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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.
141

Time allocation to homework and extra-curricular tuition by primary school students in Hong Kong: the impact onhealth of indicators

Wong, Lisa Anne January 2009 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Community Medicine / Master / Master of Public Health
142

Development of a questionnaire to determine change in the occupational performance of pre-school children with autistic spectrum disorders receiving occupational therapy - sensory integration

Wallace, Kerry Anne 20 September 2010 (has links)
MSc (Occupational Therapy), Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand / As there are no occupation based outcome measures evaluating the effect of occupational therapy in the pre-school child with an Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) an Occupational Performance Questionnaire (OPQ) was developed to address this. The OPQ was tested for content validity and reliability before a 12 month intervention study to establish construct validity and response to change in children with ASD receiving Occupational Therapy using a Sensory Integration frame of reference (OT-SI) was done. The results of 19 subjects on the OPQ were compared with the results on two other standardised measures -the Short Sensory Profile (SSP), and Parenting Stress Index (PSI-SF) at six monthly intervals. Convergent validity between family impact on the OPQ and the PSI-SF was moderate but for occupation performance on the OPQ and the SSP it changed from negligible to moderate over 12 months. The OPQ is responsive to change as correlations between improvements in the three outcome measures were moderate. The OPQ was found to still need attention in terms of item reliability and validity.
143

Likeability and Popularity as Sources of Influence within Primary School Friendships

Unknown Date (has links)
It is well documented that friends influence adaptive behaviors (Brechwald & Prinstein, 2011). However, it remains unclear how influence manifests itself. The current study investigated the role of likeability and popularity in determining the relative influence that a child exercises on his or her friend’s prosocial behavior and academic achievement in a sample of elementary schooled children (N=679). The results suggest that more liked friends have more influence over their less liked friends’ prosocial behavior and academic achievement. Both more- and less-popular friends influenced each other’s academic achievement. Residualized analyses, however, which take into account the shared overlap between likeability and popularity, suggest that the more-liked friend continued to influence the prosocial behavior and academic achievement of the less-liked friend, whereas more-popular children had no influence over their less-popular counterparts. / Includes bibliography. / Thesis (M.A.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2018. / FAU Electronic Theses and Dissertations Collection
144

Proposed standards, evaluation topics, criteria, and an assessment tool for school food and nutrition programs

Rivas, Dora Lee January 2010 (has links)
Typescript (photocopy). / Digitized by Kansas Correctional Industries
145

Fruit and vegetable intake and its relationship with health parameters in primary school children

Althubaiti, Heba Awad January 2018 (has links)
There is a well-established link between F&V and health, and are an essential part of a balanced diet and healthy lifestyle. They are rich in essential nutrients that are believed to promote good health, such as vitamins, minerals, fibre, and phytochemicals. Due to the low adherence to F&V recommendation among people across all ages, it is essential to tackle this problem - especially among children. One way to achieve this is to gain a good understanding of the relationship between F&V intake and health parameters; this will help emphasise the importance of consuming the recommend five-a-day for the whole family. In addition, the younger generation should be provided with nutritional education regarding their food choices, including snacks. The investigation in this thesis focuses on children's F&V intake and healthy snack awareness and its relationship with measured health parameters, as currently very little is known about this relationship, particularly among Scottish children. To this end, six studies were conducted and are presented here. The first and second studies examined the relationship between F&V intake and health parameters using a combination of longitudinal and cross-sectional data (n=475 and 466, respectively) from children of primary school age (5 to 12 in Aberdeenshire). Parents completed either a seven-day total food intake questionnaire - dietary record (TFIQ) or a two-day fruit and vegetable questionnaire (FVQ) on behalf of their children. Health parameters (weight, height, body fat, waist/hip circumference, blood pressure and lung function) were measured at their school. Higher F&V intake was correlated with improved health parameters when using the two-day FVQ. These are summarised as follows: lowered systolic blood pressure, some measures of lung function and reduced weight, body fat, waist circumference, hip circumference, waist to hip ratio and waist to height ratio. Of note, the health parameters did not appear correlated with F&V intake measured using the seven-day TFIQ, with the exception of a negative relationship with blood pressure when using the longitudinal data. F&V intake using two instruments (seven-day TFIQ and two-day FVQ) was compared in the third study within the same individuals (primary school children, n=51). The estimated portions of F&V using the focused (two-day) FVQ was higher than the seven-day TFIQ. It is unclear whether parents tended to overestimate their children's F&V intake using the FVQ or under-estimate it using the TFIQ. These studies led to the fourth study, which focused on identifying biomarkers of F&V intake using the new technique of metabolomics - liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (LC/MS), using urine samples collected from the children. This involved correlating biomarkers in urine with children's F&V intake as measured by the FVQ. Participants included 29 primary age children, recruited as a part of the cross sectional F&V study in Chapter Two. The findings revealed 15 food/F&V biomarkers, excluding food/F&V biomarkers (n=5) that reflected children's dietary behaviour which was identified as a result of the significant correlation with children's F&V intake. The identified biomarkers which were revealed from two different approaches - stepwise regression and literature searching - are as follows: citric acid; benzoic acid; 2-Pyrrolidinone; Glycine; Alanine; N-Nitrosopyrrolidine; Isocitric acid; Isocitrate; 1-Acetoxypinoresino; Proline betaine; Adenosine; Adenine; Hippuric acid; Carnitine, and Ethanol. Children's F&V intake was correlated with three urinary metabolites (4, 427, 109) in which very few correlations (n=4, one positive and three negative correlations) were significant. These correlations that compared the identified biomarker with what was reported in the FVQ were generally poor in terms of not showing agreement with children's F&V intake. One exception was the positive correlation that was found with the urinary excretion of gamma guanidinobutyric acid, which may reflect children's fruit intake. Urinary excretion of formic acid, butanoic acid and 1-propanamine were all negatively correlated with children's F&V intake and were used as a robust biomarker of fruit and dairy products among children. With the use of the metabolomics technique, there is more precision in children's dietary profile presentation compared with relying on a single method, such as the FVQ. Metabolomics has the potential to be used as a validation/reference tool and in detecting novel biomarkers. A fifth study was carried out to explore children's perceptions of snack healthiness and snack preferences, and the relationship between these and their health parameters. Participants were children of nursery and primary age (3-12 years old, n=472). A card sorting exercise was implemented using 18 popular snack types, and basic health parameters (weight, height, body fat, waist/hip circumference), both of which were measured in the children's school. The children showed good understanding of snack healthiness based on the nutritional composition of the 18 snacks, and the findings showed that as children develop, their perception of healthiness increases. Nevertheless, the unhealthier snacks were still the most preferable type to children. A follow-up study was conducted to examine parents' (n=142) views on snack healthiness and snack preferences for their children. Participants were parents of nursery and primary school age children. An online survey was designed and implemented as a tool for data collection. Parents exhibited a good awareness of healthy snacks, however stated that their children showed more preference for unhealthy snacks. There was no statistically significant relationship between parents' knowledge of snack healthiness and their age, sex, education level, employment status and ethnicity. Although parents demonstrated that nutritional value is one of the most important goals for them in snack selection for their children, taste and peer pressure are two factors that significantly affected children's snack choice. It is still not clear why the parents' snack choices were not always the healthy choice. Overall, the findings from the above-conducted studies demonstrated that: 1) Scottish children still do not adhere to the five-a-day recommendation; 2) some aspects of children's health were correlated to their F&V intake when using a focused two-day FVQ, and expressed more F&V intake for their children when the focus was on the two-day FVQ; 3) urine metabolomics has potential for identifying biomarkers of F&V intake; 4) both children and their parents showed a good perception and knowledge of what constitutes a healthy snack - even children of nursery age were able to differentiate between healthy and unhealthy types; 5) nevertheless, children's eating habits (particularly towards snack preference) need to be improved. It is hoped that these data will aid in the production and testing of further hypotheses related to short- and long-term health in children.
146

Influence of student-selected menus on students' attitudes, school food service participation and plate waste

Garrett, Patricia W. January 2011 (has links)
Digitized by Kansas Correctional Industries
147

Childhood sexual abuse : disclosure in the school setting

Barbeau, Andrée Yvonne January 1990 (has links)
No description available.
148

Time-distance as a factor in the delivery of school bus services to households in the Eastern Townships School Board, Quebec

Fox, Michael John January 1992 (has links)
No description available.
149

The experiences of grandparents providing regular child care for their grandchildren

Laverty, Judy, University of Western Sydney, College of Arts, Education and Social Sciences, School of Education and Early Childhood Studies January 2003 (has links)
Little research is currently available on child care arrangements involving grandparents, at a time of significant change within the child care sector. This study explored the experiences of grandparents providing regular care of their grandchildren prior to school entry. It used narrative inquiry, a qualitative research methodology to investigate the nature of their care experiences from the perspective of grandparent carers. Narrative tests were gathered through semi-structured interviews with 17 grandparents from a range of socio-economic and cultural backgrounds across Sydney and in south-west NSW, Australia. The active engagement of grandparents in the preparation of interpretive tests enabled significant depth of meaning to be discovered within grandparents' stories. The study revealed the grandparents held contrasting views in relation to their care experience. They gained significant meaning from building strong bonds with grandchildren, while also experiencing loss of autonomy, physical tiredness, and in some cases, family tension. The study found grandparent careers were not a homogenous group and identified four carer clusters grouped around grandparents' perspectives on family contribution, care obligations and personal independence. The study points to the importance of grandparents having choice in care decisions and the need to establish arrangements with adult children that are true care partnerships. / Doctor of Philosphy (PhD)
150

The planning and evaluation of a school dental programme

Roder, David Murray January 1977 (has links)
3 v : / Title page, contents and abstract only. The complete thesis in print form is available from the University Library. / Thesis (D.D. Sc.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of Dental Health, 1978

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