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Examination of Personality, Social and Cognitive Factors on the Co-Occurrence of Health Risk Behaviors among Multi-Problem Youth: The Utility of An Integrative FrameworkDes Rosiers, Sabrina E 24 March 2010 (has links)
Research has identified a number of putative risk factors that places adolescents at incrementally higher risk for involvement in alcohol and other drug (AOD) use and sexual risk behaviors (SRBs). Such factors include personality characteristics such as sensation-seeking, cognitive factors such as positive expectancies and inhibition conflict as well as peer norm processes. The current study was guided by a conceptual perspective that support the notion that an integrative framework that includes multi-level factors has significant explanatory value for understanding processes associated with the co-occurrence of AOD use and sexual risk behavior outcomes. This study evaluated simultaneously the mediating role of AOD-sex related expectancies and inhibition conflict on antecedents of AOD use and SRBs including sexual sensation-seeking and peer norms for condom use. The sample was drawn from the Enhancing My Personal Options While Evaluating Risk (EMPOWER: Jonathan Tubman, PI), data set (N = 396; aged 12-18 years). Measures used in the study included Sexual Sensation-Seeking Scale, Inhibition Conflict for Condom Use, Risky Sex Scale. All relevant measures had well-documented psychometric properties. A global assessment of alcohol, drug use and sexual risk behaviors was used. Results demonstrated that AOD-sex related expectancies mediated the influence of sexual sensation-seeking on the co-occurrence of alcohol and other drug use and sexual risk behaviors. The evaluation of the integrative model also revealed that sexual sensation-seeking was positively associated with peer norms for condom use. Also, peer norms predicted inhibition conflict among this sample of multi-problem youth. This dissertation research identified mechanisms of risk and protection associated with the co-occurrence of AOD use and SRBs among a multi-problem sample of adolescents receiving treatment for alcohol or drug use and related problems. This study is informative for adolescent-serving programs that address those individual and contextual characteristics that enhance treatment efficacy and effectiveness among adolescents receiving substance use and related problems services.
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'Dumping grounds' or a meaningful educational experience? : the involvement of Scotland's colleges in the education of disengaged young peopleDavidson, Janet Morton January 2007 (has links)
The research examines the discourses surrounding disengaged young people, particularly those under the age of 16, and the role of Scotland’s Colleges in making provision for them. Consideration is given to the voices of the young people themselves: how their college experiences compare to school and how they view themselves over this transition period. Consideration is also given to the policy in this area and how it has developed since the Beattie watershed of 1999. The debate surrounding the involvement of colleges in the provision of education for this group of young people touches on issues of social justice and the construction of children and young people, as well as throwing up questions about the roles and identity of Scotland’s schools and colleges. Among the questions it raises about colleges, it raises issues of pedagogy and of the professional status of its teaching staff and offers recommendations about the lessons each sector might learn from the other . Ultimately, it proposes that Scotland’s Colleges are uniquely placed to seek ascendancy in the post-school sector, welcoming and developing the role that they now play in the transition of young people to adulthood.
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Nature discipline : the practice of wilderness therapy at Camp E-Wen-AkeeDunkley, Cheryl Morse 05 1900 (has links)
Wilderness therapy, the practice of sending troubled young people into nature in
order to re-socialize them, poses a paradox. Time spent in wilderness is imagined to produce
civilizing effects on young people, rendering them better prepared to live responsible and
productive lives in society. Study of wilderness therapy, therefore, provides insight into
constructions of youth and nature in contemporary American society.
This thesis emerges from ethnographic research conducted at Camp E-Wen-Akee, a
therapeutic camping program for troubled youth, in Benson, Vermont, USA. In addition to
living with the three groups of campers in their rustic camp sites and engaging in camp
activities, I facilitated two camper-run research projects, and interviewed camp staff
members, and the state social workers responsible for sending adjudicated youth to
residential programs.
I find that camp life is an achievement of many heterogeneous actors, some of whom
are human and others nonhuman. The resulting work is an ethnography of a nature-culture,
wherein I describe how the camp mobilizes various resources to create the conditions for
therapeutic change. The differing nature narratives of campers and the adults indicated that
expectations for nature are at least in part, outcomes of class processes. Close attention to
camp life shows that therapy is a social strategy brought into being at a number of scales: the
material body, built and temporal architectures, landscape, and 'public' wilderness outside of
camp's borders. I find at each scale a tension between the ordering tactics deployed by camp
staff members and resistance posed by campers and 'nature' alike.
Campers' identities are meant to change as a result o f repeated performances of prosocial
behavior, and the on-going circulation of success stories. Together these practices
underscore that what one person does always has effects on others. The irony uncovered i n
this research is that while troubled youth are sent to a nature imagined as separate from
society, Camp E-Wen-Akee provides young people with an ecological model for social life.
Wilderness therapy is the outcome not of a separation between nature and society, but of ongoing
relations between the two. / Arts, Faculty of / Geography, Department of / Graduate
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Reading and Math Outcomes for Incarcerated Youth with Emotional and Behavioral DisordersMonfore, Dorotha Rombuck 05 1900 (has links)
Helping youths acquire educational skills is one of the most effective approaches to the prevention of delinquency and reduction of recidivism. Access to a high-quality education is particularly important for the growing number of youth committed to juvenile corrections, especially for those who have been diagnosed with a disability. Research has shown a tremendous gap about the academic outcomes of incarcerated juveniles with emotional disabilities. Thus, the focus of this study was to examine the academic outcomes in reading and math for youth with emotional/behavioral disorders (E/BD) released from Texas Youth Commission (TYC) programs between September 2003 and September 2004. The study examined if the rate of academic growth in reading and math as indicated by pre- and post-test scores on the Test of Adult Basic Education (TABE), are different for youth with E/B as compared to youth with other disabilities and youth without disabilities who were adjudicated in TYC programs.
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The Efficacy of Equine Assisted Group Counseling with At-Risk Children and AdolescentsTrotter, Kay Sudekum 12 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to determine the efficacy of equine assisted group counseling as compared to in-school curriculum group guidance/counseling. Research examined externalizing, internalizing, maladaptive, and adaptive behaviors of elementary and middle school students who were considered at-risk of academic or social failure. Two types of behavior instruments, the Behavioral Assessment System for Children (BASC)-Self-Rating, Parent-Rating, and Teacher-Rating Scales; and the Animal Assisted Therapy-Psychosocial Session Form (AAT-PSF), were used in a pretest-posttest comparison group quasi experimental design. Results of the paired sample t-test analysis of the BASC Self-Report indicated that the equine assisted counseling group showed statistically significant improvement in five behavior areas, and the in-school curriculum group guidance/counseling group showed statistically significant improvement in four areas, with only one behavior area the same as the equine assisted counseling group. Results of the paired sample t-test analysis of the BASC Parent-Report indicated that the equine assisted counseling group showed statistically significant improvement in twelve behavior areas, whereas the in-school curriculum group guidance/counseling showed statistically significant improvement in only one behavior area. Results of the paired sample t-test analysis of the BASC Teacher-Report indicated that the equine assisted counseling group showed no statistically significant improvement; however the in-school curriculum group guidance/counseling group showed statistically significant improvement in one area. An ANCOVA comparison of equine assisted counseling group verses in-school curriculum guidance/counseling group using the BASC Self, Parent, and Teacher-Reports indicated that the equine assisted counseling group showed statistically significant improvement in seven behavior areas that the in-school curriculum guidance/counseling group did not. Results of the repeated measures ANOVA of the AAT-PSF (equine assisted counseling group only) showed statistically significant improvement in all 3-scale scores: 1) overall total behaviors; 2) increased positive behaviors; and 3) decreased negative behaviors.
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From nomadic to static : issues of acculturation and resilience among First Nations youthsKlaiman, Cheryl M. January 2003 (has links)
No description available.
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`n Opleidingsprogram in alternatiewe interaksiemetodes vir onderwysersDreyer, Johanna Alida Elizabeth 28 February 2005 (has links)
Text in Afrikaans / The phenomenon which was studied in this research was alternative interaction methods. The research question was whether teachers could use these methods to address the problematic behaviour of learners in schools and to create a more positive attitude in learners. The question of a training program for teachers in this regard was also raised. The alternative interaction methods addressed in the literature was amongst others about addressing emotions that hinders the learners' learning process, addressing mild to serious misbehaviour and the positive encouragement of learners, as well as positive feedback given by teachers. The researcher herself used these methods on learners to see what their reaction was in this regard. Information was also gathered from teachers through questionnaires, focus groups and individual interviews. The conclusion was that the alternative interaction methods can be effective in addressing the problematic behaviour of learners and thus improve discipline. Learners' attitudes can also be influenced in a positive way when using these methods. Eventually it implies a higher level of job satisfaction for teachers. A training program was compiled for teachers to learn these alternative interaction methods and apply them in future as a contribution to Educational Psychology. / Educational Psychology / D.Ed. (Opvoedkundige Sielkunde)
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Enhancing a sense of self in a group of socially marginalised adolescent boys through participatory action researchDamons, Lynne Nesta 04 1900 (has links)
Thesis (PhD)--Stellenbosch University, 2014. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This dissertation sought to understand the experience of six participants as members
of a cluster group of socially marginalised youth in a farmworker community. Through
a collaborative process, the study sought to reframe the perceptions around the
behavioural outcomes of membership to such an outcast group. Theories of
empowerment through active participation underpinned the whole study. The study
was qualitative in nature and used a Participatory Action research methodology
which created the space for creative exploration with enabling methodologies such
as the Youth Engagement Cycle and Activity Theory. Data were collected through
focus group- and semi-structured interviews; participant observation and participant
generated artefacts. Six adolescent males who were part of an already established
cluster group of socially marginalised youth at a school were purposively selected
into the study. The analysis of data was an ongoing and iterative process informed by
the theories that underpinned the study and through content analysis of emerging
themes. The study revealed that the cluster group was not formed with delinquent intent.
Instead, it was created as a space that allowed its members to feel a sense of
belonging, security and being valued. However, the group dynamic caused individual
self-efficacy to become so enmeshed with collective agency that if left unchecked, it
had the potential to propel its members along a trajectory to delinquency. The
dissertation recommends understanding cluster groups as unique heterogeneous
entities that show insight and empathy into the challenges their cohorts experience.
Recognising that this elevates the peer group's influence above that of adults the
study recommends a collaborative, well-structured and strategic intervention that
allows individuals to experience success and self-influence in attaining mastery
within the group dynamic. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie verhandeling het ten doel gehad om ses deelnemers se ervaring as lede van
'n 'cluster' groep gemarginaliseerde jongmense binne 'n plaaswerker gemeenskap te
probeer verstaan. Deur middel van 'n proses van samewerking, het die studie
gepoog om die persepsies rakende die gedragsuitkomste van lidmaatskap binne so
'n geïsoleerde groep te herformuleer. Die hele studie is gebaseer op teorie van
bemagtiging deur middel van aktiewe deelname. Die verhandeling was kwalitatief
van aard en het gebruik gemaak van 'n Deelnemende Aksie Navorsingsmetodologie
wat ruimte geskep het vir kreatiewe ontdekking met bemagtigende metodologieë
soos bv. "Youth Engagement Cycle" en "Activity Theory". Data is ingesamel deur
middel van 'n fokusgroep en semi-gestruktureerde onderhoude; deelnemer
waarneming en deelnemer gegenereerde artefakte. Ses adolessente mans wat
reeds deel was van 'n gevestigde groep sosiaal-gemarginaliseerde jongmense by 'n
skool, is doelbewus geselekteer vir die studie. Die analise van die data was 'n
deurlopende en iteratiewe proses wat belig is deur die teorieë waarop die studie
gebaseer was asook deur inhoudsanalise van die ontluikende temas. Die studie het getoon dat die 'cluster' groep nie gevorm is met misdaad as doel nie.
Inteendeel, die groep het ontstaan as 'n ruimte wat sy lede toegelaat het om 'n mate
van geborgenheid, sekuriteit en waardering te ervaar. Die groepsdinamiek het
individuele self-doeltreffendheid toegelaat om so verbonde te raak met kollektiewe
agentskap dat indien dit nie gekontroleer was nie, dit die potensiaal getoon het om sy
lede op 'n trajek van jeugmisdaad te plaas. Die verhandeling beveel dus aan dat 'n
'cluster' groep gesien word as 'n unieke heterogene entiteit wat insig en empatie toon
met die uitdagings wat lede ervaar. Op grond van die feit dat dit die portuurgroep se
invloed bo die van die volwassenes verhef, wil die studie 'n samewerkende, goedgestruktureerde
en strategiese bemiddeling aanbeveel wat die individu sal toelaat om
sukses en selfgelding te ervaar met die bereiking van bemeestering binne die
dinamiek van die groep.
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`n Opleidingsprogram in alternatiewe interaksiemetodes vir onderwysersDreyer, Johanna Alida Elizabeth 28 February 2005 (has links)
Text in Afrikaans / The phenomenon which was studied in this research was alternative interaction methods. The research question was whether teachers could use these methods to address the problematic behaviour of learners in schools and to create a more positive attitude in learners. The question of a training program for teachers in this regard was also raised. The alternative interaction methods addressed in the literature was amongst others about addressing emotions that hinders the learners' learning process, addressing mild to serious misbehaviour and the positive encouragement of learners, as well as positive feedback given by teachers. The researcher herself used these methods on learners to see what their reaction was in this regard. Information was also gathered from teachers through questionnaires, focus groups and individual interviews. The conclusion was that the alternative interaction methods can be effective in addressing the problematic behaviour of learners and thus improve discipline. Learners' attitudes can also be influenced in a positive way when using these methods. Eventually it implies a higher level of job satisfaction for teachers. A training program was compiled for teachers to learn these alternative interaction methods and apply them in future as a contribution to Educational Psychology. / Educational Psychology / D.Ed. (Opvoedkundige Sielkunde)
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Resilience in adolescents: a psycho-educational perspectiveSteyn, Sharon Teresa 30 October 2006 (has links)
The main aim of this study was to attempt to determine which factors that contribute to resilience are absent in adolescents who are considered to be ”at risk”. The research was undertaken with white adolescent learners between Grades 8 and 12, in a former Model-C secondary school. Several definitions of resilience, a historical view of resilience, the characteristics of a resilient adolescent, several definitions of adolescence, the stages and tasks of adolescence and who the adolescent is in psycho-educational terms, were explored.
In this qualitative study, the Vulnerability Questionnaire and the Resilience Questionnaire were given to twelve educators who were requested to select the participants for the study. A qualitative assessment, using the Child and Youth Resilience Measure, was used to determine why certain adolescents are more resilient than others. Each participant also completed a collage which was analysed. / Educational Studies / M.Ed. (Specialisation in Guidance and Counselling)
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