|
Enter your query below to search our database containing over 50,000+ essays and term papers
Search results 81 - 90 of 7138 matching essays
- 81: Understanding Abusive Parents
- ... Toronto have taken important steps toward producing a profile of an abusive parent. Prof. Gary Walters and doctoral student Lynn Oldershaw of the Department of Psychology have developed a system to characterize parents who physically abuse their children. This could ultimately allow social service professionals to identify parents in child abuse. Over the last five years, Walters and Oldershaw, in collaboration with Darlene Hall of the West End Creche, have examined over 100 mothers and their three to six-year-old children who have been ...
- 82: Study of Family Interaction Lead to New Understanding of Abusive Parents
- ... Toronto have taken important steps toward producing a profile of an abusive parent. Prof. Gary Walters and doctoral student Lynn Oldershaw of the Department of Psychology have developed a system to characterize parents who physically abuse their children.This could ultimately allow social service professionals to identify parents in child abuse. Over the last five years, Walters and Oldershaw, in collaboration with Darlene Hall of the West End Creche, have examined over 100 mothers and their three to six-year-old children who have been ...
- 83: Ethics/Child Labor
- Ethics/Child Labor Today in Minot, ND when you got up, went outside to get the paper, and then sat down and read it as you were getting ready for work, did you ever stop to think how the paper got there. Probably a child delivered it to your door, and he or she gets up early every day before school and delivers it, no matter what the weather is like, seven days a weak, and at a minimal pay ... They say, oh, its good for the kid to have a job and to earn a little spending money, or that, it builds character. However they view it, they definitely dont see it as child labor. 2 In America this act would fall under the idea of child work, not child labor, and would still be considered O.K. by our standards. Child work is defined in that young ...
- 84: Violence Against Women In The
- ... change in society did not so much to change the occurrence and violence of violence in the home. So what exactly is domestic violence? Domestic Violence is usually defined as physical, emotional, sexual and other abuse by someone (usually but not always a man) of a person (usually not always a woman) with whom they have or have had some form of intimate relationship such as marriage, in order to maintain ... of domestic violence against women can never fully be documented. There is the Liberal approach that violence against women is a rare occurrence and that it is only a small number of men who will abuse. They blame social backgrounds that form a cycle of abuse. If the father used violence against the mother then the child will see it as normal. They also feel that to push a man as far as to commit an assault sexual frustration should ...
- 85: Learning To Really Learn
- ... and infants also vocalize in unison as they gaze at one another, and this mutual and simultaneous gazing and vocalizing create "Quite special moments" between them". (Lois Bloom, 1970) This is the first stage the child has that progresses into listening and speaking. These two physical activities of perceiving information and expressing thoughts, ideas, and attitudes through listening and speaking help to influence learning ability in children. In my discussion with ... questions and statements. It is her statement, which confirms that socially it is essential to feel comfort in ones surroundings and it is the role of the parent to be the first teacher of the child in sufficient speech production. There are many factors that can contribute to the quality comprehensive listening and speech production in the child depending what he/she may learn in his home environment. When school begins so does the self-consciousness of the child start to be affected; the child may not even know how to express ...
- 86: Legalization of Drugs: Against
- Legalization of Drugs: Against Everyone agrees that something must be done about the tremendous physical and emotional health problems that drug abuse causes. Concern about the abuse of drugs is so widespread that recent polls indicate it to be one of the most serious problems in today's world, threatening the security and freedom of whole nations. Politicians, health experts and much of the general public feel that no issue is more important than drug abuse. America's other pressing social problems- disease, poverty, child abuse and neglect, and corruption- often have a common element; that is drug abuse. The use of illegal drugs such as cocaine, crack, heroin and ...
- 87: Learning to Really Learn: Through Oral communication
- ... and infants also vocalize in unison as they gaze at one another, and this mutual and simultaneous gazing and vocalizing create "Quite special moments" between them". (Lois Bloom, 1970) This is the first stage the child has that progresses into listening and speaking. These two physical activities of perceiving information and expressing thoughts, ideas, and attitudes through listening and speaking help to influence learning ability in children. In my discussion with ... questions and statements. It is her statement, which confirms that socially it is essential to feel comfort in ones surroundings and it is the role of the parent to be the first teacher of the child in sufficient speech production. There are many factors that can contribute to the quality comprehensive listening and speech production in the child depending what he/she may learn in his home environment. When school begins so does the self-consciousness of the child start to be affected; the child may not even know how to express ...
- 88: American Violence
- ... occur against children, particularly at the hands of adults, they are crimes without any reasonable defense because the victims are extremely vulnerable and unable to defend themselves. Too often the crime goes unpunished because a child is afraid that exposing an abuser will only bring more pain. Abusive parents and caretakers may try to justify their methods of punishment as a way of punishing children for being "bad" or of scaring them into being "good." Parental cruelty may escalate from the "shaken-baby syndrome" and routine spanking to battering, burning, stabbing, or other acts of mutilation. Other forms of child abuse are more subtle, though equally cruel. Children are emotionally scarred when they are labeled as stupid or ugly or crazy or unwanted. Before they are even born, babies may be addicted or suffer brain ...
- 89: Music In Therapy
- ... in their field, practice music therapy.(CBMT, 1997) For further information contact the Certification Board for Music Therapists 1407 Huguenot Road Midlothian, VA 23113 (800) 765-CBMT Music Therapy with Abused Children and Adolescents Definition: Abuse is the physical, emotional, or sexual injury to an individual aged birth to 18 years of age. Such injury is often committed by a parent, a guardian, or other individual in the position of power ... signs of distrust, passive attitude or personality, overly concerned with pleasing adults. In school aged children, difficulties in developing relationships with peers, social withdrawal. Sexual: Incest including father/daughter; mother/son; brother/sister. Other adult/child non-consensual sexual relationships. Contributing Factors Parental Insufficiency: low self-esteem of parent or guardian. A Different Child: Inability to control a difficult child. Inability for parent to form strong ties to the child. Over expectation of the child's ability to perform in school or society by parent. Inadequate support system: ...
- 90: Why Do Parents Abduct?
- ... are recovered or returned quickly while others may be on the run for years. Unfortunately many of these children are never found. Generally, people are concerned with the traumatic effects of these events on the child involved. However, both the searching parent and the abductor have many pending issues with which to deal. Some people believe that children "kidnapped" by their own parents are the lucky ones. In fact, because revenge is often the driving force for these abductions, the child may become subject to physical, sexual and mental abuse. While "When Families Are Torn Apart," is written by Mary Morrissey, the majority of the article is quoted from Geoffrey Greif and Rebecca Hegar. In the article, Greif and Hegar explain how they attempted ...
Search results 81 - 90 of 7138 matching essays
|