4 resultados para Intentionality
em Repositório Científico da Universidade de Évora - Portugal
Resumo:
O alcoolismo é uma doença com um potencial de infligir sofrimento enorme, interferindo com todas as dimensões do indivíduo, assim como em todos os quadrantes da sociedade. Este relatório expressa a preocupação com a problemática, e descreve o trabalho desenvolvido ao longo de um ano na área da saúde mental e psiquiátrica por um enfermeiro. Através da criação de uma consulta de enfermagem, desenvolveram-se um conjunto de intervenções de enfermagem com o intuito de diminuir factores de risco e potenciar factores de protecção nos indivíduos com comportamentos aditivos face ao consumo de bebidas alcoólicas. A intencionalidade terapêutica incidiu sobre a reconstrução ou reorganização da vida nomeadamente nos seguintes aspectos: restabelecimento das capacidades relacionais com o seu meio, e estabilização num novo estilo de vida de abstinência alcoólica. Após intervenção observaram-se ganhos de saúde para um quinto dos utentes atendidos. Esta avaliação contudo está comprometida pela qualidade dos registos disponíveis. Concluindo-se que o projecto não se esgotou, pois este relatório permitiu uma identificação de algumas fragilidades a corrigir, nomeadamente a sistematização de registos clínicos, uma abordagem inicial que permita maior ancoragem (taxas de abandono superiores a 50%) e a introdução de um sistema de acompanhamento remoto no pós alta; ABSTRACT: Alcoholism is a disease with an enormous potential to inflict pain, interfering with all individual dimensions, and also with all sections of society. This work expresses the concern with this problematic and describes the work developed along a year in the area of mental and psychiatric health by a nurse. Through the creation of a nursing appointment, a set of nursing interventions were developed in order to reduce the factors of risk and potentiate factors of protection in the individual with addicted behaviours to alcoholic beverages consumption. Therapeutic intentionality focused on the reconstruction or reorganization of life on the following aspects: reestablishment of connecting abilities with their social environment, and consolidation of a new alcoholic abstinent life style. After the intervention we could observe some improvement on the health of a fifth of the users who were attended. However, this evaluation is compromised by the quality of the available records. We can conclude that the project is not exhausted since this work allowed the identification of some fragilities that could be corrected, namely the systematization of clinic records, a more anchoring initial approach (dropout rates exceeding 50%) and the introduction of a remote aftercare supervision system.
Resumo:
No presente relatório da Prática de Ensino Supervisionada são referidas opções de ensino, procedimentos e reações dos alunos ao processo de ensino. É dada uma grande ênfase ao ambiente de aprendizagem baseado na tecnologia e suportado por uma comunidade de aprendizagem, que tem lugar na própria sala de aula ou na sala de informática. A tecnologia é assumida como um recurso constante na maior parte das aulas através do recurso a tarefas escolhidas intencionalmente tendo em vista a possibilidade de introdução da tecnologia na sua resolução. Esta implementação assumiu várias formas, tais como a exploração de calculadoras, a manipulação do GeoGebra ou simplesmente através da apresentação de ficheiros acabados, o que constitui uma forma de obter uma boa visualização dos objetos matemáticos. A aplicação dos recursos tecnológicos foi progressivamente tornada mais intensiva, atingindo o seu culminar no Projeto de Estágio, designação atribuída a duas aulas concebidas explicitamente para a exploração da temática: “Estabelecimento de um Paralelismo entre a Geometria Tridimensional Dinâmica e as Funções”; Abstract: The Use of Technology in the Classroom as an Instrument of Visualization and Algebrization of the Mathematical Objects In this paper we refer to teaching options, procedures, and to students’ reactions to the teaching processes. We give a lot of reinforcement in the learning environment based on technology and supported by a community of learners, which take place in their own classroom or in the Informatics Class. Technology is assumed as a constant resource in most part of the classes through the intentional tasks’ choosing taking into account the possibility of technology introduction in their resolution. This implementation has assumed several forms, like calculators’ exploration, GeoGebra manipulation or simply by presenting finished files, which is a way of getting a great visualization of mathematical objects. The technological resources’ application turned itself progressively more intensive, presenting its center point on Practice Project, name who was gave to two classes conceived explicitly for the thematic exploration: “The establishment of a parallelism between Dynamic Tridimensional Geometry and the Functions”.
Resumo:
A close analysis of the specifically cinematographic procedure in Akira Kurosawa’s ‘Dream’ Crows reveals it as an articulated and insightful philosophical statement, endowed with general relevance concerning ‘natural’ perception, phenomenological Erlebnis, mechanical image and aesthetic rapture. The antagonism between the Benjaminian lineage of a mechanical irreducibility of the cinematic image to anthropocentric categories, and the Cartesian tradition of a film-philosophy still relying on the equally irreducible structure of the intentional act, be it the one of a deeply embodied and enworlded counsciousness, in accounting for the essential structure of film and spectator (and their relation), i.e., the antagonism between the decentering primacy of the image and the self-centered primacy of perception, cannot be settled through a simple Phenomenological shift from occularcentric, intentional counsciousness to its embodyment ‘in-the-world’ as yet another carrier of intentionality. Still it remains to be explained what is it in the mechanical image that is able to so deeply affect the human flesh, and conversely, to what features in the human bodily experience is its mechanical other, the fascinating image, so successfuly adressing? It should be expected from the anti-Cartesianism of both the early and the late Merleau-Ponty the textual support for an approach to the essential condition of passivity in movie watching, that would be convergent with Benjamin. The Chapter ‘Le sentir’, in Phénoménologie de la perception, will offer us the proper guide to elucidate what we are already perceiving and conceiving in Kurosawa’s film, where the ex-static phenomenological body of the aesthetical contemplator ‘enters the frame’ like the Benjaminian surgeon enters the body and like the painter - and always already like our deepest level of ‘sensing’, previously to any act of cousciousness - ‘just looses himself in the scene before him’. The Polichinello secret of cinema watching is nonetheless too evident to be seen, and that is where Phenomenological description and reduction are still required.
Cognitive Assessment System (CAS): Psychometric studies with Portuguese children from 7 to 15 years.
Resumo:
The Cognitive Assessment System (CAS) is a new measure of cognitive abilities based on the Planning, Attention, Simultaneous and Successive (PASS) Theory. This theory is derived from research in neuropsychological and cognitive Psychology with particular emphasis on the work of Luria (1973). According to Naglieri (1999) and Naglieri and Das (1997), the PASS cognitive processes are the basic building blocks of human intellectual functioning. Planning processes provide cognitive control, utilization of processes and knowledge, intentionality, and self-regulation to achieve a desired goal; Attention processes provide focused, selective cognitive activity and resistance to distraction; and, Simultaneous and Successive processes are the two forms of operating on information. The PASS theory has had a strong empirical base prior to the publication of the CAS (see Das, Naglieri & Kirby, 1994), and its research foundation remains strong (see Naglieri, 1999; Naglieri & Das, 1997). The four basic psychological processes can be used to (1) gain an understanding of how well a child thinks; (2) discover the child’s strengths and needs, which can then be used for effective differential diagnosis; (3) conduct fair assessment; and (4) select or design appropriate interventions. Compared to the traditional intelligence tests, including IQ tests, the Cognitive Assessment System (CAS) has the great advantage of relying on a modern theory of cognitive functioning, linking theory with practice.