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Spirometric studies in children, with special reference to asthmaHeese, Hans de Villiers 02 August 2017 (has links)
This thesis is a report on the value and limitations of the practical application of the Forced Expiratory Volume and Forced Vital Capacity test in children aged from 7 to 16 years. The first part deals with review of the literature on lung function and evolution of the Forced Expiratory Volume and Forced Vital Capacity test. The method and apparatus used in the test, the establishment of "normal values", the correlation of these values and certain anthropometric data, the establishment of prediction formulae for normal values, a study of the effect of factors such as sex, "learning" and repeatability, posture, daily and day-to-day variations, and the inhalation of isoprenaline on these normal values are reported. The second part deals with the practical application of the test in various pathological conditions affecting the cardio-respiratory system. The effect of respiratory disorders on ventilatory function is reported and an attempt is made to assess the effect of management, medical treatment and prognosis of a respiratory disorder at any given stage of that disorder acknowledging always that the complete evaluation of a patient requires more than laboratory tests.
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Meeting Parents at the DoorTrivette, Carol M. 01 November 2017 (has links)
No description available.
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Parent empowerment and advocacy program (PEP): advocacy for collaboration among parents of children in early interventionKukreja, Himani 24 August 2022 (has links)
Early intervention is the area of practice specific to children aged 0–3 years old and is often made up of a team of professionals working towards similar goals for a child alongside the family. Many of these settings use a multidisciplinary approach. This study aims to create a transdisciplinary model for early intervention professionals to follow and implement in their practice settings. The Parent Empowerment Program (PEP) will share evidence that transdisciplinary practice in early intervention leads to better goal outcomes for children and families. The transdisciplinary approach entails that professionals collaborate and communicate to share knowledge within their area of practice and scope with the other members on the treatment team to create a shared knowledge pool. This allows early intervention strategies to be integrated between specialties, leading to a holistic and better supported carry over of home strategies when compared to multidisciplinary practices. Occupational therapists will be able to implement this approach in treatment teams to spread awareness of our scope of practice as well as share and teach occupational therapy strategies to other health care professionals. Transdisciplinary practices lead to better client and family outcomes in the efficiency of goal attainment, family involvement, and carryover of strategies from therapy session to the home environment. This approach to practice will make occupational therapy well known and better understood for both service consumers and other health care professionals.
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The Perceptions of School Leaders about Their Readiness to Lead Early Childhood High-Needs SchoolsBrown, Onjaleke M. 05 1900 (has links)
The problem identified for this study was that principals of elementary schools often do not have the appropriate preparedness and readiness required for meeting the needs of children and teachers in the primary grades. The purpose of this study was to examine the perception of early childhood campus leaders regarding how well-prepared they are to supervise a high-needs campus that consists of primary grades which include prekindergarten through third grade. Qualitative methodology of case study design with a phenomenological perspective was selected. A finding of this research study was principals' preparedness for supervising early childhood grade levels was because their prior work experience in early childhood. Also, supports for the principals are needed to impact how they supervise early childhood grades, but careful consideration of which supports are needed must be made. The final finding was principal actions when supervising early childhood classrooms are based on their opinion about quality rather than the district defined quality document. Recommendation for further research are to replicate this with a larger population and sample; conduct a quantitative study of the impact of early childhood leadership on student outcomes that would follow a cohort of students through elementary school; and conduct a qualitative case study of principal leadership preparation that includes a teacher focus group to determine if the leadership practices are impacting teacher practices.
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Implementation of the Reggio Emilia approach| A multi-site action research case study of transitional kindergarten (TK) programs in southern CaliforniaArbizzi, Daniela 13 April 2016 (has links)
<p> The purpose of this action research study was to evaluate the effectiveness of a year-long implementation of the Reggio Emilia approach on transitional kindergarten (TK) programs of a large public school district in southern California. Teachers in 3 TK classrooms had received training from the trainer (researcher for this study) on Reggio approach prior to the onset of the school year and the beginning of this research study. The study used a multi-site case study design involving three teachers, three principals, and three parents drawn from three schools. Data was collected through interviews, an observational checklist, field notes, and reflective journal entries in three phases of the study: before, during, and after the school year. </p><p> Relevant documents were also collected during each phase. Results of the year-long research documented some improvements in teaching strategies and classrooms managements as well as factors that pose challenges to implementing the Reggio approach in TK programs: (a) teachers’ lack of in-depth knowledge of the Reggio approach, (b) high teacher-child ratio of TK classrooms, and (c) utilization of a hybrid curriculum that unsuccessfully attempted to merge California preschool learning foundation and the kindergarten common core standards. Other important challenges included lack of family involvement, high demand on academics that ignored inquiry-based learning, focus on imagination, and the whole child approach, which were the hallmarks of the Reggio philosophy. Children’s formal assessment based on school district’s benchmarks and mandates also contradicted Reggio’s emphasis on authentic assessment through documentation.</p>
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p53, life, death and differentiation in retinoblastomasDivan, Aysha January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
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The child in time: postmodern representationsof childhood in the novels of Ian McewanKong, Kim-Por, Paul., 江劍波. January 1999 (has links)
published_or_final_version / English / Master / Master of Arts
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Mothering the self : a study of the mother-daughter relationshipLawler, Stephanie January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
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Factors influencing the nutritional status of seven and eight years old schoolchildren in Eldama Ravine, KenyaToroitich, Cathy Jerotich January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
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Beyond "Sesame Street": Early literacy development in educational television programs from Australia, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States.Sandefur, Sarah Jo. January 1995 (has links)
This study addresses the potential of preschool educational television programs to contribute to the literacy development of young children. Unlike the vast majority of television-related research undertaken in the United States, this examination is not limited to nationally-produced programming, but looks to other English-speaking countries for an international perspective on the problems and possibilities of literacy series developed for young children. Ten preschool educational television programs from Australia, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States are examined via a videotape content analysis to determine the literacy potential of these program "texts." The literacy potential of children's broadcast texts has been determined within a broad framework of holistic language and learning theories developed by such researchers as Cambourne, Dewey, Eisner, Goodman, Harste, Holdaway, Rosenblatt, Smith, Vygotsky, and others. By composing a narrative of each sample episode; analyzing each program's use of visual, formic, and linguistic codes; constructing an argument for the applicability of holistic theories to television texts; and ultimately examining each sample episode through a holistic lens, a view of literacy-directed programming as it presently exists in four English-speaking countries is developed. The findings suggest that holistic learning principles applied to television texts hold great potential in providing valuable literacy-focused television events to children. Elements in the sample programs such as thematic integrity, explorations of ideas and concepts through sign systems, emphasis on child participation, language and ethnic diversity, regular inclusion of print on the screen from a variety of quality children's literature, and frequent inclusion of literacy events with children and adults demonstrated holistic principles in the sample episodes and contributed to the literacy potential of preschool programming. Characteristics of the episodes such as randomness, isolation of language subsystems from language wholes, failure to present literacy demonstrations, and exclusion of children from the visual text suggested ineffective television texts from which children had little opportunity to construct meaning. Concluding remarks explore the development of a prototypical holistic television program for preschoolers and suggest the benefits of such broadcast programs for children, their parents, media researchers/producers, and educators.
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