Spelling suggestions: "subject:"phenomenology"" "subject:"henomenology""
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"Some days I don't know how I got through it, but I did": The Experience of Resilience in Survivors of Intimate Partner ViolenceCrann, Sara 24 October 2012 (has links)
Little is known about what factors contribute to resilience or how resilience is experienced by survivors of intimate partner violence (IPV). Using in-depth semi-structured interviews, two qualitative studies examined how resilience is defined, conceptualized, and experienced by survivors of IPV. Ten adult women participated in study 1 and data was analyzed using thematic analysis (Braun & Clarke, 2006) to identify a variety of internal and external factors and mechanisms that contributed to resilience. Sixteen adult women participated in study 2 and data was analyzed using Colaizzi’s (1978) phenomenological method. Resilience was experienced as a series of cognitive, emotional, and behavioural shifts across three theme areas: toward resistance, in the experience of control, and toward positivity. Together, these studies suggest that for survivors of IPV, resilience is experienced as a personalized, ongoing, and dynamic process involving multiple internal and external pathways that facilitate shift experiences. / Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada
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Examining secondary school teacher understanding of information literacySmith, Jorden Unknown Date
No description available.
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High Order Corrections to Fundamental ConstantsDowling, Matthew E Unknown Date
No description available.
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General education, aesthetic education and value awareness : rationale for a phenomenological researchMcNeil, Isabelle. January 1996 (has links)
Literature in art education suggests a link between aesthetic experiences and value awareness. The existence of such a link could have important implications for the role of art education in our schools, answering to the often expressed need to address values within our educational programs. However, most available work on this subject is theoretical, and often based on untested prior assumptions. Therefore claims to knowledge of this link cannot yet be explicitly made. / It is my contention that an inquiry into the nature of aesthetic experiences is required before subsequent claims to knowledge of its relation to value awareness can be made. I also believe that phenomenology offers the best suited method for carrying out such an investigation. / This thesis is therefore concerned with the rationale for the need of a phenomenological investigation into aesthetic experiences: justifications being provided on the basis of the available literature and the phenomenological method itself.
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Exploring the interactional determinants of collaboration on interprofessional practice in community-based geriatric careBaldwin, Alanna 04 April 2012 (has links)
Collaboration is neither the ethos, nor the experience, of most professionals in health care. Nevertheless, the concept of collaboration has become increasingly popular in recent years, promising to enhance all aspects of work, academic, and political life. And while collaboration is a significant and complex phenomenon, it has not been clearly understood for its impact on health care professionals and their work, or for the factors that influence its success or failure.
The purpose of the study was to explore the meaning of collaboration, as conveyed by the lived experience of health care professionals, as well as the interpersonal and interactional determinants and their impact on the outcomes of their collaboration. The conceptual paradigm of phenomenology and hermeneutic phenomenological methods guided the research. In-depth interviews were conducted with 10 health care professionals engaged in interprofessional practice in a novel community-based geriatric care program. The interviews were audiotaped and transcribed verbatim. Ricoeur’s procedural steps were used to analyze the transcripts.
Acquiring the ‘real world’ experiences of health care professionals enabled the emergence of six themes: engaging in collective thinking and action to produce best outcomes and optimize clients’ health; responding to collaboration for self and other members as a continued work in progress; experiencing the personal and professional rewards as markers of success with collaboration; existing challenges create barriers that impede collaboration; experiencing the interactional dynamics of collaboration and their influences requires the interpersonal attributes of quality communication, openness, trust, and respect; and forming a common vision is necessary for collaboration but difficult to achieve.
The findings of this study suggest that collaboration is a genuinely experiential phenomenon: it is a human process that requires leadership on the part of all health care professionals to negotiate and agree upon the processes that will enhance their relationships and are necessary for collaboration to unfold. This study produced a number of recommendations that can be offered to multiple stakeholders in the geriatric care setting, as well as extended to those in the other domains of health care.
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Cultural landscapes of the common ground: Mapping traditional Anishinaabe relationships to the landRatuski, Sheldon Christopher Lee 07 February 2014 (has links)
The primary goal of this research was the facilitation of cross-cultural communication between
local Anishinaabe and settler communities within the context of the Rat Portage Common
Ground Conservation Organization. Through the course of this study a combination of western
cartographic conventions, phenomenological principles, and cultural asset mapping techniques
have been applied. The original data discussed are the aggregation of three separate data
collection initiatives. Each initiatives' individual results have been utilized in various ways to
record, communicate, and verify the final research process and products. The research also
sought to gain insight into the application of particular mapping methodologies to a
phenomenological inquiry. The phenomenon under investigation was the place-based
Anishinaabe cultural landscapes of the Common Ground Lands. While the employed mapping
conventions were found to assist in realizing the phenomenological objectives of the research, it
was also observed that phenomenology itself offered valuable insights into the act of mapping.
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Breastfeeding experiences of low-income women in the city of Winnipeg: a qualitative studyPierce, Lorelei 03 January 2014 (has links)
Low-income women are less likely to initiate, continue and exclusively breastfeed. Limited Canadian research exists regarding the lived breastfeeding experience. A phenomenological study, utilizing a feminist approach and Fishbein’s Integrative Model of Behavioral Prediction was conducted. Women recruited via purposeful, criterion sampling, who were eligible for the Manitoba Healthy Child Prenatal Benefit and had breastfed participated in 1:1 interviews (N=18). The essence of the experience was breastfeeding is “amazing and tough”. The themes of “life context”, “tough work”, and “persevering” emerged. Women who continued to breastfeed described breastfeeding becoming easier and ongoing breastfeeding variability in their experience. Those who discontinued breastfeeding noted it did not fit with their lifestyle, made the decision to breastfeed later, and interpreted breastfeeding problems differently. Researchers and practitioners need to explore the role of stress and consider this in providing individualized, coordinated breastfeeding and health care support to these women.
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Exploring the interactional determinants of collaboration on interprofessional practice in community-based geriatric careBaldwin, Alanna 04 April 2012 (has links)
Collaboration is neither the ethos, nor the experience, of most professionals in health care. Nevertheless, the concept of collaboration has become increasingly popular in recent years, promising to enhance all aspects of work, academic, and political life. And while collaboration is a significant and complex phenomenon, it has not been clearly understood for its impact on health care professionals and their work, or for the factors that influence its success or failure.
The purpose of the study was to explore the meaning of collaboration, as conveyed by the lived experience of health care professionals, as well as the interpersonal and interactional determinants and their impact on the outcomes of their collaboration. The conceptual paradigm of phenomenology and hermeneutic phenomenological methods guided the research. In-depth interviews were conducted with 10 health care professionals engaged in interprofessional practice in a novel community-based geriatric care program. The interviews were audiotaped and transcribed verbatim. Ricoeur’s procedural steps were used to analyze the transcripts.
Acquiring the ‘real world’ experiences of health care professionals enabled the emergence of six themes: engaging in collective thinking and action to produce best outcomes and optimize clients’ health; responding to collaboration for self and other members as a continued work in progress; experiencing the personal and professional rewards as markers of success with collaboration; existing challenges create barriers that impede collaboration; experiencing the interactional dynamics of collaboration and their influences requires the interpersonal attributes of quality communication, openness, trust, and respect; and forming a common vision is necessary for collaboration but difficult to achieve.
The findings of this study suggest that collaboration is a genuinely experiential phenomenon: it is a human process that requires leadership on the part of all health care professionals to negotiate and agree upon the processes that will enhance their relationships and are necessary for collaboration to unfold. This study produced a number of recommendations that can be offered to multiple stakeholders in the geriatric care setting, as well as extended to those in the other domains of health care.
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Lived borderline space : a Heideggarian journey into the lived experience of psychosisGibson, Colin George January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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Cultural landscapes of the common ground: Mapping traditional Anishinaabe relationships to the landRatuski, Sheldon Christopher Lee 07 February 2014 (has links)
The primary goal of this research was the facilitation of cross-cultural communication between
local Anishinaabe and settler communities within the context of the Rat Portage Common
Ground Conservation Organization. Through the course of this study a combination of western
cartographic conventions, phenomenological principles, and cultural asset mapping techniques
have been applied. The original data discussed are the aggregation of three separate data
collection initiatives. Each initiatives' individual results have been utilized in various ways to
record, communicate, and verify the final research process and products. The research also
sought to gain insight into the application of particular mapping methodologies to a
phenomenological inquiry. The phenomenon under investigation was the place-based
Anishinaabe cultural landscapes of the Common Ground Lands. While the employed mapping
conventions were found to assist in realizing the phenomenological objectives of the research, it
was also observed that phenomenology itself offered valuable insights into the act of mapping.
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