Sozialwesen (SW)
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Schädlingsbekämpfung im Markt: Diskretion oder offensives Marketing - das Imageproblem der Branche
(2009)
Führungskräfte in der Sozialwirtschaft stehen vor enormen Herausforderungen. Um sie zu bewältigen, gilt ein Verständnis von Führung, das vorwiegend auf Macht und Autorität setzt, als nicht mehr zeitgemäß. Der Ansatz des Self-Leadership folgt dagegen dem Verständnis, dass durch die effektive Umsetzung selbstbeeinflussender Strategien ein reflektierter Umgang mit dem eigenen Ich möglich wird.
Angesichts der medialen Präsenz der Themenfelder Sexarbeit und Prostitution sowie deren Komplexität und Undurchsichtigkeit wird u.a. der Frage nachgegangen, wie es im wissenschaftlichen Kontext gelingen kann, systematisch und methodisch kontrolliert vorzugehen, um Sexarbeit und Prostitution von der sie umgebenden Mystifizierung, Instrumentalisierung und Stigmatisierung zu befreien, mit dem Ziel, objektive Perspektiven zu generieren und Befunde zu erzeugen, die den gesellschaftlichen Debatten zugeführt werden können.
Der Beitrag legt das durch zum Teil moralisierende Ansätze und politische Interessen geprägte diskursive Feld mit seinen aktuellen Kontroversen kritisch dar.
Singen kennt kein Alter
(2016)
Singen kennt kein Alter
(2016)
Soziale Altenarbeit - ein Handlungsfeld für Diplom-PädagogInnen? - Ergebnisse eines Studienprojekts
(2000)
Sozialpädagogischer Studienschwerpunkt „Soziale Geragogik/Altenhilfe“ an der Universität Münster
(1998)
Spiritualität...
(2004)
STAMPPP - Science and the treatment of autism: A multimedia package for parents and professionals
(2011)
STAMPPP - Science and the treatment of autism: A multimedia package for parents and professionals.
(2010)
Steigerung der beruflichen Zufriedenheit durch das Studium in Beratung, Mediation und Coaching?
(2018)
Communicating with spoken dialogue systems (SDS) such as Apple’s Siri® and Google’s Now is becoming more and more common. We report a study that manipulates an SDS’s word use with regard to politeness. In an experiment, 58 young adults evaluated the spoken messages of our self-developed SDS as it replied to typical questions posed by university freshmen. The answers were either formulated politely or rudely. Dependent measures were both holistic measures of how students perceived the SDS as well as detailed evaluations of each single answer. Results show that participants not only evaluated the content of rude answers as being less appropriate and less pleasant than the polite answers, but also evaluated the rude system as less accurate. Lack of politeness also impacted aspects of the perceived trustworthiness of the SDS. We conclude that users of SDS expect such systems to be polite, and we then discuss some practical implications for designing SDS.
Suizidprävention im Alter
(2010)
There is still so much ahead of us - Family functioning in families of palliative cancer patients
(2013)
Adopting a systems approach, parental cancer has its impact on patients, spouses, and dependent children. The purpose of the current study was to examine family functioning dependent on parental disease stage and on family member perspective in families of cancer patients with adolescent children. The cross-sectional study was conducted within a German multisite research project of families before their first child-centered counseling encounter. The sample comprised individuals nested within N = 169 families. Analyses performed included analysis of covariance (ANCOVA) and intraclass correlation. Open answers were analyzed following quantitative content analysis procedures. Between 15% and 36% of family members reported dysfunctional general functioning scores. Parents indicated more dysfunctional scores on the Family Assessment Device scale Roles, and adolescents more dysfunctional Communication scores. Regarding assessment of family functioning, there was higher agreement in families with parents in a palliative situation. For adolescents with parents in palliation, incidents because of the disease tend to become more dominant, and spending time with the family tends to become even more important. As our study pointed out, parental cancer, and especially parental palliative disease, is associated with both perceived critical and positive aspects in family functioning. Supporting families in these concerns as well as encouraging perceptions of positive aspects are important components of psycho-oncological interventions for families with dependent children.
Air strikes on Hamburg in 1943 (Operation Gomorrha) were a historical turning point and had a deep impact on both cityscape and history of Hamburg. Little is known about intraindividual and transgenerational consequences as well as its interaction with societal and historical processes. Aiming at closing this gap interviews with witnesses, their children and grandchildren, as well as the whole family, were conducted in the context of an interdisciplinary research project. Based on the example of an interview with a at the time of the Operation Gomorrha eleven years old witness, her daughter, and grandson the biographical localisation of war experiences and transgenerational transmission will be explained and discussed.
OBJECTIVE Parents with cancer are concerned about the impact of their disease on their children. However, parenting concerns and associated factors in cancer survivors have not previously been analyzed. The purpose of this study is to examine parenting concerns and to test a path model for understanding parenting concerns in cancer survivors. METHODS In a cross-sectional study, a total of 1416 parents with cancer (mean age 47.5years, 74% women) having minor or young-adult children were recruited through two cancer registries. Parenting concerns were assessed using the Parenting Concerns Questionnaire. Structural equation modeling (SEM) was used to analyze the associations between social support, parenting confidence, emotional distress, family functioning and parenting concerns. RESULTS Mothers reported higher total parenting concerns than fathers (p<0.001). We observed strong effects of emotional distress and parenting confidence on parenting concerns. Family dysfunctioning was associated with lower concerns. An indirect association between social support and parenting concerns was identified. CONCLUSION Parenting concerns in cancer survivors display the need for interventions and after care programs that focus on affected families with minor and young adult children. The results of the structural path model illustrate the associations between psychological and interactional factors. Supporting parents with cancer in their parenting confidence and strengthen social support and family functioning may not only reduce the long-term burden on the parents themselves but also the burden on the entire family.
BACKGROUND Cancer patients and their minor children have been shown to experience psychological distress. The objectives of the current study were to 1) describe the need for and use of psychosocial support and 2) determine predictors of family-centered support use in patients with minor children. METHODS A population-based sample of 1809 patients was recruited via 2 cancer registries. The eligibility criteria were age 25 years to 55 years, an initial diagnosis received no longer than 6 years before this survey, and having at least 1 minor child. Medical characteristics and self-report measures were used. RESULTS Overall, approximately 38% cases were identified as being borderline or probable anxiety cases and 16% were identified as being borderline or probable depression cases. Since diagnosis, 44% of the patients had used psychosocial support and 9% had received family-focused and child-focused support. These patients perceived a lower quality of life and poorer family functioning. Approximately 73% of patients with children wanted information concerning or psychosocial services to support their children or parenting. Use of family-centered support was not found to be predicted by disease-related factors (eg, cancer staging) but rather by subjective needs (eg, mental health and having a distressed child in the family). CONCLUSIONS The results of the current study emphasize the importance of child and parenting concerns in psychosocial care in oncology. Screenings for children and appropriate training programs for health care may increase awareness of this issue.