• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 8
  • 2
  • 2
  • Tagged with
  • 18
  • 18
  • 7
  • 6
  • 5
  • 5
  • 5
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 3
  • 3
  • 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.
1

A group experience in counseling Black conduct disordered adolescents

Parker, Kenneth 01 May 1990 (has links)
The purpose of this study is to confirm whether or not group counseling improves the self-concept and associated behaviors in Black American adolescents who are assessed to be conduct disordered. The instruments utilized in the study are the Tennessee Self-Concept Scale and the Devereux Adolescent Behavior Rating Scale. Twenty (20) subjects were randomly selected from a population of behavior disordered adolescents. Ten (10) subjects were randomly placed in control and ten (10) experimental groups. The study was implemented by two counselors employed by the community agency conducting the study. Two (2) hypotheses were examined in this study. Analysis of Covariance was used to analyze the data. The variables selected for the study included the following: Positive Score-Identity, Moral-Ethical Self, Personal Self, Total Positive Score, Unethical Behavior, Defiant-Resistive, Poor Emotional Control and Inability Defiant-Resistive, Poor Emotional Control and Inability to Delay. The two null hypotheses were rejected and were significant at the p<.05 level indicating a significant difference between the control and experimental groups. The results of this study supported the hypotheses that Black American conduct disordered adolescents who received group counseling will have significantly higher self-concept and behavioral profiles than adolescents who do not receive such counseling. The utilization of this counseling modality can improve the behaviors of Black American adolescents who have conduct disorders.
2

Stereotypical Media Images and Anxiety in Black Adolescent Girls

Jean, Elizabeth Ashley 01 May 2019 (has links)
No description available.
3

The phenomenon of resilience among black adolescents from divorced families in the Vaal Triangle Area / by N. Te Vaarwerk

Te 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.
4

The phenomenon of resilience among black adolescents from divorced families in the Vaal Triangle Area / by N. Te Vaarwerk

Te 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.
5

The phenomenon of resilience among black adolescents from divorced families in the Vaal Triangle Area / by N. Te Vaarwerk

Te 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.
6

A phenomenological study of the experiences of pregnant, black adolescent girls living with HIV/AIDS

Temba, Vuyo Noluthando 30 September 2008 (has links)
Even though it has always been widely believed that HIV affects mainly the underprivileged and unemployed, the scourge is fastest growing in the educated and employed. Despite this, it is still the unemployed and underprivileged that are still of concern. According to the UNAIDS (2004) South Africa has the fastest growing HIV/AIDS epidemic in the world and this situation poses a great threat to the country’s economic, political and even social development. Within the socio-economic landscape of South Africa, the most adversely affected is the youth, women and those in poverty. It is this vulnerable social group (the underprivileged youth and women) who is of concern to this study. Adolescent pregnancy also seems to be increasing in South Africa - a trend that seems to be influenced by various personal and socio-cultural factors. Not only do some adolescent girls find themselves faced with a presumable adult challenge for some of these girls also seem at greater risk for sexual transmitted diseases, particularly HIV and AIDS. Dealing with the reality of adolescent pregnancy and HIV/AIDS could be challenging as the adolescents try to take care of themselves and their children in an environment often filled with stigma, uncertainty, and limited access to information and health care. This situation calls for those in the field of research to understand teenage pregnancy in the context of HIV and sociological and psychological pressures that these girls find themselves in as they manoeuvre through this challenge. Perhaps by understanding their personal experiences, society can best devise ways to assist these girls. Even though a lot of research has been conducted in South Africa on HIV/AIDS, a considerable amount of it has focused on males and pregnant women in general. In situations where adolescents are studied, a lot of focus and emphasis is put on their sexual behaviour and the causes of their pregnancy. The purpose for this study therefore was to get an in depth view of the experiences of three pregnant, black adolescent girls living with HIV/AIDS. A qualitative phenomenological approach with in depth interviews was conducted. The method of analysis used was Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA). Four themes or categories of meaning units were derived from the analysis of the interview material. These themes are extrapolated and described and representative quotations from the raw data are included. In exploring these themes and making sense of the data, Erikson’s psychosocial theory of development was used as a frame of reference to contextualise the themes derived from the study in the light of the relevant development stage. / Dissertation (MA)--University of Pretoria, 2008. / Psychology / unrestricted
7

Rorschach indicators of resilience in adolescents / I.E. Odendaal

Odendaal, Isabella Elizabeth January 2011 (has links)
The main focus of this study was to explore how personal constructions, consisting of latent and conscious schema, and obtained from a culturally sensitive interpretation of the RCS, informed the transactional resilience of Black South African adolescents. This study was motivated in view of limited knowledge available about the (i) processes that are generic to the resilience-promoting transactions of Black South African adolescents and (ii) to potentiate insight into an adolescent’s construction of personal meaning of her conscious and unconscious experiences that may not always be easily recognised in her overt behaviour or by self-report measures often used in South African resilience research. Six Black South African adolescents aged 14 to 16 years volunteered to take part in this multiple case study. The participants were identified as resilient by an advisory panel consisting of learners and educators at an English-medium school in the Vaal Triangle area. In this essentially qualitative study, qualitative data obtained from an unstructured individual interview, unstructured observations, and a follow-up interview were integrated with the data obtained from a culturally sensitive, conceptual interpretation of these Black adolescents’ Rorschach protocols. The structural, quantitative data obtained from specific indicators in Exner’s Comprehensive System were interpreted in a culturally sensitive manner and integrated with the qualitative data obtained from the Rorschach protocols. A culturally sensitive, conceptual framework for interpreting Rorschach indicators associated with adolescents’ transactional resilience was provided. These findings indicated individual and ecological protective resources well known within South African resilience research. Findings that contributed new understanding of the transactional processes associated with Black South African adolescent resilience were also obtained. Four case-specific self-reflective strategies were identified, namely, emotional stoicism, frequent introspection, honouring the past, and adopting a new identity. These selfreflective strategies served as the participants’ unique ways of compensating for their adversity-informed schema as well as encouraging them to navigate towards the sustained support of specific significant others and resilience-promoting ecological resources. The participants indicated that attachment challenges brought about repressed feelings and specific security needs, which shaped their resilience-promoting navigation and enabled them to self-knit in a resilient way. / Thesis (Ph.D. (Education))--North-West University, Vaal Triangle Campus, 2011
8

Rorschach indicators of resilience in adolescents / I.E. Odendaal

Odendaal, Isabella Elizabeth January 2011 (has links)
The main focus of this study was to explore how personal constructions, consisting of latent and conscious schema, and obtained from a culturally sensitive interpretation of the RCS, informed the transactional resilience of Black South African adolescents. This study was motivated in view of limited knowledge available about the (i) processes that are generic to the resilience-promoting transactions of Black South African adolescents and (ii) to potentiate insight into an adolescent’s construction of personal meaning of her conscious and unconscious experiences that may not always be easily recognised in her overt behaviour or by self-report measures often used in South African resilience research. Six Black South African adolescents aged 14 to 16 years volunteered to take part in this multiple case study. The participants were identified as resilient by an advisory panel consisting of learners and educators at an English-medium school in the Vaal Triangle area. In this essentially qualitative study, qualitative data obtained from an unstructured individual interview, unstructured observations, and a follow-up interview were integrated with the data obtained from a culturally sensitive, conceptual interpretation of these Black adolescents’ Rorschach protocols. The structural, quantitative data obtained from specific indicators in Exner’s Comprehensive System were interpreted in a culturally sensitive manner and integrated with the qualitative data obtained from the Rorschach protocols. A culturally sensitive, conceptual framework for interpreting Rorschach indicators associated with adolescents’ transactional resilience was provided. These findings indicated individual and ecological protective resources well known within South African resilience research. Findings that contributed new understanding of the transactional processes associated with Black South African adolescent resilience were also obtained. Four case-specific self-reflective strategies were identified, namely, emotional stoicism, frequent introspection, honouring the past, and adopting a new identity. These selfreflective strategies served as the participants’ unique ways of compensating for their adversity-informed schema as well as encouraging them to navigate towards the sustained support of specific significant others and resilience-promoting ecological resources. The participants indicated that attachment challenges brought about repressed feelings and specific security needs, which shaped their resilience-promoting navigation and enabled them to self-knit in a resilient way. / Thesis (Ph.D. (Education))--North-West University, Vaal Triangle Campus, 2011
9

Mulheres negras adolescentes no ensino médio : discriminação e desafio /

Silva, Maria Aparecida. January 2005 (has links)
Orientador: José dos Reis Santos Filho / Banca: Wilson José Alves Pedro / Banca: José Antonio Segatto / Resumo: O trabalho aqui apresentado se insere em um campo de preocupações que giram em torno da relação estabelecida entre mulher negra adolescente e discriminação. Com ele, e a partir de entrevistas fechadas com estudantes secundárias, procuramos verificar se os projetos de vida e as perspectivas das mulheres negras estarão marcados por alguma experiência de estereotipagem, que absorvem o feminino e a raça como verdadeiros estigmas. Em um plano mais geral, a questão é saber se as condições de vida adversas no campo social- o que inclui as discriminações e os efeitos do machismo- marcam as mulheres negras adolescentes a ponto de negarem um futuro para elas. Mais especificamente, trata-se de saber se o estereótipo, enquanto mecanismo de violência simbólica, acaba por determinar subjetivamente o seu lugar social e o seu projeto de vida enquanto membro de uma sociedade marcada pelo racismo. É nossa hipótese que a questão racial e a questão de gênero, em algumas de suas variantes, ainda permanecem como referência- problema para o contigente de mulheres negras adolescente que pensam sobre suas vidas para além do ensino médio. / Abstract: The present work inserts it self in a field of concerns that turn around the relation established between black adolescent woman and discriminations. What bases this work is to verify if the projects of life and the perspectives of these black adolescent women, will be marked by some experience of estereotipagem that absorb the feminine and the race as true stigmata. This fact finishes for determining its social place and its future while member of a definite society as racist. This process is understood in this work as violence. Specifically, the question is to know if, those that had obtained to survive the more general conditions of life, economic situation, discriminations, male chauvunist, etc, and the spite of all the problems of the public schools, the black adolescent women that enter and conclude the high schooI, have its projects of life marked by experiences of life contaminated by having suffered with situations from racial violence It's our expectation to see proven that the racial question in some of its variants, still remains as reference problem for the contingent of black adolescent women that thinks on its lives for beyond the high schooI. / Mestre
10

Mulheres negras adolescentes no ensino médio: discriminação e desafio

Silva, Maria Aparecida [UNESP] 25 July 2005 (has links) (PDF)
Made available in DSpace on 2014-06-11T19:29:47Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 0 Previous issue date: 2005-07-25Bitstream added on 2014-06-13T20:28:13Z : No. of bitstreams: 1 silva_ma_me_arafcl.pdf: 371572 bytes, checksum: 0c95ede94f6d5d7173789d3f18f97a39 (MD5) / Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq) / Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES) / O trabalho aqui apresentado se insere em um campo de preocupações que giram em torno da relação estabelecida entre mulher negra adolescente e discriminação. Com ele, e a partir de entrevistas fechadas com estudantes secundárias, procuramos verificar se os projetos de vida e as perspectivas das mulheres negras estarão marcados por alguma experiência de estereotipagem, que absorvem o feminino e a raça como verdadeiros estigmas. Em um plano mais geral, a questão é saber se as condições de vida adversas no campo social- o que inclui as discriminações e os efeitos do machismo- marcam as mulheres negras adolescentes a ponto de negarem um futuro para elas. Mais especificamente, trata-se de saber se o estereótipo, enquanto mecanismo de violência simbólica, acaba por determinar subjetivamente o seu lugar social e o seu projeto de vida enquanto membro de uma sociedade marcada pelo racismo. É nossa hipótese que a questão racial e a questão de gênero, em algumas de suas variantes, ainda permanecem como referência- problema para o contigente de mulheres negras adolescente que pensam sobre suas vidas para além do ensino médio. / The present work inserts it self in a field of concerns that turn around the relation established between black adolescent woman and discriminations. What bases this work is to verify if the projects of life and the perspectives of these black adolescent women, will be marked by some experience of estereotipagem that absorb the feminine and the race as true stigmata. This fact finishes for determining its social place and its future while member of a definite society as racist. This process is understood in this work as violence. Specifically, the question is to know if, those that had obtained to survive the more general conditions of life, economic situation, discriminations, male chauvunist, etc, and the spite of all the problems of the public schools, the black adolescent women that enter and conclude the high schooI, have its projects of life marked by experiences of life contaminated by having suffered with situations from racial violence It´s our expectation to see proven that the racial question in some of its variants, still remains as reference problem for the contingent of black adolescent women that thinks on its lives for beyond the high schooI.

Page generated in 0.1025 seconds