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Perceptions of Adolescents Suspended for School Drug AbuseBomba-Edgerton, Katherine 01 January 2017 (has links)
School drug use has been attributed to the annual suspension of thousands of secondary adolescents, subsequently contributing to poor academics, low graduation rates, and continued school drug use. The purpose of this qualitative study was to examine the experiences of former adolescents who engaged in school drug use. Social learning theory suggests that behaviors observed from within the environment may later be modeled. Using Bandura's social learning theory, 10 participants, 18 years old and older responded to open-ended questions about how they processed school drug use. Using interpretative phenomenological analysis, the responses to the open-ended questions were coded and analyzed. Bandura's social learning theory supports the key findings. Findings indicated that former students reported being influenced by their environment and others around them, such as friends. Additional findings from the study suggest that boredom was another reason students engaged in school drug use. While a few students enrolled in a new school after being suspended for school drug use, the findings suggest that out-of-school suspensions are not meaningful to students. After returning to school from their suspension, students felt behind in their school work. Implications for social change include understanding potential influences of school drug use on students and their environment. This understanding can benefit schools, parents, and the community through interventions and proactive measures that target school drug use among adolescents.
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A Phenomenological Study of Single Fathers of Children with Autism in TrinidadSeepersad, Merisha Shirwell Margaret 01 January 2016 (has links)
With an increase in diagnosis rates of autism in Trinidad, more parents of children with autism, especially single fathers, face numerous challenges on a daily basis. There is a lack of research on this topic and therefore an inadequate understanding of the experiences of Trinidadian single fathers as primary caregivers for children with autism. The purpose of this phenomenological study was to explore and depict the lived experiences of single fathers of children with autism. Social support theory was the guiding conceptual framework to explore and understand how single fathers effectively manage their daily challenges. Ten single fathers from Southern Trinidad were recruited through criterion sampling and they engaged in semi-structured interviews individually. Moustakas's steps to phenomenological analysis were used to analyze the data. There were seven major themes that emerged from describing the lived experience of single fathers of children with autism: (a) challenges, (b) social support systems, (c) day-to-day experiences, (d) the role of the father within the family, (e) effects on social life, (f) sibling reactions, and (g) adaptive coping mechanisms. This study may engender social change, as the findings may be used to support single fathers to continue to provide care for their children. This study could result in improved understanding and support for their children both at home, in school, and in the community. The findings will be available to other fathers who share similar experiences. Special education service providers may gain further information to improve their services to families of children with disabilities.
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Teachers' Experiences Concerning the Rise in Student AggressionWorks, Doris Massey 01 January 2015 (has links)
This research study addressed the problem of aggressive and disruptive behaviors for kindergarten through Grade 12 students in a school district located in Southeastern United States. The study examined classroom teachers' daily lived experiences with student aggression. Using a phenomenological design and guided by the frustration aggression theory and the social learning theory, the research questions explored teachers' responses to what can be done to help with disruptive and aggressive students and how social learning could help students with these behaviors. Data were collected from interviews with 5 individual teachers who had experienced aggressive and disruptive behaviors; data were also gathered from a focus group of 6 to increase credibility of the final interpretations. Both interview and focus group data were color-coded and thematically analyzed. Emergent themes revealed that aggressive disruptive behaviors included extreme disrespect toward teachers with physical and verbal abuse, and low teacher efficacy. The results indicated that social learning, through positive modeling, was needed to help aggressive disruptive students change their behavior. Teacher recommendations included professional training on social learning strategies, reducing class size, instilling a zero tolerance policy, increasing administrative support, and providing social learning programs for aggressive students. These recommendations could lead to social change by implementing constructive measures to reduce aggression and nurture positive teacher-student relationships by which students are empowered to learn and grow.
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Reducing High-Risk Young Adult Offenders' Attrition From Reentry ProgramsTaylor, Rosema Jackielyn 01 January 2018 (has links)
Reentry programs have been demonstrated to reduce recidivism. These same programs experience high attrition rates that degrade effectiveness and reduce capacity. Recidivism rates are reported as over 77% after 5 years from release which negatively impact society, victims and the released offenders. The purpose of this grounded theory study was to examine recently released offenders' insights regarding attrition from reentry programs to provide program administrators with themes that may be useful in addressing attrition. Social learning theory was used to frame the study. Audio recordings were collected during semistructured interviews with 21 reentry program participants. The recordings were transcribed and organized by stage and individual participant. The data was then coded to develop emergent themes about attrition. The themes were unawareness of reentry programs, inefficient learning processes, and lack of cooperative relationships. The themes that offer insight into the self-reported feelings were optimism turns to frustration when learned skills do not provide the expected outcomes and willingness to inform others about the reentry program. Results may provide reentry program administrators with insights to improve the design and execution of reentry programs to facilitate completion by high-risk offenders, which may lower the risk of recidivism.
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Police Officer Initiated Intimate Partner Violence by Male and Female Officers: A Test of Social Learning TheoryWilliamson, Matthew T. January 2020 (has links)
No description available.
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The Multidimensional Roles of Peers on ReoffendingConfer, Leanne M. 24 May 2021 (has links)
No description available.
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Det sociala lärandet på folkhögskolan : En kvalitativ studie om det sociala lärandet på en svensk folkhögskola / Social learning on a folk high school : A qualitative study on social learning at a Swedish folk high schoolGärdh, Hampus, Hanslofwa, Joachim January 2023 (has links)
This study focuses on how students at a folk high school in southern Sweden experience social learning and how their identity is affected. The study is qualitative with a hermeneutic approach and the data was collected through semi-structured individual interviews with a total of eight students studying general courses. The results are analyzed using Honneth’s theory recognition, Vygotskijs theory on thinking & speech and Moscovici’s theory social representation. The results showed that the students expressed improvement in views of their own identity and self-esteem and it’s likely that the social learning in classes is responsible for the improvement among students where the teacher enables social learning and responsibility in the classroom. Lastly, our study showed that many students indicated that social factors had more importance than academic gain. / Studien fokuserar på hur deltagare på en folkhögskola i södra Sverige upplever socialt lärande och hur deras identitet påverkas av detta. Studien är en kvalitativ studie med en hermeneutisk metodansats och det empiriska materialet har samlats med hjälp av semistrukturerade individuella intervjuer med hjälp av åtta deltagare. Resultatet analyseras med hjälp av Honneths teori erkännande, Vygotskijs kulturhistoriska teori och Moscovici teori sociala representationer. Resultaten visar att deltagarna uttrycker förbättring kring den egna självbilden och det egna självförtroendet och det är troligt att det sociala lärandet på folkhögskolan är en förklaring till detta där läraren möjliggör socialt lärande och ansvar i klassrummet. Slutligen visar studien att många deltagare menar att sociala faktorer har större betydelse än akademiska framgångar.
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Is social learning correlated with innovation in birds? an inter- and an intraspecific testBouchard, Julie January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
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The Social Attentional Foundations of Infants’ Learning from Third-Party Social InteractionsThiele, Kyra Maleen 13 July 2022 (has links)
Human infants rely on social interactions to acquire culturally relevant knowledge about their environment. Aside from active participation (“first-party perspective”), infants encounter social interactions through third-party observation (“third-party perspective”). Despite the absence of own involvement, the mere observation of others’ interactions represents an essential source of social learning opportunities. The overarching aim of this dissertation was to deepen our understanding of the foundations of infants’ observational learning from third-party interactions. This was achieved by investigating (a) social attentional developments and motivational influences driving infants’ attention toward third-party interactions (Study 1 & 2), and (b) factors influencing infants’ attention and memory while observing third-party interactions (Study 3).
Study 1 investigated how infants’ attentional orienting to third-party interactions develops in parallel with their active social attention behavior. In Experiment 1, 9.5- to 11-month-old infants looked longer than 7- to 8.5-month-olds at videos showing two adults engaging in a face-to-face interaction, when simultaneously presented with a non-interactive back-to-back scene showing the same people acting individually. Moreover, older infants showed higher social engagement (including joint attention) during parent-infant free play. Experiment 2 replicated this age-related increase in both measures and showed that it follows continuous trajectories from 7 to 13 months of age. These findings suggest that infants’ attentional orienting to others’ social interactions coincides with developments in their social attention behavior during own social interactions.
Study 2 examined the incentive value of social interactions as a proximal driver of infants’ attentional orienting to third-party interactions. In a gaze-contingent associative learning task, two geometrical shape cues were repeatedly paired with two kinds of target videos showing either a dyadic face-to-face interaction or a non interactive back-to-back scene. We found that 13-monthold infants performed faster saccadic latencies and more predictive gaze shifts toward the cued target region during social interaction trials. This suggests that social interaction targets can serve as primary reinforcers in an associative learning task, supporting the view that infants find it intrinsically rewarding to observe others’ social interactions.
Study 3 investigated infants’ object encoding in the context of observed social interactions. In Experiment 1, 9-month-old infants were presented with four types of videos showing one object and two adults. The scenarios varied regarding the eye contact between the adults (eye contact or no eye contact) and the adults’ object directed gaze (looking toward or away from the object). Infants showed increased object encoding, but only when seeing two adults looking at an object together, following mutual eye contact. We found an identical pattern of results in a matched first-party design during which 9-month-old infants were directly addressed by one single adult on screen (Experiment 2). Together, these findings suggest that the capacity to learn about novel objects by observing third-party interactions emerges in the first postnatal year, and that it may depend on similar factors as infants’ learning through direct social interactions at this age.
The findings of all three studies are integrated in a general discussion. In summary, the
results of this thesis suggest that, throughout the first year after birth, infants develop abilities and preferences enabling them to approach and efficiently learn from third-party social interactions.:General Introduction 1
1.1 The Infant As an Active Learner 2
1.2 Social Attentional Requirements of Infants’ Learning From Social Interactions 3
1.3 Motivational Mechanisms Affording Opportunities to Learn From Social Interactions 16
1.4 Infants’ Learning From Social Interactions 21
1.5 Research Gaps 26
1.6 Focus of This Dissertation 27
Study I 33
2.1 Introduction 34
2.2 Experiment I 38
2.3 Experiment II 45
2.4 General Discussion 50
Study II 55
3.1 Introduction 56
3.2 Methods 57
3.3 Results 63
3.4 Discussion 64
Study III 69
4.1 Introduction 70
4.2 Experiment I 74
4.3 Experiment II 81
4.4 General Discussion 86
General Discussion 91
5.1 Summary of Results 91
5.2 Research Contributions 93
5.3 Limitations and Future Directions 101
5.4 Overall Conclusion 114
References 115
Appendix A – Supplementary Materials Study I 137
Appendix B – Supplementary Materials Study II 148
Appendix C – Supplementary Materials Study III 152
Curriculum Vitae 167
Scientific Publications and Conference Contributions 169
Contributions of Authors 171
Declaration of Authorship 175
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Partners in Crime: Toward an Integrated, Explanatory Theory of Serial Killer CollaborationBraimovic, Monique January 2015 (has links)
The study of serial killer collaboration has received little attention in academia. While current explanatory theories of serial homicide can include subtypes of serial killers that operate alone, the study of collaborating serial killers has been neglected. In this paper, an integrated, explanatory theory of serial killer collaboration is proposed. The theory builds on concepts from social learning theory, the trauma control model, and relational self theory and aims to examine what interpersonal dynamics that characterize the partnerships of collaborating serial killers. Five cases of collaborating serial killers have been analyzed and compared with focus on individual life histories and how these are reflected in the interpersonal dynamics in serial killer collaboration. The study found that serial killer collaboration is fundamentally characterized by a mutual need for human connection and approval, and that sociocultural role expectations affect the interpersonal dynamics of collaborating serial killers in terms of dominance, victim-preference, victim-acquisition, and method of murder.
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