• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 103
  • 57
  • 16
  • 14
  • 12
  • 8
  • 6
  • 2
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 297
  • 94
  • 61
  • 55
  • 47
  • 40
  • 36
  • 35
  • 31
  • 31
  • 28
  • 27
  • 26
  • 26
  • 24
  • 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.
181

Sibling Workshops

Chambers, Cynthia R. 01 May 2008 (has links)
No description available.
182

A Multi-Informant Study of Perceived Parental Conflict and Youth Adjustment among Siblings within Military Families

Quichocho, Davina, Lucier-Greer, Mallory 13 April 2019 (has links)
Purpose: This study utilized the ABCX Model of Family Stress and Coping to examine the role of interparental conflict (IPC) on child adjustment in military families. We investigated how IPC as a stressor (A) relates to the meaning adolescent children assigned to the conflict (C), and how this meaning predicts adjustment outcomes among siblings in the family, reflecting a crisis (X). Methods: Data were collected from 116 families composed of an active-duty military parent, civilian parent, and two adolescent siblings. Parents and both adolescents reported their perception of IPC, and adolescents reported on their own positive adjustment. Results: Only civilian parent reports were related to adolescent sibling perceptions of IPC, and adolescent perceptions of IPC inversely predicted their own adjustment. Discussion: Findings support the importance of adolescent perceptions as a factor in their own outcomes. Results highlight the importance of at-home-caregivers as a potential point of intervention in fostering adjustment.
183

A Comparative Analysis of Intensive Individual Play Therapy and Intensive Sibling Group Play Therapy with Child Witnesses of Domestic Violence

Tyndall-Lind, Ashley 05 1900 (has links)
This study was designed to determine the effectiveness of intensive sibling group play therapy in: (a) improving the self-concept of child witnesses of domestic violence; (b) reducing internalizing behavior problems, such as withdrawal, somatic complaints, anxiety and depression, of child witnesses of domestic violence; (c) reducing externalizing behavior problems, such as aggression and delinquency, of child witnesses of domestic violence; and (d) reducing overall behavior problems of child witnesses of domestic violence. A second objective of this study was to compare the effectiveness of intensive sibling group play therapy and intensive individual play therapy on the above identified dimensions.
184

Siblings of Autistic Children: a Supportive Intervention Program Assessing Self-Report and Parent Measures of Coping

Pope, Judith Auricchio 12 1900 (has links)
This research project was designed to demonstrate the usefulness of a supportive intervention program for 17 nine to 14 year old siblings of autistic children. Current clinical practice has begun most recently to include the siblings of handicapped children in treatment services as a preventive measure to help maximize families' coping abilities and to increase the chances that they will be strengthened by their unique circumstances. Although research evidence suggests that most siblings are not at risk for serious psychopathology, it seems reasonable to assume that few remain unaffected by living with a handicapped brother or sister. Siblings report that they have increased responsibilities, many unanswered questions, and parents who typically are caught up in the stresses of caring for a handicapped child and have limited time to attend to their needs. It was hypothesized that an intervention program providing information about the handicapping condition, autism, and offering support through participation in a discussion group with other siblings of autistic children would effect improved coping in the participants. Three time-limited interventions (information plus support, information plus activity, and activity control) were compared under controlled conditions. Sibling coping was measured by a) a battery of self-report and parent ratings of behavior and attitudes, b) clinical observations, and c) sibling and parent anecdotal accounts. Descriptive behavioral and attitudinal data on the total sibling sample indicated more deviant individual profiles than would be expected in the normal population. Consistent with previous research and clinical practice with this subject population, children who were identified with problems were those generally thought to be at greatest risk such as older female and younger male siblings who have assumed extensive caretaking responsibilities for the autistic child. Specific group changes following intervention were confounded by individual subject reactions to the various procedures. Qualitative aspects of the siblings' participation were discussed in terms of implications for future clinical intervention and research with this sibling population.
185

Ett anhörigperspektiv : Upplevelser, erfarenheter och stödbehov utifrån att ha ett syskon med en funktionsnedsättning / A sibling perspective : Experiences and support needs based on having a sibling with a disability

Bergqvist, Cizilia, Masalin, Tanja January 2020 (has links)
Uppsatsen syftade till att beskriva upplevelser, erfarenheter och stödbehov utifrån att vara syskon till personer med funktionsnedsättning, med ett nutida samt retrospektivt perspektiv. En kvalitativ metod användes, där sex personer som har syskon med funktionsnedsättning, intervjuades genom semistrukturerade intervjuer. Resultatet visade ett upplevt ansvarstagande, där ansvaret kunde leda till emotionella konsekvenser och en påverkan på livsval och familjerelationer. Resultatet visade att omgivningens attityder och förväntningar upplevdes som påfrestande för informanterna. Informanterna i studien upplevde sig utveckla användbara kunskaper och perspektiv utifrån sina erfarenheter. I resultatet påvisades ett behov av, liksom en önskan om, personligt stöd och erfarenhetsutbyte. Även en upplevelse av bristfälligt stöd från verksamma inom socialt arbete uttrycktes. Studiens resultat går i linje med tidigare forskning, som visat på upplevda konsekvenser och ett behov av erfarenhetsutbyte, bland personer som har syskon med funktionsnedsättning. / The aim of this study was to describe experiences and support needs, based on being siblings to people with disabilities, through a retrospective and a present perspective. A qualitative method was used, in which six persons who has siblings with disabilities, participated in semi-structured interviews. The result showed an experienced responsibility, which could lead to emotional consequences and have an impact on life choices and family relationships. The attitudes and expectations of the surroundings, were also perceived as stressful. The result further revealed development of useful knowledge based on their experiences. The result revealed both a desire and need for personal support and exchange of experience, as well as the experience of inadequate support from social workers. The study's results are in line with previous research, which has shown perceived consequences and an emphasis on exchange of experience, for people with siblings with disabilities.
186

The social experiences of a young adult growing up as an only-child

Rossi, Lucia Livia 10 June 2011 (has links)
In this study, the social experiences of a young adult growing up as an only-child were explored. A single case study with a female only-child, 23 years of age was used to elicit the themes related to these social experiences. The conceptual framework utilised for this study included the concepts of social identity, social relations and social learning, which incorporated the various social agents and contexts explored in this study. Data was generated through multiple sessions, which consisted of the participant’s life story, people and places maps, as well as unstructured and semi-structured interviews. In addition, field notes and observations were recorded in a reflective journal. The data was analysed and interpreted through thematic analysis, which involved an in-depth selection of themes evident in the participant’s written and verbal expressions. The results of the study were presented in the form of themes, subthemes and categories depicting the social experiences of the participant. The primary themes that seemed to have influenced the social experiences of the participant were her relationships (specifically that with her primary caregivers) and her experiences (attached to these relationships). This study yielded an additional category, which can be seen as contributing to the literature on the social experiences of only-children. This category focused on the cultural influences of the participants’ family, which seemed to be significant in shaping her identity. / Dissertation (MEd)--University of Pretoria, 2010. / Educational Psychology / unrestricted
187

Adolescent Depressive Symptomology: Do Siblings Hurt or Help?

Thorpe, Jared D. 05 June 2020 (has links)
Adolescents in the United States are currently experiencing a mental health crisis. While evidence shows that parents play an important role in shaping the mental health of youth, little has been done to understand how siblings may contribute to the psychological well-being of adolescents. I examine this association through the lenses of social capital and resource dilution perspectives. Social capital theory suggests that siblings may act as an additional source of resources, such as social support, which promote positive mental health. In contrast, resource dilution theory posits that the presence of siblings decreases the availability of parental resource in a way that negatively impacts adolescent psychological well-being. Utilizing a sample of 6,454 American youth from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health, I estimate a series of Generalized Linear Models predicting adolescent CES-D depression scores. Results, which are largely consistent with a resource dilution perspective, indicate that having three or more siblings is detrimental to the mental health of adolescents. These results indicate that interventions aimed at improving or protecting adolescent mental health should be targeted at creating networks that provide additional sources of adult social support for children from large families.
188

The sibling in the self: kinship and subjectivity in British Romanticism

Vestri, Talia Michele 09 October 2018 (has links)
This dissertation examines the role of sibling kinship in shaping the poetry, drama, and fiction of English Romanticism (1789-1832). While critics have long associated Romanticism with a myth of solitary authorship and an archetype of isolated genius, I demonstrate that Romantic authors imagined subjectivity in the plural, curating a vision of identity-formation that is collective, shared, multiple, and relational. Embodied in the portrayal of sibling relationships, this inter-subjective paradigm delivers new frameworks for understanding the Romantic self as situated within networks of others—networks of those who are not quite the same yet not quite different; those who are both familiar and yet unknown. My study is the first to present a sustained consideration of the way Romantic writers invoked literary siblinghood as a model for the collaborative and collective nature of selfhood, and I propose that this focus on lateral sibling kinship offers alternatives to the conventional reproductive lenses through which the late-eighteenth and early-nineteenth-century family has been previously understood. Drawing from recent work in feminist and queer theory, psychology and psychoanalysis, and sociocultural histories of kinship, this dissertation contributes new readings of canonical texts by Percy Bysshe Shelley, Joanna Baillie, William Wordsworth, Jane Austen, and Mary Shelley. Chapter One considers two stage dramas by P. B. Shelley and Baillie as rewritings of Sophocles’s Antigone. In both plays, sisters use their fraternal-sororal relations to redefine familial systems of reproduction via horizontal means of transmission rather than through vertical lines of biological inheritance. In Chapter Two, I extend this discussion of sibling networks to Wordsworth’s Lyrical Ballads, where, I suggest, we find trans-subjective inter-relations that define the poet’s vision well beyond autobiographical references to his sister Dorothy. Austen’s novels serve as the focus of Chapter Three, which argues that the self-contained “I” of the Bildungsroman genre, as Austen incorporates it, in fact depends upon intimate epistemological exchanges between sororal characters who undergo a mutually influential process of development. Chapter Four concludes with a discussion of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein. I suggest that the author critiques her central male protagonist for his failures to recognize how the reciprocity of male-female sibling sympathies underlies homosocial bonds. Taken together, these readings advance a version of Romantic subjectivity based upon lateral integration rather than egotistical solipsism. / 2027-02-28T00:00:00Z
189

Effects of Childhood Context, Implicit Motives, and Explicit Sociocultural Orientation on Autobiographical Memory in PR China, Cameroon and Germany

Bender, Michael 09 August 2006 (has links)
In this study, the relationship of autobiographical memory, implicit motivation, sociocultural orientation, and childhood variables was investigated cross-culturally. A German sample reflecting a prototypical independent context (n=100), and a Chinese (n = 77) and Cameroonian sample (n = 68) from a prototypical interdependent context were selected. Participants were asked to report their earliest childhood memories, to answer socio-demographic questions, to complete the Operant Multimotive Test as a measure of their implicit motivation, and two self-report scales to indicate their sociocultural orientation. Special attention was given to considerations of methodological equivalence across cultures.It was expected that (1) Chinese and Cameroonian participants recall more oriented towards others than German participants, and that (2) individuals from a social-oriented childhood context make more use of the social function of autobiographical recall, and finally that (3) implicit motivation and sociocultural orientation predict autobiographical memory across cultures.Results indicate that Cameroonian and Chinese participants generally make more use of the social function of autobiographical memory than do German participants. Furthermore, the more siblings an individual has, the more she/he makes use of the social function. Missing effects of implicit motivation and sociocultural orientation on interindividual differences in autobiographical memory are accounted for by methodological constraints.
190

Changes in Social Behavior of Children With Much Younger Siblings: A Case Study

Bayard, M. M., Clements, Andrea D. 01 August 2002 (has links)
No description available.

Page generated in 0.0598 seconds