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Visst känns det fint att vara vid liv en dag till? : En litteraturöversikt om kvinnors upplevelse av livsvärlden efter avslutad bröstcancerbehandling / Isn't it wonderful to be alive for another day?Karlstens Bergström, Julia, Blomqvist, Wilma January 2024 (has links)
Bröstcancer är den vanligaste cancerformen som drabbar kvinnor och allt fler överlever sin bröstcancerbehandling tack vare välutvecklade behandlingsstrategier som kirurgi, strål- och läkemedelsbehandling. Kvinnorna går från att vara i beroendeställning till sjukvården till att åter bli självständiga efter en omtumlande period av behandling. Dessa omställningar kan medföra nya erfarenheter för kvinnorna som i sin tur kan komma att påverka deras livsvärld och den vardag de sedan återgår till. Sjuksköterskan har i denna process ett lika stort ansvar att främja hälsa och lindra lidande såväl under som efter behandlingsperioden. För att kunna göra detta behöver sjuksköterskan se kvinnorna och dess livsvärld som levda kroppar. Detta för att förstå vilka långsiktiga utmaningar kvinnorna kan komma att möta efter att ha avslutat sin behandlingsresa och för att fortsätta kunna stödja de till en långsiktig och hållbar hälsa. Därav är syftet för denna allmänna litteraturöversikt att belysa kvinnors upplevelse av livsvärlden efter avslutad bröstcancerbehandling. För att kunna besvara syftet har 10 artiklar med kvalitativ ansats valts ut efter kvalitetsgranskning och analys. Sökningar har gjorts i databaserna CINAHL och PubMed. Resultatet presenteras under tre huvudteman: “Upplevelser av den levda kroppen”, “Emotionella och sociala aspekter” och “Personlig utveckling”. Majoriteten av kvinnorna upplevde en förändring av den fysiska kroppen och de flesta uttryckte att den största utmaningen var den emotionella påfrestningen och att fortsätta livet efteråt. Det beskrivs av många kvinnor att det finns en oro kring framtiden. Däremot beskriver många kvinnor att de känt en personlig utveckling och en stor tacksamhet till att få möjligheten att fortsätta leva. / Breast cancer is the most common form of cancer that affects women, and more and more are surviving their breast cancer treatment thanks to well-developed treatment strategies such as surgery, radiation and drug therapy. The women transition from a position of dependency on healthcare to regaining independence after a shattering period of treatment. These changes can lead to new experiences for the women, which in turn can affect their world of life and the everyday life they then return to. In this process, the nurse has an equal responsibility to promote health and alleviate suffering both during and after the treatment period. To be able to do this, the nurse needs to see the women and their life world as living bodies. This is to understand what long-term challenges the women may face after completing their treatment journey and to continue to be able to support them to long-term and sustainable health. Hence, the purpose of this general literature review is to shed light on women's experience of the life world after completion of breast cancer treatment. In order to answer the purpose, 10 articles with a qualitative approach have been selected after quality review and analysis. Searches have been made in the databases CINAHL and PubMed. The results are presented under three main themes: "Experiences of the lived body", "Emotional and social aspects" and "Personal development". The majority of women experienced a change in the physical body and most expressed that the biggest challenge was the emotional strain and moving on with life afterwards. It is described by many women that there is a concern about the future. On the other hand, many women describe that they felt a personal development and great gratitude for having the opportunity to continue living.
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Die jong kind se belewenis van intensiewe sportdeelnameRaubenheimer, Gawie Joubert 31 January 2006 (has links)
The aim of this study was to investigate the young child's experience of intensive sport participation. The study concentrated on the following aspects:
The role that adults play in children's sport experience.
The reasons for children's sport experience becoming negative.
Children's sport experience with special focus on enjoyment, pressure to win, competition anxiety, sportsmanship, crowd behaviour and withdrawal from participation.
A comparison between children's sport experience and the perceptions of parents and coaches of those experiences.
It was found that children experience aspects such as pressure to win, competition anxiety and crowd behaviour as negative. Another outcome of this study was the finding that children experience their sport participation more negative than parents and coaches think they do. Lastly it was found that children, in spite of having a negative experience of some aspects of sport, still enjoy participating in sport and are not considering withdrawal from it. / Educational Studies / M. Ed (Guidance and Counselling)
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An enquiry into Advent and Lenten Cycles of the Anglican and Roman Catholic Eucharistic CollectsSavage, Allan Maurice 06 1900 (has links)
There is dissatisfaction with the Collects when
scholastically (classically) understood. An alternative
phenomenological understanding is an engaging and artistic
philosophical enquiry. Phenomenological philosophical
enquiry engages the individual in meaningful interpretation
and construction of the life-world founded on a
non-dichotomous ontology. Phenomenological enquiry
(existential philosophy) interprets the present and relates
to the future such as is not possible in scholastic
(classical) philosophy.
The early twentieth century philosophers, Edmund Husserl and
Martin Heidegger, conceived a phenomenological method of
interpretation which innovatively placed the subject and
object in a dialectical union. Understanding the Collects
phenomenologically presents new insights susceptible to
consensus within a community. At present, the Collects are
structured on the principles of classical (dichotomous)
ontology. The Collects reflect the collective religious
meaning of the life-world and provide a vision upon which a
community may build. In phenomenological interpretation an
individual and a community, in the presence of that which is
divine, participate as co-creators of the life-world. Thus,
in contemporary western society phenomenological methodology
~ay be more helpful and therefore more desirable than
scholastic methodology for theological interpretation.
The hypothesis that phenomenological philosophy is more
helpful, thus more desirable, than scholastic philosopl1y
began as a hunch on my part. From a theological perspective,
I examined data obtained from a particular focus group.
Intelligent reflection, phenomenologically not classically
understood, is a working principle in this thesis. / Taking into account phenomenological methodology and
conceptualising the problem as originally and scientifically
as circumstances permit, I offer a resolution to the
dissatisfaction with the Collects. I suggest replacing
scholastic ontological understanding with the more helpful
phenomenological ontological understanding in liturgical
interpretation.
This replacement-solution hypothesis is evidenced in this
study minimally, but sufficiently, to conclude that such
replacement is occurring in theological understanding. There
are clear existential intimations of a shift from classical
understanding to phenomenological understanding. The results
of the survey show traditional understanding to be favoured,
however. In the concluding remarks, I evaluate my findings
and suggest what direction future studies may take. / Philosophy, Practical & Systematic Theology / D. Th. (Practical Theology)
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The prevalence of aggression in primary school children in unstructured environmentsVan der Hoven, Donna May 06 1900 (has links)
The phenomenon of aggression has been of interest to
psychologists for many years, and has resulted in a variety of
theories which-attempt to explain its existence in man.
Aggression is prevalent in our primary schools today and it was
this observation which initiated the research project. The
Relationship Theory was applied in order to gain insight into the
life-world of the aggressive child and to explore possible causes
which may originate from changes in our society. / Psychology of Education / M. Ed. with specialisation in Guidance and Counselling (Psychology of Education)
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Educational psychological guidelines in the handling of street childrenBell, Dominique Adrienne 11 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this study is to investigate the perceptions street children have about the most important referents in their life worlds and to propose guidelines to their helpers on the most appropriate intervention. The street children's perceptions of their families, schools, society, peers and themselves were examined through a literature study on the phenomenon of street children and their intervention and, an empirical study consisting of a questionnaire survey and case studies. It was found that the street children generally perceived themselves and these referents negatively, which can be related to experiences of severe physical, emotional and social deprivation. These perceptions influence their involvement with all referents in their lives negatively, as their main tendencies in response to problematic situations are flight, avoidance and withdrawal. Guidelines given to their schools, social-and care-workers, and educational psychologists focused on inter- and intra-personal areas of development. / Psychology of Education / M.Ed. (Guidance and Counseling)
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Samhällskunskapens dimensioner : Tio lärare ramar in sitt ämne / The dimensions of social studies : Ten teachers frame their subjectÖberg, Joakim January 2016 (has links)
Denna samhällskunskapsdidaktiska studies syfte är att undersöka vad samhällskunskapslärare själva upplever som de viktigaste påverkansfaktorerna för transformeringen av samhällskunskap som skolämne till samhällskunskap som undervisning utifrån didaktiska frågor som Vad?, Hur? och Varför?, samt hur detta upplevs förändrats över en tidsperiod om cirka tjugo år eller mer. Studien bygger på hermeneutisk-fenomenologisk livsvärldsansats där fenomenologisk beskrivning och hermeneutisk tolkning är centralt. Empirin utgörs av intervjuer med tio samhällskunskapslärare med lång yrkeserfarenhet från högstadium, gymnasium eller vuxenutbildning. Resultatet tematiseras utifrån inspiration från ramfaktorteoretiska utgångspunkteri fyra dimensioner av påverkansfaktorer, vilka är Den personliga dimensionen, Den didaktiska dimensionen, Den styrande dimensionen och Den samhälleliga dimensionen. Var och en av dessa dimensioner delas upp i ett antal variationer. Dimensionerna är konstruerade utifrån principen om det personligt nära till det samhälleligt distanserade. Utöver dessa dimensioner har en aspekt på dessa lagts till. Det är Den elevnära aspekten vars innehåll utgörs av eleverna som påverkansfaktor för hur undervisningen blir. Lärarna i studien pratar aldrig om eleverna som påverkansfaktor utan att koppla detta till någon av de fyra dimensionerna. Slutsatser som dras i studien är att de tio lärarna alla har mycket olika berättelserom vad de uppfattar som viktigaste påverkansfaktorer. Några lägger mest fokus på sin personliga bakgrund eller personliga intressen. Andra fokuserar mer på didaktiska idéer, på styrdokument eller på organisatoriska ramar. Studien visar också att lärarna alla har en eller ett par dominerande dimensioner som dels syns mest i berättelsen, dels också påverkar hur de pratar om de andra dimensionerna. Lärarnas berättelser visar även att de upplever att undervisningen och vad som påverkar denna påtagligt förändras över tid. Studiens viktigaste bidrag är kanske att den exemplifierar teoretiska perspektiv. Inte minst genom att belysa att vad som påverkar undervisningen i ett ämne är så komplext att den ramfaktorteoretiska byggnadsställningen måste anpassas efter den specifika undersökningen med dess frågeställningar och undersökningsmaterial. / The purpose of this research in social studies didactics is to examine what teachers in social studies perceive as the most important influencing factors for the transformation from social studies as school subject to social studies as classroom teaching, based on didactic questions as; What?, How? and Why?, and how this is perceived has changed over a period of about twenty years or more. The study is based on the hermeneutic-phenomenological life-world approach, where phenomenological description and hermeneutic interpretation are central. The empirical data consist of interviews with ten teachers in social studies with extensive professional experience in lower secondary school, upper secondary school or adult education. The result is thematically based on inspiration from frame factor theory in four dimensions of influencing factors, which are; The personal dimension, The didactic dimension, The governing dimension and The societal dimension. Each of these dimensions is divided into a number of variations. The dimensions are designed on the principle of the personally close to the societal distanced. In addition to these dimensions, an aspect of these is added. It is The pupil aspect, whose content pupils as influencing factor. The teachers in the study never talk about pupils and their influence on the teaching without connection to any of the four dimensions. Conclusions drawn in the study is that the ten teachers all have very different stories about what they perceive as the most important influencing factors. Some places the greatest emphasis on their personal background or personal interests. Others focus more on didactic ideas, on policy documents or on the economical and organizational framework. The study also shows that all the teachers have one or two dominant dimensions as most visible, that also affects the way they talk about the other dimensions. The teachers’ stories also show that they perceive that the teaching and what impact this change appreciably over time. The study’s most important contribution is perhaps that it exemplifies theoretical perspectives, for an example highlighting that the frame factor theoretical scaffolding must be adapted to the specific study and its issues and research materials.
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Åldersblandning i skolan : elevers erfarenheterVinterek, Monika January 2001 (has links)
Mixing ages in school classes became more and more common during the last dec-ades of the 20th century. From being a way to organise classes out of necessity they have now come to be something which is implemented on the basis of pedagogical arguments. The aim of this research has been to improve our knowledge of classes where pupils are not of the same age. A study of the pupils’ perspectives has been my main interest. (Age) homogeneous class can been looked upon as a result of the authorities’ deci-sion to have a fixed age for children to start school and their decision that certain courses should be completed within a defined period of time. Terms and the data concerning heterogeneous age groupings are ambiguous and cannot be fully understood without knowledge of national and sometimes even local contexts. Practices within age heterogeneous classes may differ greatly. A great deal of individual work takes place in age heterogeneous classes. Whether the class is non-mixed or mixed-aged does not seem to have a major im-pact on cognitive or non-cognitive abilities among the pupils, but there are suggestions that age heterogeneous classes might be disadvantageous to pupils in problematic situations. I am able to show that more than 30% of pupils in grades 1-3, close to 25% in grades 4-5, about 15% in grade 6 and a couple of percent of Swedish pupils in the later school years are taught in mixed-age groups. My own empirical research focuses on pupils’ experiences. My investigation has a ‘life-world’ oriented approach inspired by phenomenology. Pupils in grades 5 and 6 from three schools in three different socio-economic settings were interviewed. These pupils had experienced both mixed-age and single-age classes. The life-world of pupils seems to be something different from that encompassed by the philosophy about the advantages of mixing the ages in classes. Pupils find it diffi-cult to maintain or create relationships when only a few pupils of the same sex, who have started school at the same time, can be together in a class for a long time. Be-cause of the importance of social relationships almost every pupil in this investigation wished to be in a single-age class during the following year. It is the importance of common experiences rather than age that is central. Pupils stated that having things in common to study in their everyday schoolwork makes it easier to communicate and contributes to stable friendships. In my conclusion I focus on what it means to have relationships and how these are important for human identity. I also try to show how relationships are important in learning situations at school and for pupils’ opportunities to expand their knowledge. / digitalisering@umu
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A escuta do mundo da vida na constituição de uma sociedade emancipatória / The listening to the life-world in the conception of an emancipating societyBrunetti, Renata 12 December 2007 (has links)
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Renata M Brunetti.pdf: 718848 bytes, checksum: 89a26be7bf7d94724e3d31f6ed6330a9 (MD5)
Previous issue date: 2007-12-12 / The objective of the research that originated this text was, by means of the
analysis of the interviews with a few Ashoka fellows social figure, try to identify
spaces in our society, in which actions that promote emancipation are possible. Trying
to locate models, recipes, pre-defined and replicable solutions; however, the reading
and listening during the works carried us in another direction.
Some forms of defining a name for the social figure were questioned, since
they don t spontaneously fit as entrepreneurs, nor as the well known militant. Social
poets and polyglots were names used in this work to enhance their qualities in social
listening and mediation.
The interview analyses showed they strongly value local knowledge, are
multifocal have multiple interests, are incapturable. Differently from the old
paradigm, instead of defining forms of producing the world, they go out there the
world, Habermas life-world listening and translating it, and mediating it with the
systemic world .
The main theoretical inspiration belongs to the philosopher J. Habermas. We
reflected some of his recent theoretical concerns, not avoiding however, referring to
other authors and propositions. High interests were placed in providing sense and
meaning to our interviewees. Thus in this work, theory is at the service of an empirical
world. The comprehension of the experience performed with our interviewees as
well as that of the interviewees with their communities was the key element, that as
such, selected the theory.
Lastly, the work suggests that these social figures, with their actions, seem to
rehearse changes in the political culture with the strengthening of civil society, as well
as a change in knowledge paradigm. The rehearsal a political culture that may results,
first and foremost, in facing our conscious individual and social responsibilities / O objetivo da pesquisa que deu origem a este texto foi tentar localizar em
nossa sociedade, por meio da análise de entrevistas com alguns fellows da Ashoka
figuras sociais , espaços nos quais ações que promovam emancipação sejam
possíveis.
Foram questionadas algumas formas para nomear essa figura social, uma vez
que ela não se enquadra espontaneamente como um empreendedor, nem como o
conhecido militante. Poetas e poliglotas do social foram os nomes utilizados neste
trabalho para valorizar suas qualidades de escuta do social e de mediação.
A análise das entrevistas apontou que eles valorizam sobremaneira os
saberes locais, são multifocais possuem múltiplos interesses, são incapturáveis.
Diferentemente do antigo paradigma, em vez de definir formas de produzir o mundo,
vão até lá o mundo, o mundo da vida de Habermas o escutam, o traduzem e
fazem sua mediação com o mundo sistêmico .
A inspiração teórica principal é do filósofo J. Habermas. Refletimos algumas
das suas recentes preocupações teóricas. Não evitamos, porém, recorrer a outros
autores e outras proposições. Interessou-nos sobremaneira dar sentido e significado
aos nossos entrevistados e, então, nesse trabalho, a teoria está a serviço do mundo
empírico. A compreensão da experiência que fizemos com os nossos entrevistados
e aquela que os entrevistados fazem com a comunidade foi o elemento guia que,
por assim dizer, selecionou a teoria.
Por fim, o trabalho sugere que essas figuras sociais, com suas atividades
parecem ensaiar mudanças na cultura política com fortalecimento da sociedade civil e
uma mudança no paradigma do conhecimento. Uma cultura política que implica,
antes de tudo, a conscientização de nossa responsabilidade individual e social
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Åldersblandning i skolan : elevers erfarenheterVinterek, Monika January 2001 (has links)
Mixing ages in school classes became more and more common during the last dec-ades of the 20th century. From being a way to organise classes out of necessity they have now come to be something which is implemented on the basis of pedagogical arguments. The aim of this research has been to improve our knowledge of classes where pupils are not of the same age. A study of the pupils’ perspectives has been my main interest. (Age) homogeneous class can been looked upon as a result of the authorities’ deci-sion to have a fixed age for children to start school and their decision that certain courses should be completed within a defined period of time. Terms and the data concerning heterogeneous age groupings are ambiguous and cannot be fully understood without knowledge of national and sometimes even local contexts. Practices within age heterogeneous classes may differ greatly. A great deal of individual work takes place in age heterogeneous classes. Whether the class is non-mixed or mixed-aged does not seem to have a major im-pact on cognitive or non-cognitive abilities among the pupils, but there are suggestions that age heterogeneous classes might be disadvantageous to pupils in problematic situations. I am able to show that more than 30% of pupils in grades 1-3, close to 25% in grades 4-5, about 15% in grade 6 and a couple of percent of Swedish pupils in the later school years are taught in mixed-age groups. My own empirical research focuses on pupils’ experiences. My investigation has a ‘life-world’ oriented approach inspired by phenomenology. Pupils in grades 5 and 6 from three schools in three different socio-economic settings were interviewed. These pupils had experienced both mixed-age and single-age classes. The life-world of pupils seems to be something different from that encompassed by the philosophy about the advantages of mixing the ages in classes. Pupils find it diffi-cult to maintain or create relationships when only a few pupils of the same sex, who have started school at the same time, can be together in a class for a long time. Be-cause of the importance of social relationships almost every pupil in this investigation wished to be in a single-age class during the following year. It is the importance of common experiences rather than age that is central. Pupils stated that having things in common to study in their everyday schoolwork makes it easier to communicate and contributes to stable friendships. In my conclusion I focus on what it means to have relationships and how these are important for human identity. I also try to show how relationships are important in learning situations at school and for pupils’ opportunities to expand their knowledge. / digitalisering@umu
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Jag måste tänka på ett annat sätt... : Fem folkhögskolestuderande med annat modersmål och deras upplevelser av att lära matematik på svenskaKarlsson, Lisa (Lisbeth) January 2013 (has links)
The purpose of the present study is to describe adult second language learners’ experiences of mathematics learning from a past and contemporary perspective. What experiences in mathematics do they bring? What does it mean to learn Mathematics through their new language? The study is based on life-world narratives from five second language students with another native language than Swedish. Today they all study at a Swedish folk high school, at upper secondary level and they have previously studied at this level in Mathematics. The result shows that the meeting with the Swedish school and folk high school context is confusing. They face a new school culture with quite different normative rules and it is unclear to them how to behave as good students in this context. They are positive about the response from teachers which is much unlike their previously experiences. The teachers are competent tutors, supportive, listening, encouraging, friendly, authorities without being iron handed. The multilingual students in this study describe that the new language is of secondary importance in mathematics learning. Everyone starts off in year one at upper secondary level and sees mathematics the first period as a refresher. Mathematic studies are, during this period, used to consolidate the mathematical concepts in the new language. All change automatically to their native or previous school language when working with mathematical tasks. There are basic mathematical concepts learned and automated, it is too cognitively demanding to use the Swedish language. They are critical of how Mathematics is taught, a lot of individual work and pace and says that briefings and discussions are more effective, a teacher led approach that they are familiar with.
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