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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Stories of Care in the Virtual Classroom: An Autoethnographic Narrative Inquiry

Eisenbach, Brooke Boback 25 March 2015 (has links)
Since their inception in 2006, K-12 virtual classrooms have spread across the nation, reaching millions of students every day. Despite the technological changes in today's society, adolescents who lack key personal characteristics may struggle to successfully complete online coursework. A caring teacher-student relationship may assist today's virtual learners in ways that enhance motivation, learning, and online education success. Although a veteran teacher of nine years, in this autoethnographic narrative inquiry, I shared my experience as a novice, English I virtual teacher as I strived to enact relational with my virtual education students.
2

What Does It Mean to Be a Service-Learning Teacher? - An Autoethnography

Verdi, Kristy Causey 27 March 2017 (has links)
This personal narrative autoethnography of my lived experiences as a middle-school service-learning course teacher has helped me solve a personal mystery and present an important perspective for the K-12 service-learning field. With an eye on revealing a unique service-learning classroom concept to educational leaders, enhancing middle level teacher education, and hopes of providing greater opportunities for advancing research on service learning in K-12 education, this study has also aided me in understanding my professional self and my subjective educational theory through a personal interpretive framework (Kelchtermans, 1993, 1999, 2009). Using autoethnography (Ellis, 2004; Ellis & Bochner, 2006) as a method to explore my own experiences as a middle school service-learning teacher and the perceptions of critical friends— colleagues, family members, and friends—who have been significant in my experiences, I am able to present an evocative personal narrative on what it means to be a service-learning teacher. Overarching findings from this study reveal that a middle grades service-learning teacher is a self-authored individual (Baxter Magolda, 1999, 2009; Kegan, 1994) who is committed to community-engaged education (Dewey, 1900, 1933), possesses a strong “I must” (Noddings, 2002b, p. 20) perspective on relational care, and are for development in servant leadership (Greenleaf, 1977; Sergiovanni, 1992; Bowman, 2005)
3

La pratique infirmière en procréation médicalement assistée au sein d’un établissement de santé québécois : une étude autoethnographique

Guay, Martine 12 1900 (has links)
Problématique : L’infertilité – considérée par l’Organisation mondiale de la santé (OMS) comme une maladie du système reproducteur – affecte de plus en plus d’hommes et de femmes, soit un couple sur six en âge de procréer au Canada et au Québec. Elle a un impact sur le bien-être physique et mental des patient.e.s, souvent stigmatisé.e.s et isolé.e.s socialement parce que, pour plusieurs, l’infertilité demeure un sujet tabou. L’infertilité est traitée en procréation médicalement assistée (PMA) où les patient.e.s-familles sont accompagné.e.s par des infirmières dont la pratique est complexe et diversifiée, mais méconnue. But : L’étude avait pour but d’explorer la pratique infirmière en PMA dans un établissement de santé québécois. Méthode : Le devis retenu est une autoethnographie où l’étudiante-chercheuse a mis à profit son expérience comme patiente et comme infirmière en PMA. Des entretiens semi-dirigés, une observation participante et un journal de terrain ont été employés pour la collecte des données. Une analyse thématique a été réalisée. Résultats : L’expérience des patient.e.s-familles en infertilité est au cœur de la pratique infirmière et l’une des principales dimensions de cette pratique est le soin relationnel, peu importe les sphères d’activités auxquelles les infirmières sont affectées au sein de la clinique. Les autres dimensions rapportées sont le leadership/advocacy, l’apprentissage/enseignement, la collaboration et les interventions techniques. Ces résultats correspondent à l’expérience de l’étudiante-chercheuse, tant à titre de patiente que d’infirmière en PMA. Retombées : L’étudiante-chercheuse a documenté la pratique infirmière en PMA, mettant en valeur une méthode peu usitée en sciences infirmières : l’autoethnographie. / Problem: Infertility – classified by the World Health Organization (WHO) as a reproductive system disease – affects an ever-increasing number of women and men. Today, one couple out of six of reproductive age struggles with this condition in Canada and in Quebec. It has an impact on the patients’ physical and psychological well-being, often leaving both partners stigmatized and socially isolated as infertility remains a societal taboo for many. Infertility can be treated via Assisted Reproduction Technologies (ART) where the patients-families are cared for by fertility nurses, whose practice is both complex and diversified, but remains little-known. Purpose: This study explores the field of fertility nursing as it is practised in a Quebec healthcare institution. Method: The student-researcher chose to do an autoethnography in order to draw from her own experience as both a fertility nurse and a fertility patient. Semi-directed interviews, participant observation and field journal were used to collect data. A thematic analysis of data then followed. Results: The patients-families’ infertility experience is at the heart of the fertility nurse’s practice and relational care is the main dimension of that practice, regardless of which nursing activities are assigned to them in the clinic. These other dimensions were also reported : leadership/advocacy, learning/teaching, collaboration and technical interventions. These results coincide with the student-researcher’s experience, both as a fertility patient and as a fertility nurse. Impact: The student-researcher documented the practice of fertility nursing and showcased a method rarely used in nursing science: autoethnography.
4

Understanding the Context and Social Processes that Shape Person- and Family-Centered Culture in Long-Term Care: The Pivotal Role of Personal Support Workers

Melis, Ellen Helena 20 April 2020 (has links)
No description available.

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