Rethinking the Clinical vs. Social Reform Debate: a Dialectical
... philosophy in social work that aims to change the environment—the social, political, economic, or even physical context in which people live (e.g. community organizing). The terms “philosophy” and “theory” are somewhat interchangeable, but for this dissertation, “philosophy” will be used to refer to ...
... philosophy in social work that aims to change the environment—the social, political, economic, or even physical context in which people live (e.g. community organizing). The terms “philosophy” and “theory” are somewhat interchangeable, but for this dissertation, “philosophy” will be used to refer to ...
1 Knowing Terrorism: A Study on Lay Knowledge of Terrorism and
... literature on public opinion and public attitudes research, before outlining our theoretical and methodological approach. The third section reports on some of the main findings of the study, while the conclusion discusses some of the key implications we draw from the findings. Mind the Gap: Research ...
... literature on public opinion and public attitudes research, before outlining our theoretical and methodological approach. The third section reports on some of the main findings of the study, while the conclusion discusses some of the key implications we draw from the findings. Mind the Gap: Research ...
A Sociology of Modernity
... The double notion of liberty and discipline provides such a linkage. It captures the ambivalence of modernity in three major dimensions, namely the relations between individual liberty and community, between agency and structure, and between locally situated human lives and widely extended social ru ...
... The double notion of liberty and discipline provides such a linkage. It captures the ambivalence of modernity in three major dimensions, namely the relations between individual liberty and community, between agency and structure, and between locally situated human lives and widely extended social ru ...
Creativity as a Virtue of Character
... What is it to be a creative person? There is a minimal sense according to which it just is to possess the ability to produce novel and worthwhile artefacts. Yet there is a richer sense to the term that presupposes agential insight, mastery and sensitivity to reasons in bringing about what is aimed a ...
... What is it to be a creative person? There is a minimal sense according to which it just is to possess the ability to produce novel and worthwhile artefacts. Yet there is a richer sense to the term that presupposes agential insight, mastery and sensitivity to reasons in bringing about what is aimed a ...
Testing Thornberry`s interactional theory: the reciprocal relations
... (Elliott, 1983). Chapter IV presents results. Chapter V provides the discussion of results including conclusions, limitations and implications for future research. ...
... (Elliott, 1983). Chapter IV presents results. Chapter V provides the discussion of results including conclusions, limitations and implications for future research. ...
FREE Sample Here - We can offer most test bank and
... B) will develop better language skills. C) will have fewer tantrums. D) will improve her reading ability. Answer: A. Theories allow prediction of future behavior and events. By applying a theory, Erica’s parents can predict how it will influence her. Diff: 2 Page Ref: 7 Topic: What Is a Theory, and ...
... B) will develop better language skills. C) will have fewer tantrums. D) will improve her reading ability. Answer: A. Theories allow prediction of future behavior and events. By applying a theory, Erica’s parents can predict how it will influence her. Diff: 2 Page Ref: 7 Topic: What Is a Theory, and ...
IDENTITY, SOCIAL IDENTITY, COMPARISON, AND STATUS
... theory. Similarly, Stets (2001) contrasts identity theory and justice theory; and Jasso (2002) contrasts justice theory and status theory. As all these authors, in company with many others, note, there is much to be gained in generality, parsimony, and insight by systematic articulation across theor ...
... theory. Similarly, Stets (2001) contrasts identity theory and justice theory; and Jasso (2002) contrasts justice theory and status theory. As all these authors, in company with many others, note, there is much to be gained in generality, parsimony, and insight by systematic articulation across theor ...
Review of Objectivity and Its Other, Edited by Wolfgang Natter
... the topic or site for fashioning an hermeneutic conception of objectivity and ethnocentrism as significant others, and to conceptualize postmodern ethnocentrism in a non-pernicious manner. Since any interpretation is informed by context, there are no context free -- i.e. non-ethnocentric -- claims ...
... the topic or site for fashioning an hermeneutic conception of objectivity and ethnocentrism as significant others, and to conceptualize postmodern ethnocentrism in a non-pernicious manner. Since any interpretation is informed by context, there are no context free -- i.e. non-ethnocentric -- claims ...
the appropriation of social science knowledge by `lay people`
... Bourgeois Gentilhomme was speaking in prose without knowing it, we all routinely, without necessarily being aware of it, 'use' notions and ideas derived from social science in order to make sense of our day-to-day lives. That 'lay people', whose voice Tiffany's comment above is supposed to illustrat ...
... Bourgeois Gentilhomme was speaking in prose without knowing it, we all routinely, without necessarily being aware of it, 'use' notions and ideas derived from social science in order to make sense of our day-to-day lives. That 'lay people', whose voice Tiffany's comment above is supposed to illustrat ...
Discourse in Action: Introducing mediated discourse analysis
... 4 Rodney H. Jones and Sigrid Norris users to each other in a complex nexus of practices, connecting these moments to policies and discourses of public health and personal attraction, gender politics and family politics, corporate capitalism and the discourse of academia. Were we to analyze just the ...
... 4 Rodney H. Jones and Sigrid Norris users to each other in a complex nexus of practices, connecting these moments to policies and discourses of public health and personal attraction, gender politics and family politics, corporate capitalism and the discourse of academia. Were we to analyze just the ...
New Social Connections: Sociology`s Subjects
... And so here we are. The cargo lies ready for your selection, erudition, mystification, deconstruction, and musing. The perspectival gaze of the sociologist awaits you. Welcome to our world(s). There’s a lot going on in here you know; it’s almost as bad as being out there. By and large, it’s much mor ...
... And so here we are. The cargo lies ready for your selection, erudition, mystification, deconstruction, and musing. The perspectival gaze of the sociologist awaits you. Welcome to our world(s). There’s a lot going on in here you know; it’s almost as bad as being out there. By and large, it’s much mor ...
Tom Gilovich, Dacher Keltner, Richard E. Nisbett-Social
... responses to the threats to survival and opportunities related to gene replication faced by all humans. By implication, these components of emotion, including facial expression, should be universal. In contrast, the cultural approach assumes that emotions are strongly influenced by self-construals, ...
... responses to the threats to survival and opportunities related to gene replication faced by all humans. By implication, these components of emotion, including facial expression, should be universal. In contrast, the cultural approach assumes that emotions are strongly influenced by self-construals, ...
The Becoming of Space: A Geography of Liminal Practices of the
... kind or another. And yet this was, in Antofagasta, obviously not the case. There was an urban built environment, sure, if that is what is meant by structure, and yet there was no urban life, not, at least, as I had previously known it. I was therefore led to ask myself more fundamental questions on ...
... kind or another. And yet this was, in Antofagasta, obviously not the case. There was an urban built environment, sure, if that is what is meant by structure, and yet there was no urban life, not, at least, as I had previously known it. I was therefore led to ask myself more fundamental questions on ...
Building counter cultures - Maynooth University ePrints and eTheses
... popular deference to authority, routinised violence and sheer provincialism that blighted the Ireland we inherited. The results are not what we expected, and there are many unfinished agendas; but few of us would want to return to that past. Official memory, and the Irish fear of conflict, now attem ...
... popular deference to authority, routinised violence and sheer provincialism that blighted the Ireland we inherited. The results are not what we expected, and there are many unfinished agendas; but few of us would want to return to that past. Official memory, and the Irish fear of conflict, now attem ...
Tests of Concepts
... objects under study. Even though, he does not specify research protocols for making observations (treating them as limiting blinders giving a misplaced sense of objectivity), Blumer's method leaves no room to imagine that raw reality is directly known. Concepts are essential to indicate and act towa ...
... objects under study. Even though, he does not specify research protocols for making observations (treating them as limiting blinders giving a misplaced sense of objectivity), Blumer's method leaves no room to imagine that raw reality is directly known. Concepts are essential to indicate and act towa ...
c. operant conditioning.
... b. exemplified by time-out. c. exemplified by a spanking. d. a new program to keep kids off drugs. Answer: c Page: 119 Bloom’s Taxonomy: Knowledge Difficulty: Medium APA Goal: Goal 1: Knowledge Base of Psychology 47. Which of the following scenarios exemplify negative punishment? a. Astrid sends he ...
... b. exemplified by time-out. c. exemplified by a spanking. d. a new program to keep kids off drugs. Answer: c Page: 119 Bloom’s Taxonomy: Knowledge Difficulty: Medium APA Goal: Goal 1: Knowledge Base of Psychology 47. Which of the following scenarios exemplify negative punishment? a. Astrid sends he ...
Chapter 3 - roar@UEL
... The origin of Husserl’s phenomenology had been a rejection of psychologism and a desire to make the analysis of logic itself the basis of a science of thought. Husserl’s early transcendental phenomenology can be seen to have been an extension from Kant’s transcendental idealism in opposition to the ...
... The origin of Husserl’s phenomenology had been a rejection of psychologism and a desire to make the analysis of logic itself the basis of a science of thought. Husserl’s early transcendental phenomenology can be seen to have been an extension from Kant’s transcendental idealism in opposition to the ...
The Effect of Acetaminophen on Social Pain
... resulting from interpersonal ostracism and rejection is high. The suffering caused by being rejected and undervalued by others (i.e., social pain) has been shown to share a similar neural pathway as physical pain. DeWall et al. (2010) revealed that taking the over-the-counter painkiller (acetaminoph ...
... resulting from interpersonal ostracism and rejection is high. The suffering caused by being rejected and undervalued by others (i.e., social pain) has been shown to share a similar neural pathway as physical pain. DeWall et al. (2010) revealed that taking the over-the-counter painkiller (acetaminoph ...
Personality and social psychology: towards a synthesis
... Finally, social psychologists are accused of a preference for problem-oriented mini-theories and laundry lists' or ragbags of variables which has furthered the theoretical impoverishment of personality research. Thus, the particularistic view offers a largely negative appraisal of social psychologi ...
... Finally, social psychologists are accused of a preference for problem-oriented mini-theories and laundry lists' or ragbags of variables which has furthered the theoretical impoverishment of personality research. Thus, the particularistic view offers a largely negative appraisal of social psychologi ...
It`s Not What You Say, It`s How You Say It
... U.S. and prevalence/consumption of violent media specifically along with the effects research has found to be associated with this consumption. Next, three predictors of violent media consumption – risk perception, attitude and intention to consume – will be reviewed. Drawing on previous research in ...
... U.S. and prevalence/consumption of violent media specifically along with the effects research has found to be associated with this consumption. Next, three predictors of violent media consumption – risk perception, attitude and intention to consume – will be reviewed. Drawing on previous research in ...
A COMPARISON OF TWO PAIRING PROCEDURES
... may limit their ability to learn. We evaluated 2 procedures (stimulus pairing and response– stimulus pairing), both of which involved pairing previously neutral praise statements with preferred edible items, to determine their usefulness in establishing praise as a reinforcer. Results of Study 1 ind ...
... may limit their ability to learn. We evaluated 2 procedures (stimulus pairing and response– stimulus pairing), both of which involved pairing previously neutral praise statements with preferred edible items, to determine their usefulness in establishing praise as a reinforcer. Results of Study 1 ind ...
- Wiley Online Library
... may limit their ability to learn. We evaluated 2 procedures (stimulus pairing and response– stimulus pairing), both of which involved pairing previously neutral praise statements with preferred edible items, to determine their usefulness in establishing praise as a reinforcer. Results of Study 1 ind ...
... may limit their ability to learn. We evaluated 2 procedures (stimulus pairing and response– stimulus pairing), both of which involved pairing previously neutral praise statements with preferred edible items, to determine their usefulness in establishing praise as a reinforcer. Results of Study 1 ind ...
Intolerance, prejudice and discrimination : a European report
... only essential for the protection of minorities. They form the very essence of social cohesion and healthy democracy. Whether Europe opts for or against tolerance and diversity depends on the actual integration of heterogeneous groups. It is the extent of prejudices towards e.g. migrants, Muslims, h ...
... only essential for the protection of minorities. They form the very essence of social cohesion and healthy democracy. Whether Europe opts for or against tolerance and diversity depends on the actual integration of heterogeneous groups. It is the extent of prejudices towards e.g. migrants, Muslims, h ...
Intolerance, prejudices and discrimination
... only essential for the protection of minorities. They form the very essence of social cohesion and healthy democracy. Whether Europe opts for or against tolerance and diversity depends on the actual integration of heterogeneous groups. It is the extent of prejudices towards e.g. migrants, Muslims, h ...
... only essential for the protection of minorities. They form the very essence of social cohesion and healthy democracy. Whether Europe opts for or against tolerance and diversity depends on the actual integration of heterogeneous groups. It is the extent of prejudices towards e.g. migrants, Muslims, h ...
Social and Cultural Anthropology: The Key Concepts
... values or forms of thought, and their connection to certain fundamental activities. The key concepts signalled in this book are to be regarded in a comparable way: they are discursive nodes from which a broader, interconnected landscape of anthropological work and understanding should become apparen ...
... values or forms of thought, and their connection to certain fundamental activities. The key concepts signalled in this book are to be regarded in a comparable way: they are discursive nodes from which a broader, interconnected landscape of anthropological work and understanding should become apparen ...