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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.
71

Identity viewed askew : a debate with special reference to a feminist theological organisation : a thesis presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Sociology, Department of Social and Cultural Studies, Massey University, Albany, New Zealand

Leggatt-Cook, Chez Unknown Date (has links)
A critical task in the formation of any political group is the determination and articulation of group identity, purpose and goals. In holding that identity is impervious to capture, much poststructuralist thought has little to contribute to an understanding of the precise processes and ongoing tensions involved in such drives for representation. The essentialism debate in feminist theory, for instance, has been primarily concerned with determining which conceptualisation of women's subjectivity will best facilitate feminism's political goals. However, under the influential feminist deconstructive perspective, a dilemma emerges regarding how an anti-essentialist notion of femininity might be reconciled with the essentialism required for a distinctly feminist voice. Alternatively, post-Lacanian psychoanalysis views subjectivity as an effect of fundamentally irresolvable antagonisms in language, allowing the emphasis to shift from the (attempted) reconciliation of irresolvable tensions to the identification of mechanisms that work to conceal those tensions, thereby permitting a sense of subjectivity to be articulated. This thesis explores the methodological implications of these theoretical debates, examining how the psychoanalytic line of questioning might be used to analyse feminist identity in an empirical setting. Research was conducted with the Women's Resource Centre (WRC) based in Auckland, New Zealand, an organisation originally established to provide feminist theology resources to women undergoing theological education. Using a conversational methodology and the observation of material expressions of identity, the research attempts to view the Centre's identity 'askew.' In doing so, it considers the creative yet eventually regressive impact of the postmodern privileging of difference and multiplicity on the feminist identity of the Centre. Referring specifically to the changing expression of the Centre's identity (in promotional material, funding applications and the WRC Story), the thesis traces the effects of ideological tension (in incorporating more inclusive notions of justice with feminist politics) and organisational change (dispersion of the original community, high staff turnover, shift in organisational culture, funding difficulties). Wider implications of the research for voluntary and feminist organisations are indicated, along with an evaluation of post-Lacanian psychoanalysis for the empirical study of identity and for the overarching theoretical concerns of the thesis.
72

Service coordination in rural South Australia

Munn, Peter January 2005 (has links)
This study identifies informal networks as the most accepted method of sharing information. Enhancing service delivery is shown as being a key trigger of coordination while rigid funding approaches are perceived to be a major inhibitor. Organisational type, position, practice approaches and location are shown to influence people's perception of coordination.
73

Up-lift in Vaggeryd : Qualitative Analysis of Entrepreneurial Education in Vaggeryd

Jordanov, Dejan January 2007 (has links)
PROBLEM DISCUSSION: Vaggeryd is a small municipality Småland. In addition to its strategic position along the main traffic route E4, Vaggeryd is very interesting also because of its advanced view on growing of the business sector, in both short and long-term per- spective. To meet that goal the municipality of Vaggeryd started to invest in “Egenföretagareutbildningen” EFU in cooperation with Jönköping International Business School (JIBS). The main idea is that students attend the courses that are held by JIBS and during their studies start their own business in a local business incubator called Fenix. PURPOSE: To host such education requires a huge amount of energy and resources from the municipality, which consequently would like to get answers to questions like “Is it worth investing in the education?” or “What are the results of such education?” The aim of this paper is to give the answers to those crucial questions though I believe that the time that has passed from the beginning of the education is too short and that the number of the students was not large enough to get definitive answers. This paper concentrates on a narrow part of the qualitative research methods – an inter- view. It is divided into two parts, a theoretical part and the empirical findings. FINDINGS: The research showed that six students out of a total of ten from generation 2005 started a new venture, three will take over a family business, and one has not decided to start a business yet. Of six students in generation 2003 four have started a business and one of them finished in bankruptcy, one plans to start a business in the future and one does not have a good business idea. RECOMMENDATIONS: Answers that the interviews returned gave interesting sugges- tions to both the municipality of Vaggeryd and JIBS about how to improve EFU. I would emphasise two, I believe, the most important recommendations. First municipality has to attract neighbouring municipalities in the EFU project. In addition, a greater effort should be made to help students build a spider’s web of business contacts.
74

"The Word is Not all Rainbows and Butterflies": Facilitating Physical Activity and Quality of Life among Children Living with Cystic Fibrosis and Congenital Heart Disease-toward a Conceptual Framework and Parent-mediated Behavioural Counselling Program

Moola, Fiona 10 January 2012 (has links)
Although medical advances have improved prognosis for children with cystic fibrosis (CF) and congenital heart disease (CHD), these youth experience poor psycho - social health. Embedded within the Medical Research Council’s framework, the purpose of this Dissertation was to a) examine how CF and CHD children experience physical activity, b) explore parents’ perceptions toward their child’s activity, c) develop a theory of physical activity in childhood chronic diseases, d) develop a physical activity counselling program for youth with CF and their parents, and e) evaluate the program impact on quality of life and physical activity. Study One explored how 14 CF youth experience physical activity. Active and inactive youth were characterized by different experiences, such as a sense of hope or despair. Given the burden of treatment and the fatal nature of the disease, youth negotiated temporal barriers to activity. Study Two explored perceptions toward activity among 29 CF and CHD parents. Parents discussed the benefits and barriers associated with physical activity for both child and self, and underscored the importance of role modeling. By adopting a Grounded Theory approach, the theoretical constructs from Study One and Two were crystallized to develop a theory of physical activity in youth with CF and CHD. This theory was used to develop “CF Chatters:” A Six Week Physical Activity Counselling Program for Youth with CF and their Parents, and the intervention employed behavioural self regulation ii skills. In Study Three, four case families in the CF clinic at the Hospital for Sick Children participated in CF Chatters. Improvements were noted in quality of life and physical activity, and participants described the program as convenient and relevant to their activity concerns. CF Chatters afforded therapeutic benefits to participants. By employing an eclectic qualitative approach, this Doctoral Program has made theoretical and practical contributions toward our understanding of how physical activity is experienced among children living with CF/CHD. The findings support the use of behavioural counselling as an effective and feasible modality for enhancing quality of life and physical activity. This Dissertation calls on clinicians to attend to the activity needs of chronically ill Canadian youth.
75

"The Word is Not all Rainbows and Butterflies": Facilitating Physical Activity and Quality of Life among Children Living with Cystic Fibrosis and Congenital Heart Disease-toward a Conceptual Framework and Parent-mediated Behavioural Counselling Program

Moola, Fiona 10 January 2012 (has links)
Although medical advances have improved prognosis for children with cystic fibrosis (CF) and congenital heart disease (CHD), these youth experience poor psycho - social health. Embedded within the Medical Research Council’s framework, the purpose of this Dissertation was to a) examine how CF and CHD children experience physical activity, b) explore parents’ perceptions toward their child’s activity, c) develop a theory of physical activity in childhood chronic diseases, d) develop a physical activity counselling program for youth with CF and their parents, and e) evaluate the program impact on quality of life and physical activity. Study One explored how 14 CF youth experience physical activity. Active and inactive youth were characterized by different experiences, such as a sense of hope or despair. Given the burden of treatment and the fatal nature of the disease, youth negotiated temporal barriers to activity. Study Two explored perceptions toward activity among 29 CF and CHD parents. Parents discussed the benefits and barriers associated with physical activity for both child and self, and underscored the importance of role modeling. By adopting a Grounded Theory approach, the theoretical constructs from Study One and Two were crystallized to develop a theory of physical activity in youth with CF and CHD. This theory was used to develop “CF Chatters:” A Six Week Physical Activity Counselling Program for Youth with CF and their Parents, and the intervention employed behavioural self regulation ii skills. In Study Three, four case families in the CF clinic at the Hospital for Sick Children participated in CF Chatters. Improvements were noted in quality of life and physical activity, and participants described the program as convenient and relevant to their activity concerns. CF Chatters afforded therapeutic benefits to participants. By employing an eclectic qualitative approach, this Doctoral Program has made theoretical and practical contributions toward our understanding of how physical activity is experienced among children living with CF/CHD. The findings support the use of behavioural counselling as an effective and feasible modality for enhancing quality of life and physical activity. This Dissertation calls on clinicians to attend to the activity needs of chronically ill Canadian youth.
76

Emotional design : an investigation into designers' perceptions of incorporating emotions in software

Gutica, Mirela 11 1900 (has links)
In my teaching and software development practice, I realized that most applications with human-computer interaction do not respond to users’ emotional needs. The dualism of reason and emotion as two fairly opposite entities that dominated Western philosophy was also reflected in software design. Computing was originally intended to provide applications for military and industrial activities and was primarily associated with cognition and rationality. Today, more and more computer applications interact with users in very complex and sophisticated ways. In human-computer interaction, attention is given to issues of usability and user modeling, but techniques to emotionally engage users or respond to their emotional needs have not been fully developed, even as specialists like Klein, Norman and Picard argued that machines that recognize and express emotions respond better and more appropriately to user interaction (Picard, 1997; Picard & Klein, 2002; Norman, 2004). This study investigated emotion from designers’ perspectives and tentatively concludes that there is little awareness and involvement in emotional design in the IT community. By contrast, participants in this study (36 IT specialists from various fields) strongly supported the idea of emotional design and confirmed the need for methodologies and theoretical models to research emotional design. Based on a review of theory, surveys and interviews, I identified a set of themes for heuristics of emotional design and recommended future research directions. Attention was given to consequences; participants in this study raised issues of manipulation, ethical responsibilities of designers, and the need for regulations, and recommended that emotional design should carry standard ethical guidelines for games and any other applications. The research design utilized a mixed QUAN-qual methodological model proposed by Creswell (2003) and Gay, Mills, and Airasian (2006), which was modified to equally emphasize both quantitative and qualitative stages. An instrument in the form of a questionnaire was designed, tested and piloted in this study and will be improved and used in future research.
77

Moonlight in Miami [electronic resource] : a field study of human-robot interaction in the context of an urban search and rescue disaster response training exercise / by Jennifer L. Burke.

Burke, Jennifer L. January 2004 (has links)
Title from PDF of title page. / Document formatted into pages; contains 68 pages. / Thesis (M.A.)--University of South Florida, 2004. / Includes bibliographical references. / Text (Electronic thesis) in PDF format. / ABSTRACT: This study explores human-robot interaction during a 16-hour high-fidelity Urban Search and Rescue (USAR) disaster response drill with teleoperated robots. Situation awareness and team interaction were examined using communication analysis. Operators (n=5) sought assistance from team members to compensate for difficulties building or maintaining situation awareness. Operator-team member communication focused on relating what was seen through the robot's eye view with prior knowledge and planning search strategies. Results suggest operators need a new cognitive mental model to filter and comprehend data provided by the robot, and that robot-assisted search is a team task rather than an individual one. / ABSTRACT: USAR technical search teams need a new shared mental model of robot-assisted search in order to coordinate activities effectively. / System requirements: World Wide Web browser and PDF reader. / Mode of access: World Wide Web.
78

The South African research landscape : the use of traditional and alternative methodologies in addressing information shortages /

Prinsloo, Mélani. January 2007 (has links)
Diss. Luleå : Luleå tekniska univ., 2007.
79

Respondent fatigue in self-report victim surveys: Examining a source of nonsampling error from three perspectives

Hart, Timothy C 01 June 2006 (has links)
Survey research is a popular methodology used to gather data on a myriad of phenomena. Self-report victim surveys administered by the Federal government are used to substantially broaden our understanding of the nature and extent of crime. A potential source of nonsampling error, respondent fatigue is thought to manifest in contemporary victim surveys, as respondents become "test wise" after repeated exposure to survey instruments. Using a special longitudinal data file, the presence and influence of respondent fatigue in national self-report victim surveys is examined from three perspectives. Collectively, results provide a comprehensive look at how respondent fatigue may impact crime estimates produced by national self-report victim surveys.
80

The impact of recent policy revisions addressing doping and gender rules on women track and field student-athletes in China

He, Dongwan 25 August 2015 (has links)
Women’s involvement in sport has remained a critical issue in society for several decades. Sex verification and drug testing are two methods that have been used to regulate women’s eligibility to compete in international sports competitions based on their testosterone levels. Organizations such as the International Olympic Committee (IOC) and World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) have published and updated policies and rules that set eligibility criteria for who can compete in women’s sport and under what conditions. However, the academic literature addressing Chinese women’s perspectives on international sex verification and drug testing policies available in English is extremely limited. This study investigates how recent policy revisions regarding doping and sex eligibility rules impact women student- athletes competing in track and field at the university level in China. Using qualitative research methods, this thesis analyzes the impact of recent doping and gender policies on a sample of Chinese female student-athletes. / October 2015

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