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An exploratory study of the adjustment problems of children entering institutional careKwok, Am-ping, Louisa., 郭鶯萍. January 1985 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Social Work / Master / Master of Social Work
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A study of three children growing up in institution, and its implications for working towards a better environment for childdevelopmentLo, So-wah, Diana., 盧素華. January 1977 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Social Work / Master / Master of Social Work
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Social skill training for children in institutional care: an exploratory studyNg, Yim-wah., 吳艷華. January 1991 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Social Work / Master / Master of Social Work
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14 |
The Attachment Story Completion Test : analysing the emergent themes and object relations of a South African protocol.Plit, Alexa 17 April 2013 (has links)
Attachment
theory
has
implications
for
relational
functioning
across
the
lifespan.
The
attachment
experience
of
institutionalised
children
in
South
Africa
is
understudied.
Using
a
psychoanalytic
perspective
as
an
addition
to
thematic
analysis
of
the
ASCT,
this
research
aims
to
add
to
the
functional
perspective
of
attachment,
an
internal
psychic
frame
of
reference
with
which
to
view
attachment
of
at
risk
children
in
South
Africa.
Using
58
ASCT
protocols,
divided
between
children’s
homes
and
hospitals,
stories
were
analysed
using
thematic
content
analysis
and
discussed
with
an
object
relations
perspective.
Results
suggest
the
inclusion
of
additional
categories
of
attachment
to
the
current
classification
system
as
well
as
a
deeper
relational
understanding
of
the
experience
of
insecure
attachment.
This
has
implications
for
the
current
understanding
and
classification
of
attachment.
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Predicting out-of-home placements of children and adolescents with serious emotional disturbance (SED)Yoo, Seo-koo, 1969- 27 July 2011 (has links)
Not available / text
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Pathways to an institution for mental defectives.Wallace, Phyllis Elaine. January 1964 (has links)
This study investigates some of the variations in factors underlying the identification of children as mental defectives and the decision to commit them to an institution. The fieldwork was carried out at the State Training School for Mental Defectives in St. Louis, Missouri. The data consist of material abstracted from case records of eighty-seven recent admissions to the institution and of interviews with parents of twenty of these children. [...]
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Terapie met 'n aantal depressiewe adolessente kinderhuisdogters : 'n ekosistemiese benadering / Therapy involving a number of depressive adolescent girls in a children's home : an ecosystemic approachDe Meillon, Nicoline, 1949- 11 1900 (has links)
Text in Afrikaans / A significant percentage of adolescents in children's homes are depressive in consequence of multiple experiences of loss. There is a possibility that experiences of depression are maintained in a systems
context. Group therapy using an ecosystemic approach was embarked upon in order to study and to alter within a systems context the phenomenon of depression, the accompanying negative experiential and meaning-assignment worlds of the depressive adolescent girl in a children's home and the interactional behavioural patterns. It was hypothesised that behavioural change brought about in the group therapy context would extend to systems beyond the therapy system. A group of five adolescent girls in a children's home, of whom two
were severely depressive, were taken for eight group therapy sessions. The principles of ecosystemic epistemology as a paradigm for family therapy were applied in the sessions. These principles stress inter
alia the use of metaphor. Circular questioning was employed in order to explore the relationships within the group. Moments of depression were observed and recorded directly and indirectly according to both linear and circular approaches, and the therapeutic process was described. The manner in which the therapeutic group changed
metaphorically by the group itself. A decrease in girls' level of depression was observed during therapy. Their
cognitive, affective and normative functioning also changed, and alterations affecting relationships, self-concept and self-realisation could be perceived in the therapeutic process. These changes in relationships and the decrease in the level of depression were confirmed quantitatively. The transfer of these attitudes and relationships to the children's home system was confirmed by interviewing the children's home "parents" of the adolescents involved. / Psychology of Education / D. Ed. (Sielkundige Opvoedkunde)
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Adult adjustment and independent functioning in individuals who were raised in a children's homeBond, Susan Jane January 2010 (has links)
Children are placed in a children’s home when a Presiding Officer finds them to be in need of care and when there is no viable community placement alternative. The body of literature on children’s homes focuses primarily on the negative effects and outcomes of such statutory placement. The assertion that children who grew up in children’s homes will continue to use the services of welfare organisations in adulthood, is supported by the researcher’s observation as a practicing social worker. This, and the study of available literature, resulted in this qualitative, exploratory-descriptive and contextual research study with the following goal: to enhance the understanding of how intervention programmes at children’s homes can contribute to adult adjustment and independent functioning of those children in their care. A purposive sampling method was used to identify ten participants who had spent at least 2 years in a children’s home and who had been discharged from the children’s home at least 5 years ago (to the date of data collection). The sample was drawn from clients at non governmental social welfare agencies who fitted the sampling criteria. The data was collected via semi-structured interviews using an interview guide, which were recorded, transcribed and then analysed using a thematic content analysis approach. The results of the study may be used to develop and implement meaningful intervention strategies for individuals placed in children’s homes.
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Ouerbegeleidingskursus vir kinderhuisouersRudd, Christina E. 15 July 2014 (has links)
M.A. (Social Work) / The purpose of this study was to provide a parent education course specially tailored to the needs of the houseparent in a childrens home. The course is intended for utilization as part of the normal in-service training programmes of resident staff. Existing materials from a large number of sources were assembled and reintegrated into a course suitable for this purpose. The focal point of the course is improvement of the relationship between houseparent and child with a view to enabling the child to utilize opportunities for growth towards a positive self-concept, responsibility, self-reliance and self-confidence. The subjects covered in the course are as follows: motivation for in-service training of resident staff knowledge of the self and self-awareness statutory procedures which precede placement in a childrens home maternal deprivation and its effect on the child in residential care developmental theory a theory of behaviour and misbehaviour factors in the family situation.
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An exploratory study of attachment patterns in institutionalised childrenKatz, Rokaya 06 November 2008 (has links)
M.A. / This exploratory study drew primarily upon narrative interviews and projective tests and secondarily on collateral information taken from case files from a small sample of adolescents who were institutionalised as a result of neglect and abuse. The aim of this study was to explore and develop a better understanding of the nature of attachment patterns of institutionalised adolescents by looking at how attachment abuse, maternal deprivation and institutionalisation can be detrimental to forming close relationships. The data from the clinical interviews, the Sentence Completion Test and the Thematic Apperception Test (TAT) were subjected to a thematic content analytical process. The Kinetic Family Drawing Test (KFD) was analysed using Kaplan and Main’s classification system for children’s family drawings. The Draw-a-Person Test (DAP) was analysed qualitatively, using various literature on interpreting human figure drawings but largely drawing on Machover’s interpretive system. No quantitative analyses were used in this study. The results yielded a wide range of themes related to the attachment patterns of children in children’s homes. The results of the study clearly highlighted the attachment needs of adolescents. The overall themes present in the tests are of rejection, abandonment, isolation and deprivation. The results indicated that older children who have been separated from their caregivers and placed in a children’s home because they were abused, neglected or maternally deprived, tend to be insecurely attached. The literature highlights the importance of adequate caregiving that is necessary for the child to develop a healthy sense of self and the implications if this is absent.
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