7 resultados para materiality of practices
em Universidade do Minho
Resumo:
A educação em saúde conheceu, no último século, profundas mudanças, tanto no plano conceitual como no das práticas dele decorrentes, fruto das transformações por que passou a humanidade em termos políticos, económicos e sociais. O conceito de educação desviou-se da perspectiva instruidora e escolarizadora de crianças e jovens, centrada na transmissão-assimilação de conhecimentos, para uma perspectiva mais abrangente e integradora, centrada na criação de condições que permitem aos indivíduos desenvolverem-se holisticamente na sua multidimensionalidade, em permanente interação com os outros. Por sua vez, o conceito de saúde perdeu o seu pendor negativo de ausência de doença, passando a ser entendido positivamente como um estado de completo bem-estar físico, mental, social e espiritual, em constante mutação ao longo da vida. Nesse sentido, a educação em saúde deixou também de ser vista como a transmissão de informação de caráter higienisto-sanitário, orientada para a prevenção ou o tratamento da doença, efetuada em contextos formais, para passar a ser entendida como a capacitação dos indivíduos para controlarem os seus próprios determinantes de saúde, através da criação ou do desenvolvimento de competências de ação. A educação e a saúde passam, pois, a apresentar-se como duas faces de um mesmo processo. Neste trabalho pretendemos, pois, analisar a evolução conceptual em torno da saúde e da educação no séc. XX, tentando perceber até que ponto essas mudanças conceptuais se têm refletido ao nível das práticas.
Resumo:
Dissertação de mestrado em Educação Especial (área de especialização em Intervenção Precoce)
Resumo:
Tese de Doutoramento em Estudos da Criança (área de especialização em Sociologia da Infância).
Resumo:
A single supply chain management (SCM) practice will have a certain impact on organizational performance(OP). However, since it is placed in a system that many other practices are conducted simultaneously, the practice itself will interact with other ones and have a greater impact on OP. This mechanism is named the "resonant" influence. The technique of Structural equation modelling (SEM) was used to test the above mechanism with data collected from Vietnamese garment enterprises. The tcst results showed that the model without mutual interaction among SCM practices could explain 42.8%, 26.3% and 34% variance of operational performance, customer satisfaction and financial performance. While the one containing this interaction is capable to explain 69.5%, 33.1% and 57.3%, respectively.
Resumo:
BACKGROUND: Machinery safety issues are a challenge facing manufacturers who are supposed to create and provide products in a better and faster way. In spite of their construction and technological advance, they still contribute to many potential hazards for operators and those nearby. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study is to investigate safety aspects of metal machinery offered for sale on Internet market according to compliance with minimum and fundamental requirements. METHODS: The study was carried out with the application of a checklist prepared on the basis of Directive 2006/42/EC and Directive 2009/104/EC and regulations enforcing them into Polish law. RESULTS: On the basis of the study it was possible to reveal the safety aspects that were not met in practice. It appeared that in the case of minimum requirements the most relevant problems concerned information, signal and control elements, technology and machinery operations, whereas as far as fundamental aspects are concerned it was hard to assure safe work process. CONCLUSIONS: In spite of the fact that more and more legal acts binding in the Member Countries of the European Union are being introduced to alleviate the phenomenon, these regulations are often not fulfilled.
Resumo:
The links between gender, sex and sexuality and their relevance are theoretically and politically problematic (Richardson, 2007). One of the difficulties in understanding their interconnections is that these terms are often used differently and ambiguously by different authors (and even by the same authors). This article reports the results of an analysis of the articles published in open access communication journals with known impact factor, edited in Portugal and published between 2005 and 2012. The diverse conceptualisations of those three basic concepts and of their (inter)relationships within communication research are identified. The complexity and the intricate (and often implicit) nature of both the meanings of these categories and their relationships underlie and justify our attention and further research. What the findings suggest about the current communication research into gender issues published in the two journals surveyed is that the ‘Gender differences discourse’ (Sunderland, 2004) is the most pervasive discourse (also) in academic practice. Additionally, they show that gender and sex are mainly taken for a fact, not a question that is worth being studied. The editors of these journals, as well as the scholars submitting manuscripts, need to be more aware of the traditional nature of the theoretical and methodological choices that they make regarding gender- and sex-related issues, as well as of the relative lack of attention to sexuality as a research subject.
Resumo:
"Published online: 29 March 2016"