159 resultados para School engagement
Resumo:
La littérature peut‐elle s'engager pour un monde où le néolibéralisme s'est érigé en triomphe sur les décombres des idéologies rivales ? Où la postmodernité a laissé la société orpheline de ses anciens repères collectifs ? Fondée sur des questions liant le roman français contemporain et des courants de pensée tels que la postmodernité ou le néolibéralisme, cette thèse de doctorat propose une réflexion autour de l'engagement littéraire, dans son acception à la fin du XXe siècle ; autrement dit, une redéfinition de la notion en accord avec les enjeux socio‐économiques contemporains. « Que peut la littérature ? » demandait Sartre en 1947 : cette question, nous la portons sur la fin du XXe siècle. La première partie de cette étude s'intéresse aux écrivains contemporains et mesure les similitudes qui attestent d'une filiation avec la compréhension sartrienne de l'engagement littéraire ou, au contraire, les distinctions qui entérinent une rupture. La deuxième partie témoigne qu'il ne peut y avoir d'engagement littéraire sans prise en considération du monde. La postmodernité et le néolibéralisme : ces deux courants sont interrogés tour à tour dans leur spécificité propre, avant d'interroger la pertinence du rapprochement entre discours littéraire et socio‐économique. L'originalité de cette thèse est de proposer ensuite une définition de l'engagement littéraire contemporain, ainsi qu'une réflexion sur les conditions nécessaires à son expression. La troisième partie est consacrée aux formes littéraires. L'hypothèse faisant de la littérature le révélateur du « surplomb problématique » d'une époque (Wolfgang Iser) s'impose comme le fil conducteur qui relie les textes du corpus : l'agencement des thèmes, les personnages, les emprunts à différentes traditions et les registres de langue constituent autant de variations possibles inscrivant l'hypothèse d'un « individu travaillant » aliéné au sein du texte. Ouvriers, mais aussi employés du secteur tertiaire, ou cadres, reconquièrent par l'entremise de la fiction - qui les met en vedette - une partie de leur visibilité perdue dans la sphère publique.
Resumo:
In most Western postindustrial societies today, the population is aging, businesses are faced with global integration, and important migration flows are taking place. Increasingly work organizations are hiring crossnational and multicultural workteams. In this situation it is important to understand the influence of certain individual and cultural characteristics on the process of professional integration. The present study explores the links between personality traits, demographic characteristics (age, sex, education, income, and nationality), work engagement, and job stress. The sample consisted of 618 participants, including 394 Swiss workers (200 women, 194 men) and 224 foreigners living and working in Switzerland (117 women, 107 men). Each participant completed the NEO-FFI, the UWES, and the GWSS questionnaires. Our results show an interaction between age and nationality with respect to work engagement and general job stress. The levels of work engagement and job stress appear to increase with age among national wotkers, whereas they decrease among foreign workers. In addition, work engagement was negatively associated with Neuroticism and positively with the other four personality dimensions. Finally, job stress was positively associated with Neuroticism and Conscientiousness, and negatively associated with Extraversion. However, the strength of these relationships appeared to vary according to the worker's nationality, age, sex, education, and income.
Resumo:
Background. There is a paucity of data pertaining to the epidemiology and public health impact of Enterobius vermicularis and Strongyloides stercoralis infections. We aimed to determine the extent of enterobiasis, strongyloidiasis, and other helminth infections and their association with asymptomatic Plasmodium parasitaemia, anaemia, nutritional status, and blood cell counts in infants, preschool-aged (PSAC), and school-aged children (SAC) from rural coastal Tanzania.MethodsA total of 1,033 children were included in a cross-sectional study implemented in the Bagamoyo district in 2011/2012. Faecal samples were examined for intestinal helminth infections using a broad set of quality controlled methods. Finger-prick blood samples were subjected to filariasis and Plasmodium parasitaemia testing and full blood cell count examination. Weight, length/height, and/or mid-upper arm circumference were measured and the nutritional status determined in accordance with age.Results E. vermicularis infections were found in 4.2% of infants, 16.7%, of PSAC, and 26.3% of SAC. S. stercoralis infections were detected in 5.8%, 7.5%, and 7.1% of infants, PSAC, and SAC, respectively. Multivariable regression analyses revealed higher odds of enterobiasis in children of all age-groups with a reported anthelminthic treatment history over the past six months (odds ratio (OR): 2.15; 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.22 - 3.79) and in SAC with a higher temperature (OR: 2.21; CI: 1.13 - 4.33). Strongyloidiasis was associated with eosinophilia (OR: 2.04; CI: 1.20-3.48) and with Trichuris trichiura infections (OR: 4.13; CI: 1.04-16.52) in children of all age-groups, and with asymptomatic Plasmodium parasitaemia (OR: 13.03; CI: 1.34 - 127.23) in infants. None of the investigated helminthiases impacted significantly on the nutritional status and anaemia, but moderate asymptomatic Plasmodium parasitaemia was a strong predictor for anaemia in children aged older than two years (OR: 2.69; 95% CI: 1.23 ¿ 5.86).Conclusions E. vermicularis and S. stercoralis infections were moderately prevalent in children from rural coastal Tanzania. Our data can contribute to inform yet missing global burden of disease and prevalence estimates for strongyloidiasis and enterobiasis. The association between S stercoralis and asymptomatic Plasmodium parasitaemia found here warrants further comprehensive investigations.