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Neighbourhood attitudes toward group homes for adults with a mental handicapLove, Rosemary January 1991 (has links)
This study investigated neighbourhood attitudes toward people with mental handicaps. It examined the public's knowledge about mental handicaps and collected demographic information about the respondents. A total of three hundred households were surveyed, seventy-five in each of four areas in Vancouver, B.C. Each area was divided into immediate, intermediate and distant neighbours, centred around a group home.
The research questions investigated the influence of factual knowledge, proximity and the amount of contact with people who have a mental handicap and demographic, factors on neighbours' attitudes towards adults with a mental handicap.
Descriptive statistical and ANOVA procedures were conducted. The results did not produce statistically significant evidence to answer the research questions. However, two moderate trends were detected. Immediate and intermediate proximity groups showed slightly more tolerant attitudes than the distant neighbours. Respondents with higher amounts of contact with people who have mental handicaps scored higher on the attitude scales, but not at statistically significant levels.
There is a discussion of the implications of the study and suggestions for further research. / Education, Faculty of / Graduate
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A study of the dependency needs of adolescents with developmental retardation : an evaluation of short term care usage, expressed emotion in the primary carer and the contribution of community servicesDossetor, David R. January 1991 (has links)
No description available.
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A study of factors surrounding the transition from preschool to school for children with Down's syndromeSloper, Patricia January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
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The development of language skills of severely educationally subnormal children in a hospital settingAshdown, Robert William January 1980 (has links)
No description available.
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Some experiments with technology for the profoundly mentally handicappedLovett, S. January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
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Learning and instructional success in people with a mental handicapStrand, Stephen Charles January 1989 (has links)
Learning - the process by which new skills and behaviours are acquired - is a central concept in the understanding of mental handicap. Discrimination learning Is specifically identified as an essential pre-requlslte for the acquisition of a variety of more complex behaviours and skills. Many studies have reported that severely mentally handicapped persons show a relative inability to profit from unstructured learning experiences, and frequently fail to learn discriminations trained through simple differential reinforcement (trial-and-error training). Programmed training procedures are identified as important vehicles to facilitate the discrimination learning of severely mentally handicapped children. An initial study is reported that confirms the superiority of programmed over trial-and-error discrimination training, and demonstrates this superiority is maintained over a series of similar discrimination tasks. The results also demonstrate that stimulus fading procedures can be successfully implemented using micro-computer technology, and that 'errorless' learning can be effected through the sequencing and fading of trainer prompts. However, programmed procedures are not invariably effective in teaching discriminations to developmentally impaired persons, and failures to learn following programmed training are not infrequently reported. In a series of studies, some of the basic procedural parameters underlying diverse programmed techniques were evaluated as determinants of the development (or lack of development) of appropriate stimulus controL Increasing the salience of S+, whether through manipulation of S+ or S-, was shown to be more effective than increasing the salience of S-. Further, congruence between prompt and training cue dimensions was shown to be a significant variable affecting the outcome of training. The effectiveness of programmed procedures was also shown to interact with task difficulty. Finally, wide individual differences in learning within the population of severely mentally handicapped persons have frequently been reported, and were also observed in the present research. In a final study, individual differences in some basic cognitive abilities and aspects of classroom behaviour were assessed and shown to be significantly correlated with discrimination performance. The results are related to the literature on compound conditioning (e.g., Kamin, 1968) and theories of discrimination learning (Terrace, 1966; Rescorla & Wagner, 1972; Zeaman and House, 1963, 1979), and suggest the importance of attentlonal processes in discrimination learning. Lastly, some educational implications of the results are discussed.
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The feasibility of trainee committees as a means of self-advocacy in adult training centres in England and WalesCrawley, B. January 1982 (has links)
The subject of this study is the trainee-committee, a group of mentally handicapped adults attending an Adult Training Centre who meet regularly to discuss aspects of centre life. The frequency of representative groups of trainees was established by a survey of all ATCs in England and Wales. An 83% response rate revealed that over one fifth of centres had one of the following types of committee: trainee only (no staff taking part); staff majority (one or two trainees sitting in on a staff meeting); and trainee majority (a group of trainees with one or two members of staff in attendance). The third, 'trainee majority', category was by far the most common. The growth in committees is a recent development with an acceleration in the two years prior to the survey. A follow-up study, one year later, found this trend to be continuing. Further detail of committees was obtained in the second stage of the research in which 12 committees were examined. At each centre, the staff member most involved with the committee completed a questionnaire concerning the committee performance and his/her attitudes towards it. Trainee committee members and non-members were also interviewed and an illustrated, five point scale was used as the response medium. Trainee and staff responses to the same items were compared. This stage of the research revealed that the approach adopted towards the committees examined lacked structure and objectiveness. The staff involved did not appear to have considered the individual skills required for committee membership or the factors which impinge on committee activity. Training for membership, though recognised as valuable, rarely took place. Staff, trainee committee members and non-members, generally viewed the committee as a valuable component of centre life. Recommendations for committee practice were drawn up following this stage of research. In the third stage of the study, the effects of committee initiation and activity were investigated. An experimental committee was established according to the recommendations previously formulated and pre-training took place prior to committee initiation (in 12 hourly sessions). The nine committee members were assessed on the Self-Advocacy Assessment Battery (SAAB) (12 individual and 2 group related measures) prior to training and six months later. The committee met weekly in this period and its activities were directed, and monitored, by the experimenter. Assessments were also made, at the same intervals, of a committee which had existed for 3 years, and to which the members of the experimental committee had been matched on the Scale for Assessing Coping Skills. The activities of this committee were partially monitored. A matched control group with no previous committee experience, or experience throughout the study, was similarly assessed. A case study of each committee, and analysis of the verbal recordings of meetings, are given in the thesis. Little difference was found between the three groups at the first assessment. Significant improvements were noted for the experimental committee at the second assessment on the measures of knowledge of committee terminology, reporting information and assessing opinion. Locus of control was found to have become significantly more internal at the second assessment. Improvements were also indicated for the experimental committee in the measure of recognition of vocal expression, decision making and in the group problem solving and decision making measures. Little change was found in selfconcept, recognition of facial expression, the Rosenzweig Picture-Frustration study, the staff and parental measures of frequency of independent action and in staff ratings of committee ability. The performance of the existing committee and control group varied little between assessments. The recommendations for committee practice were amended following this final stage of the research and the Self-Advocacy Manual was in draft form at the end of the study. The results are discussed in terms of the value of trainee-committees as a means of self-advocacy for mentally handicapped people. * Whilst the majority of individuals attending Adult Training Centres fall within the category of severe mental handicap, it should be pointed out that the majority of individuals taking part in this study would be in the upper-severe to mild mental handicap range of ability.
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Vocational supervisor's staff training and development requirements in sheltered workshops /Evans, Malcolm E. Unknown Date (has links)
Thesis (M Ed (Human Rsource Studies)) -- University of South Australia, 1991
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The development and evaluation of the essential adult sex education (EASE) curriculum for the mentally retardedZelman, David Bruce, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis--Wisconsin. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 76-80).
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An examination of mentally retarded offenders in the Hong Kong criminal justice systemSo, Ka-man., 蘇家雯. January 1994 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Criminology / Master / Master of Social Sciences
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