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An exploration of the personal experience of peer leadershipFarmiloe, Bridget Joy Anne, n/a January 1998 (has links)
Drug use and misuse among young people in Australia has caused concern throughout the
community and has prompted nationwide action to address the problem. One component of
intervention strategies with young people is drug education.
Drug education in Australia represents an international philosophy of prevention and takes
a harm minimisation approach to intervention. One strategy that has had international
success in the area of drug education with young people, and that has been used effectively
in health education in Australia since the 1970s, is peer education.
Peer drug education involves young people conducting drug education sessions with their
peers. An example of peer drug education in Australia is the Teenagers Teaching
Teenagers' (Triple T) program, conducted in the Australian Capital Territory (ACT).
Evaluations and descriptions of peer drug education programs tend to focus more on
outcomes pertaining to program recipients and fail to explore in detail the specific
experience of peer leaders. Existing research on the experience of peer leadership does not
explore in detail the personal experience of leaders, that being the effect of peer leadership
training and duties on leaders' personal perceptions of drugs, their behaviour with drugs and
their own feelings and skills.
This thesis explores the personal experience of a group of peer leaders who participated in
the Triple T program in 1994. It considers their perceptions of the program at the time of
training and then goes on to explore the impact of this experience on their formulation of
ideas about drugs to the present day.
The thesis is a qualitative project which utilises in-depth interviewing and focus groups to
gather data and then presents a thematic analysis of participant response. The thesis asks
two research questions,
1. What do young men and women involved in the Triple T program take from the
experience of peer leadership training and duties?
2. In what way does the Triple T' experience appear to contribute to the development
of drug related ideas of these young people in the two years following involvement in
the program?
The findings suggest that the participants gained information, skills and personal
development from the training and generally found it to be a positive experience. However,
participants distanced themselves personally from a substantial amount of the training
content and did not personally reflect on the training content to any great extent at the time
of training. Training processes and some aspects of leadership duties more personally
affected them, although again there was personal distancing from this part of the program.
In exploring the findings there was difficulty determining the influence of the training
experience due to participant reluctance to attribute influence to any one source on the
formulation of ideas. Instead, participants describe a complex interaction of influences on
the formulation of ideas about drugs and a process which involves maintaining control,
upholding the notion of informed choice and incorporating ideas about drugs into the
formation of an adult identity. Influences on these ideas include the training, actual
experiences with drugs and observations of others.
The thesis exploration suggests that being involved in peer drug education does impact on
peer leaders but this experience was not personalised to any great degree at the time of
training. However, in the following two years, participants called on the training
information as well as other influences as they formed their ideas about drugs.
The thesis raises some issues of how to maximise leaders' personal connection to the peer
drug education process, if this is in fact a desired outcome of peer education. It also
suggests the need for further research into the experience of peer leaders who seem to have
remained the least considered party in the peer education movement.
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An analysis of peer drug education : a case studyBroad, Barbara Patricia, n/a January 1992 (has links)
Drug use and misuse by young people is a problem and concern in
the Australian and Australian Capital Territory (ACT) communities.
There are concerns regarding illicit and licit drugs but licit drug use
has been identified as the major area of concern. Young people in
the ACT reflect the drug use/misuse patterns and trends of other
states. Commonly used drugs by young people are alcohol, tobacco,
cannabis and analgesics.
Strategies to address the problem of drug use/misuse by young
people include intervention and community drug education programs.
Peer drug education (as an example of community drug education),
trains young people as peer educators to implement drug education
programs with younger age groups.
A case study analysis based on qualitative, naturalistic and new
paradigm research is the research method used in this thesis.
An eclectic model of drug education including key components from a
variety of drug education models provides a comprehensive overview
of peer drug education. The literature review showed the complexity
of influences on drug use/misuse. These influences relate to
individual, peer, parental and family, community and societal factors.
Peer drug education is generally recognised as an effective drug
education strategy.
Peer drug education programs (Triple T: Teenagers Teaching
Teenagers) were conducted in the ACT from 1988-1990. Reports
documenting these programs (including evaluation data) and a
literative review are the main data analysed for the case study.
The case study analysis of five ACT peer drug education programs
and one interstate program showed the key planning issues for
effective peer drug education were:
collaborative decision making as a central concept;
detailed planning and liaison with target groups;
established structures within schools and communities to
support the trained peer educators;
team work and small group work as intrinsic and extrinsic
factors within the program;
clarification of responsibilities and roles of all personnel
involved in the program; and
facilitators/leaders with attributes and qualities that encourage
peer drug educators as social change agents.
Analysis of data from the case study reports showed young people
can be effective peer drug educators. Residential programs are
preferred over non-residential programs. Peer drug education
programs are effective in both school and community agencies.
The literature review and analysis of reports also indicated that peer
drug education needs to focus on establishing positive norms in
groups of young people. Collaborative decision making and positive
role modelling assist in the establishment of these norms. Peer drug
education links to the wider changes occurring in education and
health settings. Peer drug education is about collaborative decision
making, social justice, development of key competencies and social
change.
This thesis confirmed the complexity and dynamic nature of peer drug
education and there were many questions raised for further research
from the literature review and analysis of program reports.
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Local coherence of hearts in the derived category of a commutative ringMartini, Lorenzo 13 October 2022 (has links)
Approximation theory is a fundamental tool in order to study the representation theory of a ring R. Roughly speaking, it consists in determining suitable additive or abelian subcategories of the whole module category Mod-R with nice enough functorial properties. For example, torsion theory is a well suited incarnation of approximation theory. Of course, such an idea has been generalised to the additive setting itself, so that both Mod-R and other interesting categories related with R may be linked functorially. By the seminal work of Beilinson, Bernstein and Deligne (1982), the derived category of the ring turns out to admit useful torsion theories, called t-structures: they are pairs of full subcategories of D(R) whose intersection, called the heart, is always an abelian category. The so-called standard t-structure of D(R) has as its heart the module category Mod-R itself. Since then a lot of results devoted to the module theoretic characterisation of the hearts have been achieved, providing evidence of the usefulness of the t-structures in the representation theory of R. In 2020, following a research line promoted by many other authors, Saorin and Stovicek proved that the heart of any compactly generated t-structure is always a locally finitely presented Grothendieck categories (actually, this is true for any t-structure in a triangulated category with coproducts). Essentially, this means that the hearts of D(R) come equipped with a finiteness condition miming that one valid in Mod-R. In the present thesis we tackle the problem of characterising when the hearts of certain compactly generated t-structures of a commutative ring are even locally coherent. In this commutative context, after the works of Neeman and Alonso, Jeremias and Saorin, compactly generated t-structures turned out to be very interesting over a noetherian ring, for they are in bijection with the Thomason filtrations of the prime spectrum. In other words, they are classified by geometric objects, moreover their constituent subcategories have a precise cohomological description. However, if the ascending chain condition lacks, such classification is somehow partial, though provided by Hrbek. The crucial point is that the constituents of the t-structures have a different description w.r.t. that available in the noetherian setting, yet if one copies the latter for an arbitrary ring still obtains a t-structure, but it is not clear whether it must be compactly generated. Consequently, pursuing the study of the local coherence of the hearts given by a Thomason filtration, we ended by considering two t-structures. Our technique in order to face the lack of the ascending chain condition relies on a further approximation of the hearts by means of suitable torsion theories. The main results of the thesis are the following: we prove that for the so-called weakly bounded below Thomason filtrations the two t-structures have the same heart (therefore it is always locally finitely presented), and we show that they coincide if and only they are both compactly generated. Moreover, we achieve a complete characterisation of the local coherence for the hearts of the Thomason filtrations of finite length.
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