Spelling suggestions: "subject:"socialemotional"" "subject:"socioemotional""
11 |
Explorations in the Effect of Emoticon on Negotiation Process from the Aspect of CommunicationChiu, Kuo-chan 27 August 2007 (has links)
Emotions play an important role in affecting human¡¦s behaviors. It is obvious especially in the negotiation process. However, these emotional interactions disappear in the electronic communication media. Emoticons provide a new way for negotiators to show their emotions in e-negotiation. E-negotiation support system is composed of electronic communication and decision support system. Using emoticons could help negotiators display their emotions to counterparts. This study explored the effect of emoticon on negotiation process from the aspect of communication.
In general, e-communication can be separated into social-emotional communication and task-oriented communication. Emoticons retrieve multiple cues and enable negotiators transmit emotions so that the interactions increase. As a result, more social-emotional communication happens between negotiators. Previous studies indicate that nonverbal cues could add the meaning of messages. In the negotiation process, negotiators may lower down the opportunity of misunderstanding by using emoticons to express their thought in text and increase the quality of communication. The negotiation process may be more effective and increase the ability to reach agreement. Negotiators will be more satisfied of the process and their counterparts when the outcome is equal or better than what they expected.
The purpose of this study is to explore whether supporting emoticons influence negotiators communication behavior and change the negotiation process. For this purpose, we conducted an experiment and adopted content analysis to define the social-emotional communication and task-oriented communication behaviors. We also measured the perceived communication effectiveness and satisfaction of negotiation process by questionnaire. The results showed that emoticons increase the frequency of social-emotional communication. Social-emotional communication also increases the negotiators¡¦ task-oriented communication. As a result the communication becomes more effective. Negotiators have better satisfaction of negotiation process.
|
12 |
Youth at Risk for Gang Affiliation, and Measures of Social/Emotional Competency in Early AdolescenceMiddleton, Heather Lynne 24 August 2009 (has links)
News reports of an escalating youth gang problem are frequent in current Canadian media. However, empirical study of factors contributing to youth gang affiliation, particularly in regards to protective factors that may be targeted in intervention and prevention efforts is lacking, especially in Canadian populations. This study was initiated as an exploratory study to examine the relationship between degrees of gang affiliation and measures of social/emotional competency, with a view to identifying a tool that could possibly be utilized to guide intervention planning efforts. The relationship with group affiliation, as well as the relationship to measures of aggression were also included to lend further depth to the analysis. The target population was youth between the ages of 12 to 15 years old who may have been at earlier (lesser degree and more transient) stages of gang affiliation.<p>
Data for this study were collected in self-report survey format from 109 youth between the ages of 12 and 15 years of age from several urban Saskatchewan schools. Correlational analysis was performed to investigate the relationships between group and gang affiliation on the BarOn EQ-i: YV (BarOn & Parker, 2000), and the Aggression Questionnaire (Buss & Perry, 1992). Significant relationships were found between gang affiliation and the BarOn EQ-i: YV Interpersonal and Adaptability composites, and Total EQ scores, as well was with the Physical Aggression subscale of the Aggression Questionnaire. Differences in relationships emerged when the sample was separated by gender. There was a lack of significant relationship found between degree of group (non-gang) affiliation and gang affiliation amongst respondents in this study. Significant correlations were found between degree of group affiliation and the BarOn EQ-i: YV and between group affiliation and the Aggression Questionnaire results. Independent sample T-tests were utilized to investigate gender differences, with significant findings noted. An ANOVA was performed to assess for differences in the social/emotional competency and aggression measures, between outlier groups on the group and gang affiliation measures, with significant findings of between group differences.<p>
While the BarOn EQ-i: YV emerges as a potentially valuable tool for the identification of alterable characteristics related to youth gang affiliation, the results of this study are preliminary in nature. Limitations of study design, measures, and sample group are identified, along with recommendations for future research.
|
13 |
Tier Change Profiles: A Longitudinal Examination of Strengths and Risks in an Integrated Student Support InterventionPetsagourakis, Despina January 2021 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Mary E. Walsh / Poverty negatively impacts health, emotional wellbeing, and educational outcomes for children and creates an opportunity gap between children living in poverty and their wealthier peers (American Academy of Pediatrics, 2016). To close the opportunity gap, schools are encouraged to adopt a systemic approach that addresses both academic and non-academic barriers to learning (Adelman 2018). Integrated Student Support (ISS) models have emerged as one of the most effective systemic school-based interventions (Moore et al., 2018). ISS interventions use various strategies to address the continuum of student needs. Tiered intervention frameworks are one strategy geared towards categorizing risk levels and services by their respective levels of intensity. Tiered interventions commonly focus on academic and social-emotional domains. However, their social-emotional focus is often limited to behavior and their categorization of students is deficit-focused (Freeman et al., 2017). City Connects, one ISS intervention implemented in high-poverty urban districts, uses a tiered intervention framework that encompasses the whole child and incorporates strengths as well as risks. City Connects assigns a tier to strength/risk levels evidenced by students at the beginning of each school year. While City Connects has demonstrated robust positive effects on student outcomes, little is known about annual tier level. In the current study, repeated measures latent class analysis (RMLCA) identified patterns of tier change over five years during which students attended City Connects elementary schools in one district. Multinomial regression and chi-square analyses investigated the relationship of social-emotional strengths, needs, and services to the Tier Change Profiles. Overall, more than half of students changed tier between time points. The most commonly exhibited tier change was increasing/decreasing tier by one. RMLCA findings indicated that students facing lower risk at baseline, exhibited low risk over time, while students facing the highest risk exhibited the greatest volatility in risk over time. Students who had more social-emotional strengths than needs were more likely to exhibit Tier Change Profiles of low risk over time but having more social-emotional needs than strengths was not predictive of Tier Change Profile. Among other findings, outcomes suggest that acknowledging and bolstering strengths play a significantly positive role in developmental trajectories. / Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2021. / Submitted to: Boston College. Lynch School of Education. / Discipline: Counseling, Developmental and Educational Psychology.
|
14 |
The Measure of Social and Emotional Competence in Children (MSECC): An open-source, stakeholder-informed, and strength-based assessment tool for social and emotional competence in childrenPassarelli, Rebecca E. 10 July 2020 (has links)
No description available.
|
15 |
Restorative Practice Implementation and Experiences at Two Charter High Schools: A Multiple Case StudyBreedlove, Meghan 02 September 2022 (has links)
No description available.
|
16 |
The Progression and Development of Community in a First Grade ClassroomWanless, Rebecca Anne 20 December 2012 (has links)
No description available.
|
17 |
Occupational therapy coaching of the childcare provider in early childhood mental wellnessShetzler, Candace L. 04 January 2024 (has links)
Children between the ages of birth and 5 years rely on adults for care, social-emotional relationships, safety, positive resilience building, and coregulation. Childcare workers and teachers may lack the educational background or access to the highly skilled continuing education of current evidence-based practice for mind, brain, and education connections (Whitebook et al., 2018). Occupational therapy (OT) practitioners traditionally support children with developmental delays or diagnoses and their specific caregivers through early intervention services. A comprehensive literature search showed limited documented and studied instances of using OT to support all children by supporting the childcare industry through education, training, and coaching (American Occupational Therapy Association, 2020; Bazyk et al., 2009; Jasmin et al., 2017; Marsh & Mathur, 2020; Shepley & Grisham-Brown, 2019).
Knowledge sharing, interaction modeling, and coaching about topics such as self-regulation, emotional regulation, sensory processing, and trauma-informed interactions—and how these concepts interrelate—offer childcare providers and teachers support within the natural environments of their classrooms. The OT Coaching of the Childcare Provider in Early Childhood Mental Wellness is a professional development training and coaching program that aims to do that. Occupational therapists with advanced knowledge and experience in infant and early childhood mental health and wellness will deliver knowledge, education, coaching, and reflexive practices. This allows childcare providers with limited time and resources to advance their sensitive and responsive caregiving for the 6 million U.S. children in childcare. The program’s underpinnings are grounded in the action learning theory, coaching model, and situational learning theory (Cho & Egan, 2009; Revans, 2011; Rush & Sheldon, 2013). The program’s module-series topics are drawn from various theoretical frameworks, including mind–brain education science, the sensory-processing model, and sensory integration theory (Kuypers, 2011; Lane et al., 2019; Martini et al., 2016; Williams & Shellenberger, 1996).
|
18 |
Socially and Emotionally Competent Leadership: Making Sense of a District-wide Focus on SELConners, Michele Mari January 2020 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Raquel Muniz / Traditionally, district leaders are the initiators of large-scale reform efforts including the establishment of social emotional learning (SEL) initiatives. However, school-based leaders also bear the responsibility of implementing the programs and practices associated with such district-wide initiatives. While there is a significant body of research on strategies leaders can use during the implementation process, as well as the content of those strategies that enable sensemaking, there is little information about what district and school leaders should do to ensure successful implementation of social emotional learning (SEL) initiatives. Further, no research to date has focused on the manner in which district leaders support school-based leaders as they make sense of a district-wide focus on SEL, and how such a focus on SEL shapes school-based leadership practices. This study is part of a larger qualitative case study about leadership practices that model SEL competencies for adults or, promote the social and emotional learning for teachers and other staff, and the way those leadership practices shape a district and its schools in a Massachusetts public school district. The purpose of this individual study was to examine, through the lens of sensemaking, how district leaders supported school-based leaders as they made sense of a district-wide focus on SEL, how a district-wide focus on SEL shaped school-based leadership practices, and which school-based leadership practices, if any, modeled SEL competencies. Findings indicate that district leaders supported school-based leaders’ sensemaking by articulating a clear mission and goals, providing structures that fostered collaboration, and supporting professional development. However, the school-based leaders’ sensemaking could be deepened through greater opportunities to share their learning through collaboration. School-based leaders acknowledged that a district-wide focus on SEL shaped their leadership practices, namely that SEL serves as the foundation from which they lead. More specifically, all respondents mentioned leadership practices associated with the competencies of social awareness, relationship skills, and responsible decision-making. Implications suggest successful implementation of district-wide SEL initiatives relies on district leaders creating and supporting interactions that will support school-based leaders’ sensemaking of a district-wide focus on SEL. / Thesis (EdD) — Boston College, 2020. / Submitted to: Boston College. Lynch School of Education. / Discipline: Educational Leadership and Higher Education.
|
19 |
Evaluation of the Second Step Program in an Urban Elementary SchoolBole, Jennifer M. 03 September 2019 (has links)
No description available.
|
20 |
Implementation Factors of the Social Emotional Learning Language Arts (SELLA) Curriculum: Impact on Teachers’ Social-Emotional CompetenceGronotte, Madeline A. 11 August 2022 (has links)
No description available.
|
Page generated in 0.0712 seconds