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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.
901

The Problem of Child Sexual Abuse: A Guide for Elementary Teachers

Merrilees, Cindy Gissy 01 January 1987 (has links)
This project presents a six-hour inservice component for elementary teachers dealing with the sexual abuse of children. The program focuses on the three pertinent areas of: the effects on the child; detection, reporting and intervention; and counseling strategies. The program presents content knowledge followed by exercises to build confidence. Exercisesinclude case studies, small and large group discussion, question and answer task sheets and small group activities. The review of related literature includes the effects of sexual abuse on the child; detection, reporting and intervention procedures; and counseling strategies.
902

Effects of the Use of a Heart Failure Diary on Self-Care and Quality of Life

Walker, Claudette 01 January 2011 (has links)
Heart Failure is a growing and costly problem in the United States. There have been advancements in medical therapy, but unfortunately patients continue to have frequent exacerbations and hospital readmissions. The reason for this may be inadequate Heart Failure self-care, which is the most important aspect of disease management. Literature strongly encourages self-care, but there is minimal research focusing on the use of a Heart Failure diary. The study was a one group pretest/posttest design. The intervention included individualized education, provision of the Heart Failure Diary, and weekly follow-up for a total of four weeks. The Heart Failure Diary was developed specifically for this study for recording daily self-care maintenance activities which includes weight monitoring, fluid intake, salt intake, swelling, shortness of breath, and medication adherence. In order to determine the effects of using the diary on self-care and quality of life, the Self-Care of Heart Failure Index (SCHFI) and Minnesota Living with Heart Failure Questionnaire (MLHFQ) responses were compared pre and post intervention. The difference between the SCHFI pretest-posttest scores demonstrated a non-significant improvement in self-care maintenance, n = 14, 2.616 (12.942), SE = 3.459, p = .463, t = - .756, 95% CI [-10.089, 4.856]. The difference between the MLHFQ pretest-posttest scores demonstrated a non-significant improvement in quality of life, n = 14, -5.500 (18.851), SE = 5.038, p = .295, t = 1.092, 95% CI [-5.384, 16.384]. The effect size of the SCHFI, d = .20, and the MLHFQ, d = .29, are both small and most likely due to the small sample size. The study concluded that using the diary did not have a statistically significant effect on the self-care or quality of life of these patients with heart failure.
903

Density of the Numerators or Denominators of a Continued Fraction

Vafabakhsh, Seyed J 01 January 1994 (has links)
Let A = {an}∞n = 1 be a sequence of positive integers. There are two related sequences Pn and Qn obtained from A by taking partial convergents out of the number [0; a1, a2, ..., an, ...], where Pn and Qn are the numerators and denominators of the finite continued fraction [0; a1, a2, ...,an]. Let P(n) be the largest positive integer k , such that Pk ≤ n. The sequence Q(n) is defined similarly. • A known result of Barnes' Theorem states that P ( n ) = o ( n ) and Q ( n ) = o ( n ). • In this paper we improve this result as P ( n ) = O (log n) and Q ( n ) = O (log n), where it follows that P ( n )= o ( nε ) and Q ( n ) = o ( nε ) for any ε >0.
904

A Comparison Study of Kindergarten Retention Rate and Implementation of Developmental Kindergarten

Tennent, Toni Lane Dorsett 01 January 1990 (has links)
In an attempt to help developmentally young children experience success, many schools have established developmental kindergarten programs. An ex post facto study of a developmental kindergarten program in a Florida elementary school examined 598 student records covering five school years. Overall kindergarten retention rates before and after the implementation of the developmental kindergarten program were compared. Entry age, gender, and class size as factors in retention were also analyzed. A comparison of the entry age, gender, and kindergarten retentions before and after implementation of developmental kindergarten was also undertaken. Results of chi-square analyses showed no significant effects upon kindergarten retentions attributed to developmental kindergarten. The developmental kindergarten class, as implemented, had not significantly reduced overall retention rates for kindergarten students. Nor had it significantly reduced retention rates of at-risk students.
905

Deception in Interpersonal Settings: The Relationship Between the Content of an Excuse and its Recipient

Trefry, Vera Margaret 01 January 1999 (has links)
A correlational study investigated the nature of excuses, including the relationship of excuse complexity, uniqueness, frequency, and success to the level of knowledge the recipient has about the excuse giver. Analysis of results from responses of 121 participants to questionnaires describing excuses to employers, teachers, parents, and spouse/boy/girlfriends found that the complexity and uniqueness of excuses vary positively with the knowledge level of the recipient, but only when an unequal power relationship exists between the recipient and the excuse giver. Excuses to recipients with a low personal knowledge level of the excuse giver, such as employers or teachers, tended to be simple in nature, contained a minimum amount of information, and were usually common and frequently occurring. In contrast, excuses to recipients with a high personal knowledge of the excuse giver, such as parents who lived with the participants, tended to be complex in nature, contained significantly larger amounts of information, were generally more specific to the excuse giver and less frequently occurring. Old excuses were used more than new excuses in all contexts. Previously used excuses were also more frequent in low or neutral confidence conditions, and were more likely to be successful. Excuses were more successful to employers or teachers than to parents or spouse/boy girlfriends. Different categories emerged for different recipients of the excuses: the illness category was used most in the work context, and the miscellaneous category was used most in the parent and spouse/boy/girlfriend contexts. The influence of external control, and short and long term intimacy factors on the nature of excuses was discussed.
906

Reflexivity and Social Phenomenology

Hoffman, Benjamin K 01 January 2011 (has links)
This thesis develops an account of human understanding on the basis of an analysis of German philosopher Martin Heidegger’s Being and Time, and in relation to the thought of the Kyoto School philosopher Watsuji Tetsuro. The aim is to describe shared human intelligibility as founded upon a historical tradition and maintained by concrete practices, and yet as expressed only by interpretive projections, and therefore always open to revision. An analysis of the significance of anxiety and authenticity in Being and Time, as aspects of the existential interpretive process of our lives, is accompanied by a philosophical description of everyday acts, which finds that the world is interpreted in relation to the others with whom the world is co-inhabited. This social relatedness between, on one hand, authentic, ‘individualized’ interpretation, and on the other hand, the everyday basis of intelligibility, is shown to support a potentially radical philosophy of social transformation. The first half of the text discusses the central significance of interpretation for Heidegger’s phenomenology, and argues for a reading of authenticity as a contextual, practical and individualized project. The second half develops an account of social existence in reference to Watsuji’s phenomenological ethics, and concludes with an examination of social opposition movements and the revision of the ground of intelligibility provided by a tradition and expressed in social practices.
907

Defining Imaginary Audience Scores Via Gender Attributes Versus Biological Gender

Freeman, George M 01 January 2002 (has links)
Imaginary audience scores for males and females have not demonstrated consistent differences in the literature. In this study, scores on the Imaginary Audience Scale (lAS) and on the Imaginary Audience subscale of the Adolescent Egocentrism-Sociocentrism scale (ABS) were compared to self-rating of gender attributes on the Personality Attributes Questionnaire (PAQ). Results for 64 females and 32 males surveyed at a southeastern university indicate that one's self-rating of gender attributes correlates with imaginary audience scores while biological gender does not. As masculine attribute scores increase, lAS scores and Abiding Self subscale scores decrease. As masculine-feminine attribute scores (traits favored by both sexes) increase, imaginary audience scores increase on all measures.
908

Substance Use and Barriers to Treatment Across Native Hawaiians/Pacific Islanders and Asian Americans

Levine, Lauren Michelle 01 January 2008 (has links)
Research shows that Asian Americans have lower rates of substance abuse treatment utilization than Caucasians. However, investigators have recently begun to separate Native Hawaiians/Pacific Islanders (NH/PI) from Asian Americans. Thus, it remains unclear whether disparities in barriers to treatment utilization differ across NH/Pis and Asian Americans. Data (N = 43,093) from the 2001-2002 National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions (NESARC), a large, nationally representative survey was used in this study. A chi-square analysis examined whether disparities in barriers and utilization differed between NH/Pis (n = 300) and Asian Americans (n = 1,334). We found that NH/Pis who thought they should seek treatment for their drinking were statistically and significantly less likely than Asian Americans to do so. We found no statistically significant differences for drug use. We also found that NH/Pis were more likely to meet criteria for a substance use disorder than Asian Americans. Results suggest the possibility that alcohol use has become increasingly embedded and normalized in NH/PI culture as opposed to Asian American culture while drug use has not. Thus, alcohol's normalization may result in NH/Pis more frequently failing to seek needed alcohol treatment. This indicates that public health policy should consider alcohol and drug use separately when designing and implementing culturally-specific preventions and interventions and focus on the de-normalization of alcohol use. Large-scale surveys of NH/Pis are needed to better identify barriers to treatment and utilization patterns. In sum, results highlight the need to increasingly consider cross-cultural variation in research while simultaneously developing culturally sensitive prevention and intervention programs.
909

Obstetrical Screening Practices of Nurse-Midwives and Nurse Practitioners

Abney, Laura Ann 01 January 2009 (has links)
With the continued growth in the numbers of nurse practitioners and certified nurse-midwives, more and more women will receive prenatal care from advanced practice nurses. The purpose of this research was to assess the routine screening practices of advance practice nurses providing prenatal care and to compare those practices with current guidelines. The study focused on five areas of prenatal screening: bacterial vaginosis, group B streptococcus, gestational diabetes, maternal serum markers, and fetal movement monitoring. The interaction model of client health behavior by Cheryl Cox, specifically professional-technical competencies, part of the client-professional element of the model, provided the theoretical framework for this study. The sample was obtained :from two major nursing organizations involved in prenatal care: the National Association of Nurse Practitioners in Women's Health and the American College of Nurse-Midwives. A random sample of250 members from each organization was sent a postcard explaining the study and directing them to the online survey. In four out of five screening areas, there was no significant difference in the screening practices of NPs and CNMs. Bacterial vaginosis was the only screening with a significant difference. There was inconsistency with what the advanced practice nurses state they do and current guidelines with respect to screening for group B streptococcus and maternal serum markers.
910

Rape Risk Reduction Materials: How Do University Students of Color Perceive the Cultural Relevancy of These Materials?

Vorreyer-Hedges, Anita L 01 January 2002 (has links)
Few studies have investigated how race and ethnicity influence people's beliefs about rape, or what impact these beliefs have on what and how we teach college students in efforts to raise awareness about rape. The purpose of this study was to gain understanding of how students of color perceive the cultural relevance of materials commonly used on campuses for rape risk reduction education. Participants were African American and Hispanic students at a mid-sized state university. Focus group sessions and interviews were conducted with 23 student participants. Students reported that they found the rape risk reduction materials culturally relevant; however, other revisions of the materials were necessary if the materials were to connect with students. Data analysis, based on the construction of grounded theory and the use of educational criticism, revealed three recurring themes-the influence of popular culture on student perceptions of social situations, the role of racial and ethnic identity development within a global context, and developmental influences on students' ways of constructing knowledge. Therefore, rape risk reduction efforts must be culturally sensitive and developmentally appropriate, and take into consideration the influence of popular culture in order to connect with students.

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