for this purpose: (1) The Male Role Attitude Test (MRA), a Likert-type scale based on David and Brannon's (1976) description of the four themes of the male role, 'No Sissy Stuff,' 'The Big Wheel,' 'The Sturdy Oak,' and 'Give 'Em Hell,' and (2) The Attitudes Toward Equality Vignettes (ATEV), 21 hypothetical situations measuring attitudes toward equality for men and women in the public and private spheres of the division of labor. Attitudes are measured on a continuum, one end of which reflects endorsement of 'traditional,' sex segregated roles for men and women, the other end of which reflects a 'modern' perspective of role flexibility and sharing. Data were obtained from a random sample of senior males at two universities, one private, the other state supported Findings confirm the primacy of the breadwinner role for men. The men's major concerns are for occupational success and sexual competency. However, there is little to indicate that they consider the burdens and responsibilities of the male role so troublesome as to lead them to change it. While there is a generalized belief in sex role equality allowing women to participate in the public sphere and men in the private, indications are few men want to participate more fully in homemaking and childcare. Since few can conceive of a woman whose major responsibility is not limited to keeping her husband and children happy, it is difficult for them to consider seriously a woman's career intentions Among the 29 social, demographic, and family variables tested, U.S. citizenship, grade point average, academic major, and father's income emerge as important predictors of MRA and ATEV scores. In addition, father's education is important to the explanation of MRA scores while age, birth order, religiosity, mother's employment, and the respondent's family aspirations are important predictors of ATEV scores. Implications of the research for theory development and social change are discussed Reference David, Deborah S. and Robert Brannon. The Forty-Nine Percent Majority: The Male Role, Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley, 1976 / acase@tulane.edu
259

Attitudinal differences to mental illness of selected groups of persons as associated with differences in extra-mural adjustments of mental patients living with them

January 1963 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
260

The black family: a case for change and survival in white America

January 1974 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu

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