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Die invloed van skofwerk op ouer-kindverhoudingeLötter, Martinus Johannes 30 November 2003 (has links)
Text in Afrikaans / 'n Ondersoek is onderneem om vas te stel watter invloed skofwerk op ouerkindverhoudinge
het.
'n Literatuurstudie is uitgevoer om die invloed van skofwerk op mense en
gesinsfunksies te bepaal. Vraelyste ten opsigte van die ouer-kindverhouding en
gesinskommunikasie is geïdentifiseer en aangepas.
Uit die resultate van die empiriese ondersoek is geen beduidende verskil gevind in die
globale verhouding tussen ouers en kinders by gesinne waar ouers skofte werk en
gesinne waar ouers nie skofte werk nie. 'n Beduidende verski1 in die kenverhouding
tussen ouers en kinders bet voorgekom. Daar is bevind dat ouer adolessente 'n
swakker gesags- en vertrouensverhouding met bulle ouers het as jonger adolessente in
gesinne waar die ouers skofte werk.
Opvoedkundige implikasies van die bevindinge is bespreek. Riglyne vir die
verbetering van die ken-, vertrouens- en gesagsverhouding tussen ouers en kinders is
aan ouers en onderwysers gestel. Laastens is voorstelle vir verdere navorsing
gemaak.
An investigation was wtdertaken to detennine the intluence of shift work on parent~
child relationships.
A literature study was done to detennine the influence of shift work on people and
family functions. Questionnaires dealing with the parent-child relationship and
family communication were identified and adapted.
According to the results of the empirical investigation no significant differences were
found in general parent-child relationships between families where parents work shifts
and families where parents do not work shifts. A significant difference was found in
the relationship of knowing between shift working parents and childnm. lt was foWld
that older adolescents have a weaker relationship of authority and trust in families
where parents work shifts.
The educational implications of the findings are discussed. Guidelines for a better
relationship of knowing, authority and trust between parent and child are given to
parents and teachers. Lastly, suggestions for further research are made. / Educational Studies / M. Ed.(Guidance and Couselling)
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Working women in their multiple role environment : a salutogenic perspectiveCarrim, Sumaya Omar 06 1900 (has links)
Industrial and Organisational Psychology / M.A. (Industrial Psychology)
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Working mothers, child care and the organisation : an ecosystemic explorationMarques, Paula Alexandra de Graça 11 1900 (has links)
In this study an ecosystemic and social constructionist approach is used to understand the meanings and perceptions held by working mothers in relation to their experiences with the childcare and organisation settings. These meanings are described in terms of the influence of wider social discourses, personal epistemological assumptions, tacit knowledge, past experiences and current contexts. The working mothers, together with the researcher, form a linguistic system in which meanings about motherhood, employer-support and childcare arrangements are co-constructed and shared. The relationships between the working mothers and the researcher are not only observed within a linguistic context, but also within the ecosystemic view of mutual reciprocity, self-referentiality and double description. A qualitative and naturalistic research methodology is followed to describe the emergent design and the grounded theory. Based on the qualitative paradigm, the conclusions drawn at the end of the study are idiographic and reflective. / Psychology / M.A.(Clinical Psychology)
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The systems psychodynamics underlying the work-family interface amongst managerial women in the public sectorNaik, Biva 11 1900 (has links)
It is argued that key to gender empowerment and the success of women in leadership is the exploration of the work-family interface which serves to enhance the understanding of issues faced by women leaders as they navigate through their domestic and management roles. It is also contended that work-family scholarship move beyond the study of objective characteristics, and the overt conscious level of functioning of the interface, to an understanding of the intra-psychic experiences of individuals. Recognising the preoccupation with the role strain perspective, it is argued that work-family scholarship adopts a more balanced view and considers the positive and negative effects of participating in multiple roles. Hence the general aim of this qualitative study was to understand the systems psychodynamics underlying the work-family interface that influence the processes of enrichment and conflict among managerial women in the public sector.
In the empirical study, data was gathered using the organisational role analysis method, and analysed by means of systems psychodynamic discourse analysis. Six themes and their related subthemes were identified, namely anxiety and conflict, identity, boundary management, authority, role and task. The findings explored the manner in which these behavioural dynamics of participants, and their family and organisational systems interacted, mutually influencing each other, and shaping the way managerial women found, made and took up their domestic and management roles at the work-family interface. This led to resource generation and role enhancement, or resource depletion and role strain in the role (domestic or management). Through relatedness, projection and introjection between the systems and roles, the quality of life in one role influenced the other role, promoting enrichment and conflict at the interface. This study concluded that both enrichment and conflict occur at the interface. While participants oscillated between experiencing enrichment and conflict, some participants experienced more enrichment than conflict, while others experienced more conflict than enrichment at the work-family interface. The extent to which enrichment or conflict occurred between the systems was mediated by participants’ ability to self-contain, and/or the receiving system’s ability to serve as a “good enough” holding environment containing the anxieties experienced in the other role. / D. Litt et Phil. (Industrial & Organisational Psychology)
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The systems psychodynamics underlying the work-family interface amongst managerial women in the public sectorNaik, Biva 11 1900 (has links)
It is argued that key to gender empowerment and the success of women in leadership is the exploration of the work-family interface which serves to enhance the understanding of issues faced by women leaders as they navigate through their domestic and management roles. It is also contended that work-family scholarship move beyond the study of objective characteristics, and the overt conscious level of functioning of the interface, to an understanding of the intra-psychic experiences of individuals. Recognising the preoccupation with the role strain perspective, it is argued that work-family scholarship adopts a more balanced view and considers the positive and negative effects of participating in multiple roles. Hence the general aim of this qualitative study was to understand the systems psychodynamics underlying the work-family interface that influence the processes of enrichment and conflict among managerial women in the public sector.
In the empirical study, data was gathered using the organisational role analysis method, and analysed by means of systems psychodynamic discourse analysis. Six themes and their related subthemes were identified, namely anxiety and conflict, identity, boundary management, authority, role and task. The findings explored the manner in which these behavioural dynamics of participants, and their family and organisational systems interacted, mutually influencing each other, and shaping the way managerial women found, made and took up their domestic and management roles at the work-family interface. This led to resource generation and role enhancement, or resource depletion and role strain in the role (domestic or management). Through relatedness, projection and introjection between the systems and roles, the quality of life in one role influenced the other role, promoting enrichment and conflict at the interface. This study concluded that both enrichment and conflict occur at the interface. While participants oscillated between experiencing enrichment and conflict, some participants experienced more enrichment than conflict, while others experienced more conflict than enrichment at the work-family interface. The extent to which enrichment or conflict occurred between the systems was mediated by participants’ ability to self-contain, and/or the receiving system’s ability to serve as a “good enough” holding environment containing the anxieties experienced in the other role. / D. Litt et Phil. (Industrial and Organisational Psychology)
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Empirical essays on health care for children and familiesNeziroglu Cidav, Zuleyha, 1979- 05 October 2012 (has links)
This dissertation consists of three empirical essays investigating different aspects of health care for children and families. The first essay examines the effectiveness of adherence to American Academy of Pediatrics guidelines for preventive pediatric health care. Using a national longitudinal sample of children age two years and younger, we investigate whether compliance with prescribed periodic well-child care visits has beneficial effects on child health. We find that increased compliance improves child health. In particular, higher compliance lowers future risks of fair or poor health, of some history of a serious illness and of having a health limitation. The second essay examines child health care utilization in relation to maternal labor supply. We test the hypothesis that working-mothers trade off the advantages of greater income against the disadvantages of less time for other valuable tasks, such as seeking health care for their children. This tradeoff may result in positive, negative, or no net impacts on child health investment. We estimate health care demand regressions that include separate variables for mother’s labor supply and her labor income. Our results indicate that higher maternal work hours reduce child health care visits; higher maternal earnings increase them. In addition, wage-employment, as opposed to self-employment, is detrimental to child health investment. A further finding is that preventive care demand for younger children is less sensitive to maternal time and income changes. We also find that detrimental time effects dominate beneficial income effects. The third essay studies intra-household resource allocation as it pertains to its demand for preventive medical care. We test the income-pooling hypothesis of the common preference model by using individual specific medical care consumption data and present evidence on the allocation of household resources to the medical needs of the child, husband and wife. Our results are in line with the findings of previous studies that emphasize the ongoing importance of the traditional gender role of woman as the primary caregiver. We find that the resources of the wife have a greater positive impact on child’s and her own preventive care demand than does the resources of the husband. In contrast to most studies from developing countries, we find that US families do not exhibit differential health care demand based on child gender. It is also noteworthy that the wife’s education level has a greater positive impact than that of her husband does on both the husband’s and her own preventive care utilization. / text
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Working women in their multiple role environment : a salutogenic perspectiveCarrim, Sumaya Omar 06 1900 (has links)
Industrial and Organisational Psychology / M.A. (Industrial Psychology)
|
138 |
Working mothers, child care and the organisation : an ecosystemic explorationMarques, Paula Alexandra de Graça 11 1900 (has links)
In this study an ecosystemic and social constructionist approach is used to understand the meanings and perceptions held by working mothers in relation to their experiences with the childcare and organisation settings. These meanings are described in terms of the influence of wider social discourses, personal epistemological assumptions, tacit knowledge, past experiences and current contexts. The working mothers, together with the researcher, form a linguistic system in which meanings about motherhood, employer-support and childcare arrangements are co-constructed and shared. The relationships between the working mothers and the researcher are not only observed within a linguistic context, but also within the ecosystemic view of mutual reciprocity, self-referentiality and double description. A qualitative and naturalistic research methodology is followed to describe the emergent design and the grounded theory. Based on the qualitative paradigm, the conclusions drawn at the end of the study are idiographic and reflective. / Psychology / M.A.(Clinical Psychology)
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Invloed van skofwerk op ouer-kindverhoudingeLotter, Martinus Johannes 30 November 2003 (has links)
Text in Afrikaans / 'n Ondersoek is onderneem om vas te stel watter invloed skofwerk op ouerkindverhoudinge
het.
'n Literatuurstudie is uitgevoer om die invloed van skofwerk op mense en
gesinsfunksies te bepaal. Vraelyste ten opsigte van die ouer-kindverhouding en
gesinskommunikasie is geïdentifiseer en aangepas.
Uit die resultate van die empiriese ondersoek is geen beduidende verskil gevind in die
globale verhouding tussen ouers en kinders by gesinne waar ouers skofte werk en
gesinne waar ouers nie skofte werk nie. 'n Beduidende verski1 in die kenverhouding
tussen ouers en kinders bet voorgekom. Daar is bevind dat ouer adolessente 'n
swakker gesags- en vertrouensverhouding met bulle ouers het as jonger adolessente in
gesinne waar die ouers skofte werk.
Opvoedkundige implikasies van die bevindinge is bespreek. Riglyne vir die
verbetering van die ken-, vertrouens- en gesagsverhouding tussen ouers en kinders is
aan ouers en onderwysers gestel. Laastens is voorstelle vir verdere navorsing
gemaak.
An investigation was wtdertaken to detennine the intluence of shift work on parent~
child relationships.
A literature study was done to detennine the influence of shift work on people and
family functions. Questionnaires dealing with the parent-child relationship and
family communication were identified and adapted.
According to the results of the empirical investigation no significant differences were
found in general parent-child relationships between families where parents work shifts
and families where parents do not work shifts. A significant difference was found in
the relationship of knowing between shift working parents and childnm. lt was foWld
that older adolescents have a weaker relationship of authority and trust in families
where parents work shifts.
The educational implications of the findings are discussed. Guidelines for a better
relationship of knowing, authority and trust between parent and child are given to
parents and teachers. Lastly, suggestions for further research are made. / Educational Studies / M. Ed.(Guidance and Couselling)
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Factors Influencing Career Advancement Potential for Mothers in the WorkplaceMcCord, Kara E. 16 August 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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