1 |
PREDICTING FRAILTY AMONG COMMUNITY DWELLING OLDER ADULTS IN THE NHANES IIIRudden, Amy Ranalli 10 November 2005 (has links)
No description available.
|
2 |
Psychodemographic determinants of family values among undergraduate students in a South African study / Choja Akppovine OduaranOduaran, Choja Akppovine January 2012 (has links)
This study investigated the psychodemographic determinants of family values among
undergraduate students in a South African University. Psychodemographic variables
in this study include gender, age, emotional distance and family support. Data was
collected using a family value validated questionnaire administered on a sample of
100 male and 100 female undergraduate students, giving a total of 200. All
participants were randomly sampled. The validated questionnaire has four sections
(demography, family value scale, family support, and emotional distance). Five
hypotheses were stated based on gender, age, emotional distance, family support and
interaction effect and anchored on a 4-Way ANOVA. The results showed that all the
three way interactions were significant. Specifically, gender, age and emotional
distance have interaction effects on family values (F(14, 1); 3.81; p<.01). Also,
gender, age and family support have interaction effects on family values (F (14, 1);
3.31; p<01 ). Similarly, age, emotional distance and family support have significant
interaction effects on family values (F (14, 1); 4.79; p<.01). The results also showed
that all the two way interactions were not significant (i.e. gender * age; gender *
emotional distance; gender * family support; age * emotional distance; age * family
support; emotional distance * family support). Therefore, hypotheses one to four were
not upheld. Only hypothesis five was upheld. Some of the results are particularly
important for young adults and their parents in terms of family management and
conflict issues. In conclusion, some recommendations were made for the formulation
of relevant strategies that might help undergraduate students in adopting stronger
family values. / Thesis (M.Soc.Sc.(Clinical Psychology) North-West University, Mafikeng Campus, 2012
|
3 |
Organizationally Mandated Diversity Training: Participants’ Perceptions at a Southeastern State UniversityHurley, Michelle Lynn 15 December 2012 (has links) (PDF)
An amplified emphasis on global competency and a projected demographic shift toward an increasingly diverse population necessitates that businesses and organizations prepare adequately to remain competitive and effective. Training to enhance employees' multicultural competence is often used by organizations to address these impending changes; however, there is little research documenting the degree to which these trainings are effective. Using archival training evaluation data, the purpose of this study was to examine participant estimations of the effectiveness of one such training and also to determine if participant demographic variables including gender, age, ethnicity, sexual orientation, and employee classification (faculty or staff) held any predictive value in relation to training ratings. The results indicated that overall most participants found the training effective. Staff, female, or non-White participants were significantly more likely to rate the training favorably. These results suggest that diversity training may be a viable method of addressing changing organizational demographics and provides some insight as to how training group demographics could be used during the training planning and implementation process to individualize the curriculum.
|
Page generated in 0.0885 seconds