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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.
81

Patterns of verbal communication in children with special needs.

Conde, Joann M. 05 1900 (has links)
The social interactions between children with special needs, learning disabilities and/or attention deficit disorder (ADHD), were investigated. The children were observed in groups of three/four while creating a cooperative art project. During this activity, their interactions were recorded and coded for patterns of verbal communication. Verbal communication was evaluated through statements reflecting requests for information and materials; helping/cooperation/giving; consideration/positive reinforcement; competitiveness; intrusiveness; rejection; self-image; neutral statements; and persuasiveness. Results indicated that children with special needs tended to engage in a greater frequency of helping/cooperative/giving statements as opposed to any other verbal statements. Specifically, positive statements as opposed to negative statements classified their verbal interactions. These children also appeared to demonstrate more internalizing behaviors than externalizing behaviors. The influence of children's behaviors on children's verbal statements was examined. Results indicated that children who evidenced a disability in reading or language appeared to engage in a greater frequency of cooperative or helping statements than their non-disabled peers. Intrusive tendencies may be associated with the following: presence of a reading disability, absence of ADHD, and absence of a disability in written expression. Additionally, the conversations of children with a disability in mixed receptive language tended to evidence a greater frequency of neutral statements when compared to their peers without a disability. Externalizing behaviors also appeared to be associated with increased use of considerate and encouraging statements. Findings also suggested that intellectual ability may be related to children's verbalizations, but unrelated to children's behaviors. Intellectual functioning appeared to be directly related to children's use of rejecting statements. Upon comparing these findings to previous literature on the social communication between children with and without special needs, it is unclear whether children with special needs evidence a shared communicative culture or ability to interpret communication patterns, which results in more positive communicative interactions. This study has implications for appropriate educational placement, the formation of children's friendships, and the social communication of children with special needs.
82

Internet a Apoštolský stolec / Internet and the Holy See

Líbal, Zdeněk January 2012 (has links)
This diploma thesis called Internet and the Holy See deals with a specific question concerning relationship between the Catholic Church and media. It examines development of the attitude of the Holy See to the Internet in context of its attitude to mass media on the basis of exploration of ecclesiastical documents related to media and analysis of Internet and mass media use in practice. It takes the Internet as the latest fundamental milestone in development of human communication and probes how the Catholic Church represented by the Holy See deals with this phenomenon. Name of this thesis begins with the word Internet, to indicate perspective chosen on this topic. In the last chapter there are conclusions emerging from analysis of ecclesiastical documents compared with actual use of the Internet by the Holy See.
83

THE EFFECTS OF PEER MEDIATED INTERVENTIONS ON SOCIAL COMMUNICATION DEFICITS INPRESCHOOL CHILDREN WITH AUTISM SPECTRUM DISORDERS

McCollum, Tricia 18 April 2023 (has links)
No description available.
84

Outcomes of a Social Communication Intervention on the Use of Emotion Words

Cornett, Amy Tucker 11 July 2012 (has links) (PDF)
Children with language impairment (LI) have often been identified as having social communication breakdowns. A number of these problems are likely the result of deficits in emotional competence. This thesis examines a social communication intervention designed to target the emotional competence of children with LI. Three elementary school-aged children with LI were recruited to receive twenty, 20-minute intervention sessions over the course of four months. Each intervention session involved a combination of activities targeting emotion recognition and emotion inferencing using story retell, story exploration, story enactment, perspectives charts, journal entries, emotion labeling, and personalization. These activities revolved around Mercer Mayer's A Boy, A Dog, and A Frog (1967) wordless picture book series. These books were used because of their age-appropriate subject matter and clear, simple depictions of character actions and facial expressions. To analyze the effectiveness of this intervention package in improving emotional competence, the number of emotion-based words belonging to the emotional categories of happiness, sadness, anger, fear, surprise, and disgust that were produced each session was counted. The percentage of appropriate usage was calculated to represent how often the participants used each emotion-based word in a semantically correct manner. Finally, emotion word productions that did not match the intended target word were analyzed for valence agreement. Results were highly variable but all three participants demonstrated improvements in the percentage of accurate productions in at least one emotional category. Although all three participants usually used words of a positive valence in an appropriate manner, inappropriate uses were also observed. When actual emotion-word productions mismatched the intended emotions, all three participants produced low valence agreement for words of positive valence and high valence agreement for words of negative valence. Further research is warranted but results suggested that this particular social communication intervention was effective in improving the production of specific emotion words by children with LI.
85

Social Circles of Children with Language Impairment

Whitworth, Erin 08 June 2012 (has links) (PDF)
Children with language impairment (LI) often demonstrate difficulties in social communication. The purpose of this pilot study was to examine the quantity and quality of the social interactions of children with LI and their typical peers through an analysis of the social networks or circles of each child. Eight children with LI as well as eight children with typically developing language and their parents were interviewed. Children's social networks were organized by social circles to effectively paint a picture of each child's social communication (Blackstone & Hunt Berg, 2003). Children with LI were found to have overall fewer contacts in their social circles than children with typical language; they also interacted with fewer peers than did children with typical language. The children with LI interacted with more adults who were paid or obligated to interact with them than did their typical peers. Information about the nature of social interactions of children with LI as well as those of children with typical language was obtained from parent interviews. Qualitative observations from the parent interviews demonstrated that the Internet was not used as a significant mode of communication for children in this age group, although the children who used it to communicate were all from the Typical group. Most parents reported that children spent the most time and talked the most with immediate family members. A greater number of parents of children with LI than parents of children with typical language skills reported their children to have people they would like to talk to but did not. Parents of children with LI also reported their children to use fewer topics in conversation than were reported by parents of their typical peers. With few exceptions, parents of children in both groups reported that their children talked mostly about concrete rather than abstract topics. More parents of children with LI than those with typical language indicated that their children had topics they would like to talk about but did not or lacked the ability to do so.
86

Social Networks of Children with Language Impairment

Mickelson, Serena Marita Louisa 09 July 2013 (has links) (PDF)
Children with language impairment (LI) often exhibit social difficulties along with language issues that can affect their friendships with peers. This study sought to identify the self-reported social networks of children with LI and compare them to the self-reported social networks of children with typical language development. Sixteen children with LI (9 girls and 7 boys) between the ages of 5-11 years, and sixteen children with typical language development matched for age and gender were studied. Children were asked to name interactants in four social circles (Blackstone & Hunt Berg, 2003): family, friends, acquaintances, and paid interactants. A parent also completed a shortened version of this questionnaire. Additionally, children completed an informal picture task (Fujiki, Brinton, & Todd, 1996) to determine the number of peers they interacted with in various activities (e.g., eating lunch at school). The number of family and close friends named by children in each group did not significantly differ. Children with typical language skills did name more interactional partners who were considered to be casual peer acquaintances and paid interactants than did the children with LI. Parent and child responses differed on several of the comparisons. The groups also differed on the number of peers named on the picture task activity, replicating previous results.
87

The Accurate Productions of Emotion Words During a Social Communication Intervention in Children with Language Impairment

Gibbons, Emily Marie 18 January 2014 (has links) (PDF)
This thesis examines a social communication intervention that targets the emotional competence of children with language impairment (LI). Three elementary school-aged children with LI received twenty, 20-minute intervention sessions over four months. Each intervention session involved a combination of activities targeting emotion recognition and emotion inferencing. The emotion-based word productions were counted and analyzed. Categorized words belonged to the emotional categories of happiness, sadness, anger, fear, surprise, and disgust. The percentage of appropriate usage was calculated to represent how often the participants used each emotion-based word in a semantically correct manner. Emotion word productions that did not match the intended target word were analyzed for valence agreement. Results were variable but two of the participants improved in the percentage of accurate productions in at least one emotional category while one participant did not improve over the intervention. Two of the participants also showed a decrease in the number of valence errors with no notable change in valence errors for the third participant. This suggests that this type of intervention can be effective in improving the use of emotion-based words in children with LI. More research is needed to develop this type of intervention.
88

The Ability of Children with Developmental Language Disorder (DLD) to Infer Emotions from Pictures: Where's the Breakdown?

Forbes, Mary Rebekah 01 April 2019 (has links)
Children with Developmental Language Disorder (DLD) often have difficulties with social and emotional learning, including emotion understanding and inferencing. Five children with DLD, ages 6;4 to 11;9, identified emotions depicted in pictured scenarios over a period of 10 weeks. Emotion categories included happy, sad, anger, fear, surprise, and disgust. Each child's responses were analyzed and plotted on a confusion matrix. In a few cases, children did not interpret the scenario accurately. Even when they interpreted the scenario accurately, all of the children misapplied, overgeneralized, or confused emotion labels in some cases. These errors represented limitations in social and emotional learning that could negatively impact the ability to interact with others, to establish and maintain relationships, and to succeed academically.
89

EXAMINATION OF THE CONVERSATION PARTICIPATION RATING SCALE

Bergmann, Amelia 05 May 2014 (has links)
No description available.
90

Comunicação social e a Constituição de 1988: programação televisiva e censura / Social communication and 1988 Constitution: television programme and censorship

Giorgi, Tania Giandoni Wolkoff 13 August 2008 (has links)
Made available in DSpace on 2016-04-26T20:27:46Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Tania Giandoni Wolkoff Giorgi.pdf: 848476 bytes, checksum: 1c88a1a0679b99b047525c91e6122c97 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2008-08-13 / The present paper brings up the discussion about the need of a judicial control over television programs. Although such control may seem a paradigm in relation to the constitutional prohibition of censorship, it only constitutes an attempt to steer the media, in particular, television broadcasting, into an observation of a loyal obedience to the constitutional principles, as well as to the fundamental rights to the human being and, particularly, to the extremely, presently disrespected notions contained in the Federal Constitution. In this sense, this monography emphasizes human dignity as an enlightening, guiding principle of our juridical system. For such, a brief analysis of concepts related to principles, rules, values and fundamental rights is presented. Likewise, the dispositions related to such concepts, however at times counterposed in our system, are also discussed. At last, the caring that here suggestedly ought to belong to jurisdiction in the composition of conflicts resulted from the disrespect of constitutional rights and principles is considered sinequanon in the composition of television discoursive practices / O presente estudo traz à tona a discussão acerca da necessidade de controle sobre programas televisivos. Tal controle, embora possa parecer um paradoxo em relação à proibição constitucional da censura, constitui uma tentativa de levar os meios de comunicação de massa, particularmente as emissoras de televisão, a atentarem para uma fiel obediência aos preceitos constitucionais, aos direitos fundamentais do ser humano, e especificamente, às suas funções expressamente delineadas na Constituição Federal, porém, atualmente desrespeitadas ao extremo. Esta dissertação enfatiza a dignidade humana como princípio iluminador de todos os outros princípios e normas de nosso sistema jurídico. Para tanto, é apresentada uma breve análise dos conceitos acerca dos princípios, regras, valores e direitos fundamentais, bem como as suas disposições, por vezes, contrapostas em nosso sistema. Por fim, as tutelas jurisdicionais na composição de conflitos advindos do desrespeito aos princípios e direitos constitucionais são apontadas na composição da prática discursiva televisiva

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