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A perceived-risk curriculum for at-risk learners /Kash, Laurel Renee. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Oregon State University, 2010. / Printout. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 241-266). Also available on the World Wide Web.
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The educational and occupational aspirations and expectations of rural Ohio tenth- and twelfth- grade students /Odell, Kerry S. January 1986 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Ohio State University, 1986. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 241-247). Available online via OhioLINK's ETD Center
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Políticas públicas para a educação básica de jovens e adultos na Região Metropolitana de São Paulo - RMSP: o caso do Projovem (2005-2007) / Public policies for the education of young people and adults in the metropolitan region of Sao Paulo - MRSP: the case of PROJOVEM (2005-2007)Evaldo de Assis Moreira 03 March 2009 (has links)
Esta pesquisa Políticas Públicas para a Educação de Jovens e Adultos na RMSP: O caso do ProJovem (2005-2007) resgata a história das políticas públicas para a educação de jovens e adultos no Brasil a partir da primeira campanha oficial de educação de adultos (1947) idealizada pelo poder público considerando os aspectos de conjuntura política e econômica. Investiga também a redefinição do papel do Estado no enfrentamento dos problemas educacionais deste segmento social após as mudanças na educação da década de 1990 bem como caracteriza as diferentes táticas de ação pelo Estado no combate à problemática do analfabetismo. O Programa Nacional de Inclusão de Jovens ProJovem apresenta-se como a forma mais recente de política pública para educação de jovens e adultos elaborada em esfera federal destinada para implementação, a partir de 2005, nas capitais e regiões metropolitanas, além das cidades com 200 mil habitantes e mais. Com base nestas características analisamos o processo de implementação do programa nos dez municípios da Região Metropolitana de São Paulo - RMSP. Considera-se também neste estudo, os interesses antagônicos políticoideológicos presentes no interior das esferas públicas e suas implicações elucidados durante as ações do poder público, neste caso, o ProJovem. Finalizamos a pesquisa apresentando uma breve avaliação prospectiva dos municípios tendo como base as opções profissionalizantes de cada município nestes dois últimos anos de implementação do ProJovem. / This research Políticas Públicas para a Educação de Jovens e Adultos na RMSP: O caso do ProJovem (2006-2007) (Public Policies for National Adult and Youth Education in Public Schools of São Paulo city: The Pro Youth case (2006-2007)) brings about the history of the public policies for adult and youth education since the first official campaign for this education segment (1947) idealized by the government considering aspects of the political and economic circumstances in Brazil. It also investigates the redefinition of the State role facing the educational problems in that social segment after the 1990s changs in Educational, as well as it characterizes the different strategies used by the State to fight against the illiteracy problem. The National Youth Inclusion Program ProYouth - presents itself as the newest form of public policy for the education of adult and young people in national sphere. This program was intended for implementation in 2005 in metropolitan towns, capitals and cities with 200 thousand citiziens or more. Bearing those characteristics in mind, this work analyses the implementation of the program in ten towns in São Paulo City. It also considers the ideological and antagonic interests displayed within the public areas and how these interests implicate the execution of the proposed actions in the Pro Youth Program. Finally the research presents a brief prospective evaluation of the involved towns based on their professional choices during the implementation of the Pro Youth Program.
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Indian secondary school youths' understanding of sexual violence in their community in the age of HIV and AIDS: a participatory video approachMahadev, Rekha January 2014 (has links)
This study focuses on Indian secondary school youths’ understanding of sexual violence in their community in the age of HIV and AIDS, and the contribution that participatory video can make to address sexual violence. South Africa, apart from having the highest HIV prevalence in the world, also has the highest incidence of sexual violence. South African society often appears complacent about the high levels of sexual violence. In the Indian community, especially among the youth, sexual violence is also cause for concern. Much effort and energy has been expended in educating learners about sexual violence and HIV and AIDS with the objective of raising awareness of the dangers of engaging in risky sexual behaviour, and ultimately to empower and influence positive behaviour change. Because HIV prevalence in the Indian population is on the rise, Indian youth’s particular vulnerability is the reason for focusing on how they understand sexual violence in the age of AIDS. Besides the paucity of research on Indian youth and sexual violence, the methodologies which have been used produced research which is descriptive in nature and hence a methodological shift from traditional methodologies to a participatory visual methodology which has the potential for critically engaging the Indian youth on the issues of sexual violence, could contribute to research which has a social change focus. This qualitative research therefore uses a visual participatory methodology within a critical research paradigm, to explore and contribute to addressing the problem of sexual violence in the age of HIV and AIDS. The participants in the study, a sample of 20 Indian learners (10 boys and 10 girls), from a secondary school in Durban which has predominantly Indian learners, was purposively selected from Grade 11 classes. Participatory video enabled them to voice how they understand sexual violence and in doing so move towards reflecting on their own agency. The theory of triadic influence with its three streams, i.e. cultural attitudinal, social normative and intrapersonal, was used to make meaning of the findings. It also provided a frame for a fourth path, namely the preventive intervene. While participatory video enabled exploring Indian youths’ understanding of sexual violence in their community in the age of AIDS, it at the same time enabled them to reflect on, and perhaps begin to disrupt their understanding of the cultural attitudinal, social normative and the intrapersonal influences and how these influence their thinking about sexual violence. Two a priori themes were established prior to the analysis, to respond to how Indian youths understand sexual violence in the age of AIDS, and how participatory video can address sexual violence. The findings suggest that their understanding of sexual violence stems from a culture of concealment in which veiling sexual violence is the norm; that the vulnerability of youth increases as the experience of pressure from peers to engage in sexual violence increases; and that sexual violence is traumatising. The use of participatory video increased the youths’ reflexivity and created a space for them to explore how to take action. The findings imply that addressing sexual violence with Indian youth should begin with interrogating the cultural norms of masculinities and femininities, and the cultural practices rooted in traditional structures of the family and community which perpetuate gender disparities and the restriction of the autonomy of women and girls. Addressing issues of vulnerability and sexual violence should be the focus of all school and community interventions to ensure learners’ well-being and ability to resist negative peer pressure. These interventions should encourage self-reflection and raise social awareness through active participation and in so doing bring about social change in the Indian community. Vigorous participatory interventions which draw on the voices of the Indian youth as agents of social change in addressing sexual violence in the age of HIV and AIDS, is therefore urgent. The significance of this study as research as intervention is useful in enabling the exploration - with the Indian youth - of how cultural and religious norms, gender disparity, Indian masculinities and femininities, and social peer pressure feed into youth’s understanding of sexual violence and at the same time getting them to begin rethinking, challenging and disrupting these understandings where necessary. The study demonstrates that engaging youth affords them an opportunity to draw from their own experiences and through their own voices and actions create knowledge through participatory video, thereby making a contribution to visual methodologies and research around sexual violence and HIV and AIDS in their world.
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Engaged: A teacher resource based on fun factorJones, Jay Marcus 01 January 2007 (has links)
The purpose of this project was to develop a teacher resource in which content is both standards based and student demonstrated as "fun" in which to participate. The form of this resource is a website called Engaged. It will ultimately consist of several folioed and interconnected web pages. Academic content is to be all teacher supplied. At risk youth are in danger of being left behind, not only in schools, but by society as a whole. Through classroom teachers it has the potential to provide at-risk-youth a vital bridge across the digital divide.
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Race socialization and perceptions of academic and social competency within a sample of African American youthLeSane, Chreyl Lamitia 01 January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
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Navigating their way : African migrant youth and their experiences of schooling in Cape TownFoubister, Caroline Ann 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MEd)-- University of Stellenbosch, 2011. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Migration has been described as “the quintessential experience” of the contemporary period (Berger, 1984). Across the world this global phenomenon has been chiefly driven by conflict, persecution and poverty resulting from destabilisation in the various home countries of millions of individuals. Within the process of worldwide migration, South Africa receives perhaps the largest number of asylum seekers in the world and according to the UNHCR (2010) the majority of migrants entering South Africa are children or youth.
Crucially, this increased migration into South Africa is occurring at a time when the majority of South Africa's general populace is still struggling with the aftermath of apartheid and increased levels of poverty and unemployment. In this qualitative, interpretative study I focus on how a group of 20 African migrant youth that live in Cape Town and attend one local school engage with the migratory experience and navigate their way through local receiving spaces. I assert that these spaces, which include both home and school, mark the youth in very particular ways and bring into focus key aspects of identity, culture, social worlds, imagination and aspiration.
The main conceptual contribution of the thesis is the idea that we are all migrants in the current world, whether we physically move or whether our lives are moved by the impact of increasing global flows. Consequently, we need to develop, it is argued, a frame of thinking that makes the migrant central, not ancillary, to historical process. For that purpose I utilise the theoretical lenses of Pierre Bourdieu, Arjun Appadurai, and Tara Yosso to argue that the African migrant youth in the study are not passive recipients bombarded by the forces of globalization and migration, but are active agents in the shaping of their local realities.
By linking individual biographies to the questions they raise about larger global, social and historical forces I attempt to offer a temporalized account of late-modern life that incorporates the contemporary conditions that the African migrant youth face as they navigate urban social arrangements, and the daily educational challenges of their local school.
A further contribution of the thesis is the documenting of the particular internal and external resources that the 20 African migrant youth drew on to motivate and assist them to navigate their schooling and social lives, as they faced up to the growing uncertainties of their new "foreign‟ spaces. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Migrasie is al beskryf as “die wesenservaring” van die moderne tyd (Berger, 1984). Oral ter wêreld word hierdie globale verskynsel hoofsaaklik aangedryf deur konflik, vervolging en armoede wat die gevolg is van destabilisasie in die onderskeie lande van herkoms van miljoene mense. Binne die wêreldwye migrasieproses is Suid-Afrika die land wat waarskynlik die grootste getal asielsoekers ter wêreld ontvang, en volgens die Verenigde Nasies se hoëkommissaris vir vlugtelinge (UNHCR, 2010) vorm kinders of jeugdiges die grootste groep migrante wat Suid-Afrika binnekom.
Wat van kardinale belang is, is dat hierdie toenemende migrasie na Suid-Afrika plaasvind op ʼn tydstip waarop die meerderheid van Suid-Afrika se breë bevolking steeds worstel met die nalatenskap van apartheid en verhoogde vlakke van armoede en werkloosheid. Hierdie kwalitatiewe, kwasi-interpretatiewe studie fokus op die wyse waarop ʼn groep van 20 jeugdige Afrika-migrante, wat in Kaapstad woon en dieselfde plaaslike skool bywoon, migrasie-ervarings hanteer en hulle weg deur die plaaslike ontvangsruimtes baan. Ek voer aan dat hierdie ruimtes, wat sowel die huis as die skool insluit, 'n baie duidelike stempel op jeugdiges laat en die aandag op sleutelaspekte van identiteit, kultuur, maatskaplike wêrelde, voorstellings en strewes vestig.
Die hoof- konseptuele bydrae van die tesis is die gedagte dat ons almal in vandag se wêreld migrante (van welke aard ook al) is, of ons nou fisiek verskuif en of die impak van toenemende wêreldwye strominge verskuiwings in ons lewe veroorsaak. Daarom, word daar geredeneer, moet ons ʼn denkraamwerk ontwikkel wat die idee van die “migrant” sentraal tot die historiese proses stel, eerder as ondergeskik daaraan. Vir dié doel gebruik ek die teoretiese lense van Pierre Bourdieu, Arjun Appadurai en Tara Yosso om aan te voer dat die jeugdige Afrika-migrante in die studie nie passiewe ontvangers is wat deur die kragte van globalisering en migrasie rondgeslinger word nie, maar dat hulle aktiewe agente is wat hulle plaaslike werklikhede self kan vorm.
Deur individuele lewensverhale te koppel aan die vrae wat dit oor groter globale, maatskaplike en historiese kragte laat ontstaan, bied ek ʼn getemporaliseerde weergawe van die laat-moderne lewe, met inbegrip van die eietydse omstandighede wat jeugdige Afrika-migrante in die gesig staar namate hulle hul weg deur die stedelik-maatskaplike organisasie moet vind, asook van die daaglikse opvoedkundige uitdagings van hulle plaaslike skool. Verder lewer hierdie tesis ʼn bydrae deur die interne en eksterne hulpbronne te dokumenteer wat hierdie 20 jeugdige Afrika-migrante gebruik het om hulle te motiveer en te help om hulle skool- en maatskaplike lewe te rig namate hulle die toenemende onsekerhede van hulle nuwe, “uitlandse” ruimtes moes aandurf.
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Does the School Day Matter? The Association Between Adolescent School Attachment and Involvement and Adult Criminal BehaviorO'Neil, Madeline 09 June 2016 (has links)
Research with adolescence demonstrates school involvement and attachment greatly influences students' outcomes and choices outside of their school environment. Many studies have addressed whether delinquent behavior while in adolescence is associated with various aspects of schooling, but there is limited research looking at the long-term effects schooling has on criminal behavior in adulthood. The purpose of this study was to assess whether students' attachment to their school or involvement in extracurricular activities at school shapes students' outcomes in adulthood--specifically their criminality and likelihood of being arrested. In addition, this study took on a gendered relationship, examining how gender moderates the associations between attachment and adult crime, and involvement and adult crime. The study took a quantitative approach using Waves 1 and 4 of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health. Findings indicate that a students' attachment to school is negatively associated with the likelihood of being arrested as an adult. In addition, the likelihood of adult criminal behavior is negatively associated with students' school involvement. Lastly, in this study I found that gender acts as a moderating mechanism between attachment and criminality, as well as sports involvement and arrested as an adult. Thus, this research adds to the established field, which has demonstrated how school involvement and attachment improve outcomes in adolescence, by showing that these positive experiences impact downstream outcomes such as criminal behavior in adulthood.
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Srovnání pedagogického a provozního procesu hokejového klubu v Kanadě a ČR / Pedagogical and Operational process of Hockey Organizations in the Czech Republic and Quebec Provice in CanadaKrpálek, Petr January 2016 (has links)
Title: Pedagogical and Operational process of Hockey Organizations in the Czech Republic and Quebec Provice in Canada Goals: The goal of the thesis is compare czech hockey system with canadian system especilly with Quebec province and City of Montreal in term of pedagogicals and operationals process. Keywords: Ice Hockey, Czech Republic, Canada, Quebec, youth education
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Eyes on the prize or head in the sand? : urban black adolescents' constructions of the future /Dacosta, Kneia. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Chicago, Committee on Human Development, 2002. / Includes bibliographical references. Also available on the Internet.
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