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The impact of play intervention on word recognition skill and on aspects of personal-social development of first-grade children /Wishon, Phillip M. January 1975 (has links)
No description available.
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Our Voices Matter: Exploring the Experience of Divorce for Young ChildrenHirschfeld, Mara Rae 03 June 2014 (has links)
While divorce can be challenging for children at any age, research suggests that children under the age of six are at increased risk for behavioral and developmental delays (Emery, 1999; Hetherington, 1979, Wallerstein and Blakeslee, 1989). Despite their increased risk, the majority of research on children's adjustment post-divorce has focused on older school age children and adolescents (Jennings and Howe, 2001; Mutchler, Hunt, Koopman, and Mutchler, 1992) rather than young children. The purpose of this qualitative phenomenological study is to explore the experience of divorce for young children (ages 5-7 old). Results produced five themes regarding children's emotional experience of divorce, which include trying to make sense of the divorce, feelings they experience/how they describe themselves, experience and advice: "]stop fighting,"what they worry about, and coping skills/ways to distract themselves. Discussion conjectures about these themes and makes suggestions for clinical implications and future studies in an effort to mitigate short-term consequences and help children cope with their parents' divorce. / Master of Science
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An autoethnographic exploration of “play at work” / Jacques KrugerKruger, Jacques January 2011 (has links)
This research brings together two concepts that are often depicted as polar
opposites. Sutton-Smith (2001) however suggests that the opposite of play is not work, but
depression, and moreover echoes other scholars in reclaiming play as an essential human
expression, even for adults. This study, therefore, argues that, given the precarious wellness
territory our workplaces are in, something about work is not working. It is furthermore
proposed that, given all the evidence of the therapeutic potential inherent to play, there is
indeed something nutritious at play in play. Despite these well-supported arguments, play
remains hidden away in the academic shadows of more serious industrial psychological
preoccupations. Surprisingly, the same conspicuous absence is even mirrored in Positive
Psychology, a bustling field that claims to celebrate glee, fun, and happiness (Seligman,
2002a).
Entitled “An autoethnographic exploration of play at work,” this dissertation leans on the
metaphor of “exploration”, or more specifically, exploratory play. This results in two distinct
yet interwoven dimensions to the research study. Firstly, the research approaches the
phenomenon of play and play-based methods in workshop contexts through the lived
experience of the researcher. Secondly, the research project in itself is conceptualised as work,
and the methodology of autoethnography is conceptualised as a playful approach to this work
of conducting research. Aside from widening the research scope, this also appropriately
matches research methodology to the research domain. Aside from being about play at work,
this research also is play at work.
Autoethnography, as a recent development in qualitative research, remains
unconventional and somewhat controversial in the South African social sciences.
Autoethnography, as an offspring of ethnography, offers a method to reflexively incorporate
the researcher’s own lived experience in the study of culture as a primary source of rich
phenomenological data. Instead of minimising the emotive and subjective, this research amplifies and celebrates it. Given a fair degree of unfamiliarity in terms of autoethnography
as well the accusation of being overly self-centred, the experience of the researcher is then
complemented by the views of a number of co-creators to the culture being studied. This is
done through external data-gathering in the forms of a focus group as well as number of semistructured,
dyadic interviews. While therefore leaning more toward postmodern themes, this
research also incorporates what has been termed analytical autoethnography (Anderson, 2006),
wherein the researcher is a full-member of the setting being studied, is portrayed as such and
is committed to theoretical analysis. This study can therefore be summarised as an
autoethnographic case study that balances evocative and analytical styles (Vryan, 2006) while
emanating from the philosophical assumptions of interpretivism and subjectivism. Internal
realities and meaning-creation are thus emphasised rather than the received views of
positivism.
The central research question being explored is how play and play-based methods
promote work-related well-being. To answer this question, firstly, play and play-based
methods are explored, both from a theoretical and practical point of view. From within
workshop (pedagogical) contexts, the play-based methods considered throughout this study
include metaphor and story, creative-arts-based play, physical-body play and also the
uncelebrated yet essential methods of icebreakers and games. A preliminary taxonomy is
proposed for play-based methods to offer description and to facilitate reflection and learning.
Descriptive elements in this taxonomy include interactive vs. solitary, competitive vs.
cooperative, motor-sensory vs. cognitive-mind, participative vs. vicarious and rule-bound vs.
improvisational.
Building on this exploration of play-based methods, the second aspect explored in more
detail has to do with the more internal and subjective experiences of participants, or players, if
you like. These experiences are then related to prominent concepts encountered in Positive
Psychology to, by proxy, understand how they relate to work-related well-being. Significant
themes that emerge from this include play as fun, play as mind-body integration, play as
authenticity, play as community, and play as stress-relief and resilience. This is then woven
into a creative non-fiction, in accord with a trend in qualitative research called creative
analytical practices (CAP) (Richardson, 2000). This creative non-fiction, detailed in Chapter
4, forms a key autoethnographic output that animates all these themes in a way that is
accessible, evocative and playful. Chapter 5 complements this chapter with an in-depth
exploration of the research journey as a confessional tale. While adopting the metaphor of hiking in mountains (exploring nature), this confessional tale clarifies the research process
and incorporates an in-depth analysis of the themes, both in terms of research data as well as
literature. This is supported by a number of separate appendixes, including interview
transcripts, depictions of the interview analysis as well as a number of photos from the field.
In terms of its uniqueness and unconventionality, this research joins in the choir of related
work to incorporate more contemporary research genres into the social sciences in South
Africa. By doing so, it opens up doors to phenomena that simply resist being studied with the
ontological and epistemological assumptions of conventional modern science. Furthermore,
the effect and impact of this research is that it provides accessible and practical ideas as to
how a synthesis of play and work can help us renew and rejuvenate our work and workplaces.
That is, how we can come alive in the work contexts that risk becoming sterile, clinical and
inhuman in the wake of Taylorist reductionism and efficiency. Given that state of work and
workplace, and the productive and therapeutic potential in play, indeed, we are too busy not to
play. / Thesis (MCom (Industrial Psychology))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2012
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The Use, Beliefs, Perceived Barriers, and Methods of Delivery of Play Therapy by Elementary School CounselorsHolbrook Ebrahim, Christine 07 August 2008 (has links)
Mental health problems can interfere with a child's ability to succeed in school (Hootman, Houck, & King, 2003) and ultimately increase the risk of family dysfunction, drug abuse, juvenile incarcerations, and school drop out (American Academy of Pediatrics, 2004). Because young children often lack the verbal skills needed to communicate anxieties or fears and because children naturally communicate through the use of play, elementary school counselors realize that play therapy is an appropriate alternative to talk therapy (Landreth, 2002). Although recent studies have demonstrated the efficacy of play therapy with elementary school students suffering from conduct disorders (Cochran & Cochran, 1999), autism, obsessive compulsive disorder, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, cerebral palsy (Johnson, McLeod, & Fall, 1997), post traumatic stress disorder (Shen & Sink, 2002), and children at risk (Post, 1999), no studies have examined the specifics of how elementary school counselors who utilize play therapy deliver it to their students. The purpose of this study was to examine the use, beliefs, perceived barriers, and methods of play therapy delivery by elementary school counselors. Additionally, this study examined the methods used to overcome barriers to implementing play therapy. While the elementary school counselors surveyed in this study seem to agree that play therapy is useful to their students, and an overwhelming majority use it (78.8%), roughly half had not received any formal play therapy training. Several barriers to implementing play therapy were identified including a lack of time, space, training, resources, and support and/or understanding from parents, teachers, or school administrators. Participants discussed the methods they use to overcome barriers, such as buying their own play therapy materials and educating faculty and parents about the positive effects of play therapy through the use of newsletters, brochures, and bulletin boards. Respondents used over 30 different play therapy techniques; the three most utilized techniques were drawing, board games, and role play. Implications for elementary school counselor practice and training were given, as well as implications for future research.
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An autoethnographic exploration of “play at work” / Jacques KrugerKruger, Jacques January 2011 (has links)
This research brings together two concepts that are often depicted as polar
opposites. Sutton-Smith (2001) however suggests that the opposite of play is not work, but
depression, and moreover echoes other scholars in reclaiming play as an essential human
expression, even for adults. This study, therefore, argues that, given the precarious wellness
territory our workplaces are in, something about work is not working. It is furthermore
proposed that, given all the evidence of the therapeutic potential inherent to play, there is
indeed something nutritious at play in play. Despite these well-supported arguments, play
remains hidden away in the academic shadows of more serious industrial psychological
preoccupations. Surprisingly, the same conspicuous absence is even mirrored in Positive
Psychology, a bustling field that claims to celebrate glee, fun, and happiness (Seligman,
2002a).
Entitled “An autoethnographic exploration of play at work,” this dissertation leans on the
metaphor of “exploration”, or more specifically, exploratory play. This results in two distinct
yet interwoven dimensions to the research study. Firstly, the research approaches the
phenomenon of play and play-based methods in workshop contexts through the lived
experience of the researcher. Secondly, the research project in itself is conceptualised as work,
and the methodology of autoethnography is conceptualised as a playful approach to this work
of conducting research. Aside from widening the research scope, this also appropriately
matches research methodology to the research domain. Aside from being about play at work,
this research also is play at work.
Autoethnography, as a recent development in qualitative research, remains
unconventional and somewhat controversial in the South African social sciences.
Autoethnography, as an offspring of ethnography, offers a method to reflexively incorporate
the researcher’s own lived experience in the study of culture as a primary source of rich
phenomenological data. Instead of minimising the emotive and subjective, this research amplifies and celebrates it. Given a fair degree of unfamiliarity in terms of autoethnography
as well the accusation of being overly self-centred, the experience of the researcher is then
complemented by the views of a number of co-creators to the culture being studied. This is
done through external data-gathering in the forms of a focus group as well as number of semistructured,
dyadic interviews. While therefore leaning more toward postmodern themes, this
research also incorporates what has been termed analytical autoethnography (Anderson, 2006),
wherein the researcher is a full-member of the setting being studied, is portrayed as such and
is committed to theoretical analysis. This study can therefore be summarised as an
autoethnographic case study that balances evocative and analytical styles (Vryan, 2006) while
emanating from the philosophical assumptions of interpretivism and subjectivism. Internal
realities and meaning-creation are thus emphasised rather than the received views of
positivism.
The central research question being explored is how play and play-based methods
promote work-related well-being. To answer this question, firstly, play and play-based
methods are explored, both from a theoretical and practical point of view. From within
workshop (pedagogical) contexts, the play-based methods considered throughout this study
include metaphor and story, creative-arts-based play, physical-body play and also the
uncelebrated yet essential methods of icebreakers and games. A preliminary taxonomy is
proposed for play-based methods to offer description and to facilitate reflection and learning.
Descriptive elements in this taxonomy include interactive vs. solitary, competitive vs.
cooperative, motor-sensory vs. cognitive-mind, participative vs. vicarious and rule-bound vs.
improvisational.
Building on this exploration of play-based methods, the second aspect explored in more
detail has to do with the more internal and subjective experiences of participants, or players, if
you like. These experiences are then related to prominent concepts encountered in Positive
Psychology to, by proxy, understand how they relate to work-related well-being. Significant
themes that emerge from this include play as fun, play as mind-body integration, play as
authenticity, play as community, and play as stress-relief and resilience. This is then woven
into a creative non-fiction, in accord with a trend in qualitative research called creative
analytical practices (CAP) (Richardson, 2000). This creative non-fiction, detailed in Chapter
4, forms a key autoethnographic output that animates all these themes in a way that is
accessible, evocative and playful. Chapter 5 complements this chapter with an in-depth
exploration of the research journey as a confessional tale. While adopting the metaphor of hiking in mountains (exploring nature), this confessional tale clarifies the research process
and incorporates an in-depth analysis of the themes, both in terms of research data as well as
literature. This is supported by a number of separate appendixes, including interview
transcripts, depictions of the interview analysis as well as a number of photos from the field.
In terms of its uniqueness and unconventionality, this research joins in the choir of related
work to incorporate more contemporary research genres into the social sciences in South
Africa. By doing so, it opens up doors to phenomena that simply resist being studied with the
ontological and epistemological assumptions of conventional modern science. Furthermore,
the effect and impact of this research is that it provides accessible and practical ideas as to
how a synthesis of play and work can help us renew and rejuvenate our work and workplaces.
That is, how we can come alive in the work contexts that risk becoming sterile, clinical and
inhuman in the wake of Taylorist reductionism and efficiency. Given that state of work and
workplace, and the productive and therapeutic potential in play, indeed, we are too busy not to
play. / Thesis (MCom (Industrial Psychology))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2012
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Play therapy: an overview and marketing planMcNeil Sallman, Cyndi January 1900 (has links)
Master of Science / Department of Family Studies and Human Services / Anthony Jurich / Play is essential to child development because it contributes to the cognitive, physical, social, and emotional well-being of children and youth. The integration of play and play therapy techniques with child and family therapy offers a creative, age appropriate way to provide mental health treatment. This report offers an overview of play therapy, the therapeutic value of play, the historical background, theory, techniques, materials, and settings. Further, it provides the reader with many therapeutic modalities in which to implement play in family therapy. Because play therapy is a specialized field, this report also provides the reader with information on how to use this to create a marketing niche. This report was written with the Masters’ or Doctoral student in mind, as well as practicing therapists; with hopes to provide them a creative avenue in which to enhance their current therapeutic modalities.
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Det finns evidens för lek inom barnpsykoterapi! : En systematisk litteraturstudieFallmark, Gunneli January 2015 (has links)
Barns mentala ohälsa ökar kraftigt. Barnpsykoterapi med inslag av fri lek, här kallad lekterapi, har under många år varit den traditionella behandlingen av barn i behov av psykoterapi. För att ha en möjlighet att kunna jämföras vetenskapligt med andra dokumenterade behandlingsmetoder behöver evidensen för lekterapi som behandlingsmetod undersökas, stärkas liksom spridas. Syftet med föreliggande uppsats är att undersöka kunskapsläget inom lekterapi som behandlingsmetod inom barnpsykoterapi. Totalt 41 studier har granskats systematiskt enligt evidensbaserad medicinsk metod. Tjugoen av dem poängbedömdes medan övriga 20 delades upp i temagrupper för att visa ett ytterligare djup och bredd av de analyserade studierna. Tretton studier av de 21 poängbedömda fick minst 80% av totalpoängen, gradering I, och sju stycken graderingen II, d. v. s. 70-80% av max poängen. Enligt internationell praxis av gradering av evidensstyrka för slutsatser, visar två studier, eller fler, med ett högt bevisvärde eller god systematisk översikt på ett starkt vetenskapligt underlag som ger god evidens. Som ett bifynd visade sig 16 av de 41 studierna även ha en direkt anknytning till affektiv neurovetenskaplig forskning. Rekommendationen är att använda barnpsykoterapi med fri lek för barn som ska behandlas vid mental ohälsa.
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Outdoor Play Behaviors of Pre-Kindergarten Students: Investigating Sociometric Scores, Familiarity, Gender, and Play Entry StrategiesMcAlpin, Leslie 08 January 2016 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to determine factors that affect pre-kindergarten children’s successful play behaviors. Using a multimethods research design, a series of separate studies were combined to determine the relationships among gender, social skills, sociometric status, and play behaviors. The study was conducted in two child development centers where children who have long been together at the center are joined by new children for their pre-kindergarten year. Each child participated in a sociometric analysis by choosing pictures of up to five classmates he/she most likes to play with and responded to interview questions on how children successfully join in play. Teachers assessed each child’s play behaviors using brief Likert Scale surveys. From the sociometric scores, the most chosen boys and girls and the least chosen boys and girls from each classroom were observed during outdoor play sessions while the researcher coded social and nonsocial play behaviors, play entry strategies, and gender and size of the group being entered. The following questions guided this basic research study: (1) What are the effects of gender and familiarity on children’s sociometric choices? (2) Do often-chosen and seldom-chosen children differ in play entry and play behaviors exhibited during outdoor play? (3) Is there a relationship between a child’s knowledge of play entry strategies, social status, and the child’s play behaviors? (4) Is there a relationship between a child’s sociometric score, observed social skills, and a teacher’s assessment of that child’s social skills? This study found the following: Children of both genders prefer same gender playmates. Gender was not a determinate of whether a child chose a student new to the center as a playmate. Seldom-chosen children make more polite requests to play than often-chosen children. Often-chosen children respond to more approaches and spend more time in social play than seldom-chosen children. Most children have knowledge of appropriate play entry strategies, but they do not always implement strategies they know are successful. Teachers know which children spend their time in social play but not which children are most chosen by classmates. Suggestions for teachers and centers and recommendations for future research are provided.
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Playing with children: the use of play as a treatment approach in working with emotionally disturbed childrenunder institutional careChan Lee, Tsui-ngor, Helen, 陳李翠娥 January 1980 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Social Work / Master / Master of Social Work
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Echoing teacher's voices : a study exploring teachers' perceptions of play, play therapy, and play therapy skills trainingHsu-Smith, Tsui-chin 05 February 2010 (has links)
There has been a growing amount of research on play therapy skills
training both with parents and teachers. These studies revealed promising results
on the effectiveness of play therapy skills training; however, a majority of the
studies were quantitative in nature. The current study implemented a qualitative
approach to exploring teachers’ beliefs about children’s play and play therapy by
investigating the perceptions and experiences of a group of teacher participants
who received play therapy skills training. Individual interviews were conducted
and data analysis generated category themes to answer research questions.
Findings suggested that the play therapy skills training had an impact on
teachers, the child of focus, and the teacher-child relationships. The training led
to changes in teacher participants’ perceptions of play, play therapy, and
children, and a pattern seemed to emerge in the influence the training had on
teachers. Teachers perceived changes in themselves in terms of awareness,
attitudes, skills, and emotions. Teachers’ views of play appeared to be changed
and shaped to be more consistent with the ideas of play therapy. Two of the four
teachers reported observing positive changes in behaviors of the child of focus. Three of the teacher participants indicated changes in teacher-child relationships
with the child of focus. Teachers seemed to generalize play therapy skills from
the playroom to the classroom. Teachers perceived that using play therapy skills
helped them build better relationships with children, interact with children more
positively, manage the class more effectively, and ultimately reduce their stress
and frustration. Overall, the play therapy skills training suggested positive results
with teacher participants, the child of focus, and teacher-child relationships.
However, there were also challenges, disadvantages, and constraints observed
and perceived by the teachers. Challenging issues in applying play therapy skills
in the classroom included the perceived difficulty of being both a teacher and a
therapeutic agent to the child of focus, and finding an appropriate classroom
balance between permissiveness and structure. Three of the four teacher
participants expressed their desire and excitement to continue applying play
therapy skills with other students in a new school year. Implications and
limitations of the study, and recommendations for further research are discussed. / text
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