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The development of resilience : reported by survivors of breast cancerBoer, Patricia Mulcahy January 1995 (has links)
This study offers a brief review of the literature on resilience. The review served as a basis for designing a qualitative study to observe how resilience develops in survivors of breast cancer. Survivors are those who lead productive, satisfying and/or inspirational lives, after their treatment has ended. By using qualitative data collection methods and post hoc data analysis, a purposive sampling of 11 women, in the Midwest, resilient survivors of breast cancer were studied. These women were asked to write brief autobiographies, detailing the important factors and contexts that were evidence of the development of resilience in themselves. Tape recorded interviews allowed participants to add to or delete from their autobiographies.The findings showed the eleven participants shared six common characteristics: (1) making a spiritual connection; (2) having meaningful work; (3) engaging in social activism; (4) being a self-directed learner; (5) living a healthy lifestyle; and (6) expressing a wide range of feelings. In addition, the taped interviews revealed the importance of creativity and authentic relationships. A resilience wheel illustrates the definition of resilience, i.e., as a positive attitude about one's body, mind, spirit and emotions, manifested by living a healthy lifestyle; engaging in meaningful work; forming and maintaining authentic relationships; and-expressing a wide range of feelings appropriately. The study demonstrated resilience is more than effective coping. It is observed and characterized by others as a zest for life.Among these participants, resilience/zest for life was found to have developed in their youth, when they identified with a positive role model/s, who modeled resilient attitudes/values. As children they internalized these values, acting on them in small ways, until adulthood when a life event triggered a shift. As adults they, then, claimed these internalized values as "my own philosophy."Although there was not sufficient evidence to discuss resilience as a developmental process in adulthood, the ages of the participants (40-77) imply the process of learning and growing continues throughout the life span.Suggestions for teaching resilience are offered along with recommendations for future research. / Department of Educational Leadership
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Darbuotojų psichologinio atsparumo sąsajos su vadovavimo stiliumi / Links between employee psychological resilience and style of leadershipNarutavičienė, Simona 26 June 2014 (has links)
Šiame darbe nagrinėjamas darbuotojų psichologinis atsparumas ir jo ryšys su vadovavimo stiliumi. Psichologinis atsparumas yra gebėjimas, leidžiantis asmeniui net ir nepalankiomis sąlygomis išlaikyti sveiką, kompetentingą asmenybę bei efektyviai spręsti nepalankias, stresines situacijas. Kalbant apie vadovavimo stilius, psichologinis atsparumas neretai siejamas su autentiška lyderyste, kuri apibūdinama atvirumu, altruistiniais veiksmais, elgesio nuoseklumu ir kuri skatina teigiamas psichologines kompetencijas bei kuria pozityvų, etišką, palaikantį klimatą. Pastebėta, kad autentiškas lyderis teigiamai įtakoja darbuotojų psichologinę gerovę, todėl darbuotojų psichologinio atsparumo ir autentiškos lyderystės sąsajų analizė yra labai svarbi. Šio tyrimo tikslas - išanalizuoti darbuotojų psichologinio atsparumo sąsajas su autentiškos lyderystės rodikliais. Tikslui pasiekti taikėme Psichologinio atsparumo skalę, Autentiškos lyderystės klausimyną bei Stresinių situacijų ir vadovo pagalbos vertinimo anketą. Tyrime dalyvavo 111 darbuotojų, kurių amžius nuo 22 metų iki 52 metų. Duomenų analizei taikyta Pearson koreliacija, Stjudento t kriterijus, Chi-kvadrato kriterijus ir tiesinės regresijos modelis. Rezultatai atskleidė, kad vienas penktadalis darbuotojų pasižymi žemu psichologiniu atsparumu, likusieji – aukštu. Paaiškėjo, kad darbuotojų psichologinis atsparumas teigiamai susijęs su vadovo pagalbos dažniu ir pagalbos efektyvumu sprendžiant stresines situacijas: kuo dažniau darbuotojas... [toliau žr. visą tekstą] / Links between employee psychological resilience and style of leadership are examined in this master’s thesis. Psychological resilience means capability to maintain healthy and competent personality despite negative circumstances and effectively cope with adverse and stressful situations. Speaking about leadership styles, psychological resilience usually is associated with authentic leadership, which involves transparency, altruistic actions, and behavioral consistency. Authentic leader fosters positive psychological capacities and develops positive, ethical and supportive context in organization. Taking into consideration that authentic leader positively influences employee psychological well-being, it is very important to evaluate links between employee psychological resilience and authentic leadership. The aim of this study is to analyze links between employee psychological resilience and authentic leadership. Psychological resilience scale, Authentic leadership questionnaire and Questionnaire, assessing stressful situations and manager support, were used to achieve this goal. 111 employees, aged from 22 to 52, participated in this study. Data analysis was based on T- Test, Pearson correlation, Chi-Square Test and Linear Regression. Results indicated, that one fifth of employees have low level of psychological resilience, others – high level. Employees’ psychological resilience is positively related with the frequency of manager’s help and effectiveness of this help: the... [to full text]
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Teenage pregnancy in South African schools : from vulnerability to empowerment / Mothibe Martha MotlalepuleMothibe, Motlalepule Martha January 2012 (has links)
One of the most serious phenomena plaguing families and societies worldwide is teenage pregnancy. In South Africa teenage mothers are permitted to return to schools after giving bith however, not much is done to support these mothers in order to ensure that they are not psychosocially vulnerable and not drop out of school due to possible stress, frustration and lack of scholastic progress. This is where this study is located. This was a Qualitative study that used symbolic drawings accompanied by short descriptive narratives and individual, semi-structured interviews as data collection methods. The study involved 10 teenage mothers who had been re-admitted to schools after giving birth. The participants were aged 15 and 16 and is grades 9 and 10. The findings show that teenage mothers enjoyed family support, had dreams for the future, were anchored in religion and spirituality, had determination and that they had abilities to learn from mistakes. I could not locate a study that had focused on the typical vulnerabilities and empowerment of teenage mothers. Therefore, this study provides useful insight into the factors that are known to render young girls vulnerable to teenage pregnancy and the resultant motherhood and the personal and exological processes that combine in complex ways in order to enable young mothers to cope resiliently. The findings add to theory and have implications for practice / Thesis (MEd (Learner Support))--North-West University, Vaal Triangle Campus, 2013
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Resilience in the presence of fragile X syndrome : a multiple case study / Chantel L. FourieFourie, Chantel Lynette January 2011 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to explore what contributes to resilience in females diagnosed with Fragile X Syndrome. Fragile X Syndrome can be defined as an inherited (genetic) condition that causes mental impairment, attention deficit and hyperactivity, anxiety and unstable mood, autistic behaviours, hyper-extensible joints, and seizures. I became aware of Fragile X Syndrome during my time as a live-in caretaker to an adolescent female who was diagnosed with Fragile X Syndrome. Because she coped with her disability so resiliently, I was encouraged to explore what contributes to resilience in females diagnosed with Fragile X Syndrome. I followed a qualitative approach, anchored in the interpretivist paradigm. This means that I tried to understand the resilience of females diagnosed with Fragile X Syndrome through the meanings that the participants in my study assigned to them. Furthermore, I worked from a transformative paradigm, which meant that I was interested in changing the traditionally negative ways in which females diagnosed with Fragile X Syndrome are seen. I followed a multiple case study approach, which included four case studies. I conveniently selected the first participant, but realised that convenience sampling was not very credible for a qualitative case study. An Advisory Panel was then used to purposefully recruit three more participants. In order to explore what contributed to their resilience, I made use of interviews, observations, and visual data collection. I also interviewed adults (e.g. parents, teachers and consulting psychologists) who were significantly involved in the lives of my participants. My findings suggest that resilience in females with Fragile X Syndrome is rooted in protective processes within the individual as well as within her family and environment. Because my findings do not point to one specific resource, my study underscores newer understandings of resilience as an Eco systemic transaction. Most of the resilience-promoting resources noted by the participants in my study as contributing to their resilience have been identified as resilience-promoting in previous studies. Although the themes that emerged in my study have been reported in resilience previously, I make a contribution to theory because I link traditional resilience-promoting resources to resilience in females diagnosed with Fragile X Syndrome.
Peer support was previously reported as a resilience-promoting resource, but in my study I noticed that the main source of peer support came from peers who were also disabled. Furthermore, my study transforms how we see females diagnosed with Fragile X Syndrome. This transformation encourages communities and families to work together towards resilience in females diagnosed with Fragile X Syndrome. / Ph.D, North-West University, Vaal Triangle Campus, 2011
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The social impact of a flood on workers at a Pretoria hotel / E. MilellaMilella, Elisabetta January 2012 (has links)
In South Africa, January 2011 was characterised by above average rainfall which
resulted in many provinces being flooded. On the 17th of January 2011, the
government of South Africa declared the City of Tshwane a National Disaster Area. It
is in the city of Tshwane where a hotel was flooded causing great damage and
disruption to the lives of the hotel workers. Given the lack of existing research
focusing on the social dimensions of natural disasters, this provided an opportunity
to study the social impact of the flood on the community of hotel workers at a
Pretoria hotel. Four sub-aims were set for the study, which involved an exploration of
the strengths that were exhibited, discovered or developed as a result of the flood;
investigating the subjective experiences in relation to the flood; exploring the
interactional patterns and relationships of the hotel workers; as well as investigating
how the leadership of the hotel impacted on the manner in which the hotel workers
dealt with the flood. A qualitative methodology, guided by a social constructivist
epistemology was adopted as basis for the study. Data was gathered by means of
individual semi-structured interviews, semi-structured questionnaires, and a focus
group interview with a number of employees at the hotel. The data was subjected to
qualitative content and grounded theoretical analysis. Five main themes emerged
from the analysis, which include: Emotional responses, which included negative
emotions such as shock, fear, frustration and anger, as well as positive emotions
such as happiness and appreciation; a variety of interactional patterns and
relationships; increased cohesiveness; enhanced leadership, and the development
of group resilience. / MA, Medical Sociology, North-West University, Vaal Triangle Campus, 2012
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PROMOTING RESILIENCE AND WELL-BEING FOR INDIGENOUS ADOLESCENTS IN CANADA: CONNECTING TO THE GOOD LIFE THROUGH AN OUTDOOR ADVENTURE LEADERSHIP EXPERIENCERitchie, Stephen D. 21 May 2014 (has links)
Background: Promoting mental health for Indigenous youth in Canada is a well-documented
priority. Indigenous approaches to health promotion share similarities with the holistic process
in outdoor adventure and experiential education contexts. The purpose of this study was to
develop, implement, and evaluate an Outdoor Adventure Leadership Experience (OALE) for
Indigenous adolescents from one First Nations community in Northeastern Ontario, Canada.
Methods: Principles of community-based participatory research were used to guide this mixed
method study that included three phases. Phase 1 involved the development of a culturally
relevant OALE intervention. The intervention was available to adolescents, aged 12-18 years,
living in Wikwemikong Unceded Indian Reserve. Phase 2 consisted of a quantitative evaluation
of the effectiveness of the OALE, based on participant self-report. It focused primarily on
assessing resilience using the 14-Item Resilience Scale (RS-14). Using an ethnographic
approach, Phase 3 comprised a qualitative evaluation of the ways in which the OALE promoted
resilience and well-being.
Results: Phase 1 occurred over a period of 10 months (September 2008 to June 2009), and it
resulted in the development of an intentionally designed 10-day OALE program. The program
was implemented in the summer of 2009 and 2010 with 73 adolescent participants, aged 12-18
years. Results from Phase 2 revealed that there was a 3.40 point increase in mean resilience for
the adolescent participants at one month post-OALE compared to one day pre-OALE (n=46,
p=.011), but the improvement was not sustained one year later. Phase 3 results revealed that the
OALE facilitated the development of resilience and well-being by helping the adolescents
connect to Anishinaabe Bimaadziwin, an Ojibway concept that can be translated as the Good
iv
Life. Connecting involved an external experiential process of connecting with various aspects of
creation and an internal reflective process of connecting within to different aspects of self.
Conclusion: The OALE appears to be a program that helped the adolescents: (1) become more
resilient in the short-term, and (2) become more aware of Anishinaabe Bimaadziwin (the Good
Life) by providing opportunities for connecting with creation and self through a variety of
experiences and reflections that were unique for each youth.
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Coping by kinders uit egskeidingsgesinne / Jacquiline von WiellighVon Wielligh, Jacquiline January 2003 (has links)
This study forms a subsection of an inter-university research project regarding the
resilience of children in late middle childhood, in the South African context.
The purpose of the current study was to determine whether any differences exist between
the coping of children from intact and divorced families.
It appears that resilience and coping are important components of psychological wellbeing,
which can promote or inhibit psychological well-being. During recent years the
effect that divorce has on children has enjoyed considerable interest. Literature on the
main components of this study, namely divorce and coping, maintains that divorce is a
traumatic process, causing multiple stressors for parents as well as children. It is also
clear that children are usually capable of handling the negative aspects related to divorce,
provided that they enjoy a support network consisting of family members, peer groups
and teachers. Most of the research continues to indicate a basically negative influence of
the divorce experience and process. Secondly a review of stress and coping literature
was offered, with reference to the manifestations of such phenomena amongst children
from divorced families. The important role played by coping in the lives of children and
the manner in which it directly relates to their development, adaptation and psychological
well-being. Amongst children, coping serves as a protection factor against stressors, such
as divorce, for instance, and it contributes to resilience.
During the empirical study the study population consisted of children in their late middle
childhood (grades 4-7). The children were selected by means of a random availability
test out of various schools in the various South Atiican provinces, after which
participants were randomly selected by means of class lists. Despite the scope of the
research project, only the data pertaining to 653 children was of use in the current study,
following the practical problems experienced during the project and the fact that several
researches handled the processing of the data. For the purpose of the study under
discussion, data pertaining to 73 children from divorced families and 580 children from
intact families was used.
The study used the "Stress Response Scale" (SRS) as a measuring instrument, as well as
biographical questionnaire, in order to determine the number, gender and ages of the
children from intact and divorced families respectively. None of the subscales provided
any statistically significant results and no practically significant differences were
indicated in respect of coping between children from intact and divorced families.
Concluding the study, recommendations are made for further research in this field and
practical suggestions are given for the implementation of the findings that were anived
at. / Thesis (M.A. (Psychology))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2004.
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The phenomenon of resilience among black adolescents from divorced families in the Vaal Triangle Area / by N. Te VaarwerkTe Vaarwerk, Natalie January 2009 (has links)
In South Africa today many adolescents are faced with having to cope with their parents' divorce. There are many risks that occur when adolescents are faced with divorce. Of late research has suggested that parental divorce is an increasingly common phenomenon in black families, but there is no literature which focuses on what contributes to black adolescents coping resiliently with their parents' divorce. The purpose of this study was to provide answers, by means of a literature review and empirical research, to what the antecedents of resilience are among black adolescents coping resiliently with their parents divorce. This was achieved by using a qualitative phenomenological design: ten semi-structured interviews were conducted with resilient black adolescents coping well with their parents' divorce. This study makes a contribution to theory because it suggests a new resilience -promoting resource for black youth from divorced homes, namely dedicated support from friends and teachers (support that is 'always' available), not noted in previous resilience studies. This study also contributed to theory by confirming that resilience promoting processes such as community-facilitated spaces (hostel residence), extra-curricular activities at school and cultural rites encourage resilience among youth whose parents are divorced. This has not been noted in previous literature studies. The findings of this study were used to draft recommendations for Life Orientation teachers on how to encourage resilience among black South African adolescents coping with the adversities of their parents' divorce. In so doing my study made a potential contribution to practice. / Thesis (M.Ed.)--North-West University, Vaal Triangle Campus, 2009.
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Factors which contribute to resilience amongst poor, second-language learners / M.F. CronjeCronje, Magdalena Francina January 2008 (has links)
The focus of this empirical study was on the antecedents of resilience among poor, English second-language (ESL) adolescent learners. The reasons why some adolescents in this situation are resilient and others are not, are indicated in this study. Adolescents qualify as being resilient if they are exposed to significant threat to their development, indicating high risk to the individual, and their adaptation to the threat is successful, due to support, resources or intervention. Thirty three resilient and 32 non -resilient poor, ESL adolescent learners were selected to participate in the empirical study. My study was a mixed method study because I made use of quantitative research (a survey questionnaire completed by the 65 selected learners), and qualitative research (semi-structured interviews with two identified resilient learners and a group interview with elders who are knowledgeable about young people in this community). The conclusions of my study emphasise that dynamic interactions between individual attributes, familial support, community resources, and cultural ties empower some adolescents to overcome hardships and be resilient. My findings are supported by literature. My findings cannot be generalised, as the adolescents in my study were all black, South African youth from an impoverished community in the Vaal Triangle. This is an explorative study, and themes that were identified as contributing to resilience in my study, need to be explored in future studies. / Thesis (M.Ed.)--North-West University, Vaal Triangle Campus, 2009.
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The phenomenon of resilience among adolescents with learning difficulties in the Vaal Triangle area / by J.M. PalmerPalmer, Jolene Maeve January 2009 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to document, by means of a literature review and empirical research, the phenomenon of resilience among adolescents with learning difficulties (LD). My study was motivated by a gap in current literature. Although there are some South African studies that explore the personal antecedents of resilience in youth with LD, there were almost no studies explaining what interpersonal antecedents might contribute to resilience. The aim of the empirical study was to investigate the phenomenon of resilience among adolescent learners coping with LD. This was done by conducting phenomenological research with ten learners who have LD and attend a school for learners with special learning needs. The findings of the study are in accordance with previous studies that suggest that resilience is encouraged by dynamic processes that are both interpersonal and intrapersonal. This study makes a contribution to theory in that it suggests that resilience among adolescent learners with LD is also encouraged by their home environment and the positive relationship with siblings that might be brought on by parents treating all their children impartially. This has not been noted in previous studies. This study also raises questions about whether inclusion of all learners in mainstream schools are beneficial to learners with LD. Because my study identified interpersonal processes (unconditional acceptance, safe spaces, championship and pedagogical expertise) that promoted resilience among those participants who took part in my study, my study contributes to what was understood about the process of resilience in learners with LD and in so doing contributes to practice in that guidelines could be drafted for Life Orientation teachers based on the findings of this study. These guidelines can enable dedicated teachers to adapt their classroom environment so that a learner with LD can benefit. / Thesis (M.Ed.)--North-West University, Vaal Triangle Campus, 2009.
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