1 |
Spiritan Life -- Number 18The Congregation of the Holy Spirit January 2009 (has links)
Spiritan Life No. 18 -- August 2009 -- Spiritan Brothers -- CONTENTS -- Editorial -- (pg 3) -- The Origin of Brothers in the Congregation, Carmo Gomes -- (pg 6) -- My Personal Experience in the Spiritan Congregation as a Brother, Joseph Mha -- (pg 37) -- A Spiritan Brother at the Service of Mission, Jean Claude Kibinda -- (pg 40) -- A Letter from Brother Oliver Dowling, Oliver Dowling -- (pg 48) -- Being a Brother in a Clerical Missionary Congregation, Javier Blancho -- (pg 51) -- A Missionary in Brussels, Christian Roherti -- (pg 55) -- My Presence as a Spiritan in Refugee Camps in Tanzania, Mariano Espinoza -- (pg 60) -- My Journey to the Religious Life, Constant Tagyang -- (pg 64) -- A Letter from Brother Francis Sullivan, Francis Sullivan -- (pg 73) -- Spiritan Brothers: Some Reflexions from the Group of Pakistan -- (pg 75) -- Spiritan Religious for fifty-five years, Edward Gross -- (pg 77) -- Missionary's life journey in France, Dominique Wack -- (pg 79) -- Spiritan Life and Vocation Enlarged General Council, Ariccia 2008 -- (pg 81)
|
2 |
Sibling relationships from preschool to pre-adolescence : change, correlates, and consequencesWhite, Naomi Jane January 2015 (has links)
No description available.
|
3 |
The origin of the teaching brotherhoodsSchuetz, John Joseph, January 1918 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Catholic University of America. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 102-103).
|
4 |
The influence of life transition statuses on sibling intimacy and contact in early adulthood /Meinhold, Jana L. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Oregon State University, 2006. / Printout. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 102-107). Also available online.
|
5 |
Sibling status and social preferences an experimental study /Loretto, Kira. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (B.A.)--Haverford College, Dept. of Economics, 2009. / Includes bibliographical references.
|
6 |
The Marist Brothers' teaching tradition in Australia, 1872-2000 with special attention to developments in Sydney /Braniff, John. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Sydney, 2005. / Title from title screen (viewed 19 May 2008). Submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy to the Faculty of Education and Social Work. Includes bibliographical references. Also available in print form.
|
7 |
Children's preceptions of parental responses to sibling quarrels and the qualities of sibling relationshipsOzretich, Rachel A. 10 February 1995 (has links)
Children in middle childhood were surveyed in elementary schools
to explore possible associations between their perceptions about certain
characteristics of their sibling relationships and the ways in which
their parents responded to sibling quarrels.
An instrument was developed to measure perceptions of types of parental responses and the
Sibling Relationship Questionnaire was used to assess sibling conflict,
warmth/closeness, and perceptions of parental partiality. Factor
analyses revealed that the parental responses of punishing, prohibiting,
and group discipline were closely related, reflecting a single dimension
(alpha=.81). Labeled restricting, regression analyses indicated that
this type of parental response to sibling quarrels was a strong positive
predictor of sibling conflict, a negative predictor of sibling
warmth/closeness, and unrelated to perceptions of parental partiality.
The contributions of the other types of parental responses to the
aspects of sibling relationships studied were different for girls and
boys. Parental referring to family rules contributed positively to
girls' sibling conflict, and negatively to sibling warmth/closeness.
Parental mediating conciliation, particularly by mothers, was a strong
positive predictor of boys' sibling warmth/closeness. Parental
mediating conciliation negatively contributed to boys' sibling conflict,
particularly fathers' mediating conciliation. Nonintervention by
parents, particularly fathers' nonintervention, was a strong positive
predictor of boys' sibling conflict, and contributed positively to boys'
perceptions of parental partiality, as well. However, among girls,
fathers' nonintervention positively contributed to sibling
warmth/closeness and negatively contributed to partiality. Boys
perceived more sibling conflict than girls, but other sibling
constellation and family structure variables did not contribute
significantly to the aspects of sibling relationships studied. / Graduation date: 1995
|
8 |
Parental perceptions of sibling behavior as related to age-spacing in the family constellationRencken, Robert Henry, 1945- January 1974 (has links)
No description available.
|
9 |
We are family : sibling attachment relationships among young adultsBrussoni, Mariana Jose 11 1900 (has links)
A total of 321 young adult sibling dyads (104 male-female, 108 male-male, and 109 female-female)
and 131 singletons completed a set of questionnaires examining the sibling relationship
from an attachment perspective. Four central research findings are presented: First, attachment
to sibling was significantly correlated with parenting, adult attachment self-model, satisfaction
with social support, frequency of contact, and personality traits. Specifically, increased
independence encouragement and acceptance by parents, decreased maternal rivalry, a more
positive self-model, larger and more satisfying social support networks, and greater frequency of
contact between siblings were related to greater quality of attachment to sibling. Also, higher
levels of NEO Agreeableness, Conscientiousness, Extraversion, and Emotional Stability were
positively correlated with attachment to sibling. Second, there was considerable reciprocity in
the attachment relationship for all pair types (r = .58) indicating that siblings' ratings of the
quality of their attachment to each other tend to correspond quite highly. Third, more positive
self- and other-models were related to increased ratings of positive relationship variables such as
affection, emotional support, and satisfaction, and decreased ratings of negative relationship
variables such as antagonism, quarreling and alienation. Fourth, concordance rates in attachment
self- and other-models were very low, indicating that siblings do not resemble each other in the
attachment dimensions. However, siblings appear to describe each other's attachment models
relatively accurately, and perceive themselves as having similar self- and other-models to their
siblings. Findings are discussed in terms of theoretical advancements for attachment theory and
the sibling literature, and practical implications for fostering positive sibling relationships.
|
10 |
Sibling relationships and emotional well-beingBurns, Eric W. January 2007 (has links)
Using data from the National Survey for Families and Households, ordinary least squares regression is performed to assess to what degree the quality and quantity of sibling relationships affect men and women. Well-being is measured by a twelve item scale, Cronbach 's Alpha = .928. Sibling relationships are measured in two facets: quality and quantity. A positive evaluation of sibling quality correlates with higher levels of well-being for men, but not women. A negative evaluation of sibling quality correlates with lower levels of well-being for both men and women. Men and women do differ in the strength of this effect. No significant relationship is found between the number of times an individual sees his or her siblings and an individual's well-being. However, the number of times siblings talk to each other does have a significant effect on well-being for both men and women. / Department of Sociology
|
Page generated in 0.0351 seconds