940 resultados para personal construct theory


Relevância:

80.00% 80.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

We explored mental toughness in soccer using a triangulation of data capture involving players (n = 6), coaches (n = 4), and parents (n = 5). Semi-structured interviews, based on a personal construct psychology (Kelly, 1955/1991) framework, were conducted to elicit participants' perspectives on the key characteristics and their contrasts, situations demanding mental toughness, and the behaviours displayed and cognitions employed by mentally tough soccer players. The results from the research provided further evidence that mental toughness is conceptually distinct from other psychological constructs such as hardiness. The findings also supported Gucciardi, Gordon, and Dimmock's (2009) process model of mental toughness. A winning mentality and desire was identified as a key attribute of mentally tough soccer players in addition to other previously reported qualities such as self-belief, physical toughness, work ethic/motivation, and resilience. Key cognitions reported by mentally tough soccer players enabled them to remain focused and competitive during training and matches and highlighted the adoption of several forms of self-talk in dealing with challenging situations. Minor revisions to Gucciardi and colleagues' definition of mental toughness are proposed.

Relevância:

80.00% 80.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Introduction : My name is Karen. In this chapter, I take a narrative approach and highlight ‘critical incidents’ that have caused me to reflect on my ‘being’ and recall events from childhood and adulthood. ‘Being’ or ‘to be’ is what Wilcock (1999) described as ‘being true to ourselves, to our nature, to our essence and to what is distinctive about us’ (p. 5). The state of ‘being’ requires time to think, reflect and to discover who we are (Wilcock 1999). My name is part of this. The constructivist view of learning posits that the learner comes with a representational model of personal constructs (in this instance, one’s name being a personal construct) and within these personal constructs, the learner makes sense of their learning situation (Stacey 1998). From the constructivist view, the teacher negotiates meaning with the learner through reflection, dialogue, guidance and feedback because the learner interprets ideas and constructs meaning based on pre-existing understandings (Candy 1991; Stacey 1998). Reflecting on my ‘being’ gives insight into the representational model of my personal constructs, of which my name is one. As a learner, this insight helps me interpret new information within a meaningful context. As a teacher, this insight informs me on how to engage with the students I teach.

Relevância:

80.00% 80.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Personal identity theory has become increasingly sensitive to the importance of the first-person perspective. However, certain ways of speaking about that perspective do not allow the full temporal aspects of first-person perspectives on the self to come into view. In this paper I consider two recent phenomenologically-informed discussions of personal identity that end up yielding metaphysically divergent views of the self: those of Barry Dainton and Galen Strawson. I argue that when we take a properly temporally indexical view of the first-person perspective, and thereby resist the assumption that phenomenally figured and theoretically-figured identity claims must have a common object, the metaphysically awkward accommodations each of these authors is compelled to make cease to be necessary.

Relevância:

80.00% 80.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

La imagen fotográfica es un bloque espacio tiempo congelado, un fragmento referido al antes y el después de algo. Al contemplar una fotografía de un interior doméstico, descubrimos un entretejido sutil entre el habitante y su hábitat. Somos capaces de recaer en más detalles de los que el ojo humano puede apreciar en su visión cotidiana, siempre ligada al devenir espacio temporal. El acto de fotografiar el hogar, de congelar unidades habitadas infinitesimales, se revela como una manifestación radical del modo unipersonal de habitar de cada fotógrafo, profesional o aficionado, y por extensión, dado que hoy todos somos fotógrafos; de cada habitante. Por un lado, la fotografía se piensa aquí como herramienta, capaz de desvelar, de poner en el mundo, los elementos, percepciones y acontecimientos, que subyacen imbricados en la construcción del hogar. Por otro, la imagen se entiende como medio de expresión y de comunicación, como el lenguaje universal de nuestro tiempo, por todos conocido y utilizado. En este momento de interconexión máxima, entre redes, datos y capas de cognición, de velocidad y aceleración, esta tesis doctoral se plantea como una vuelta a la reflexión, a la contemplación del objeto imagen, desde la certeza de que para que ésta hable hay que darle tiempo. Así, la investigación hay que entenderla desde una base ontológica y fenomenológica; desde la experiencia del ser que habita un entorno concreto y determinado. Se enmarca en el actual entorno socio cultural de occidente, se busca desvelar el significado y modo de habitar del habitante común, poniendo de manifiesto aquello que acontece para que una casa cualquiera, de un habitante cualquiera, devenga hogar. Los primeros indicios sobre el tema surgirán del análisis y la reinterpretación hermenéutica de un atlas de imágenes del habitar: cuerpo de imágenes reunido a partir de series fotográficas de hogares, de habitantes anónimos, puestos a luz por la mirada de un grupo de artistas. Posteriormente, ponemos a prueba el conocimiento adquirido en el análisis anterior, mientras que expandimos la investigación hacia el sentir del habitante común, mediante la realización de tres experimentos participativos, o estudios de campo cualitativos. Los resultados, de ambos grupos de casos de estudio, se compilan, organizan y estructuran en una taxonomía del habitar. Esta taxonomía está compuesta por cuarenta y siete parámetros, que explicitan la naturaleza compleja del hogar del siglo XXI. Este hogar es entendido como un constructo personal de cada habitante, un proceso que acontece en el tiempo y en el espacio, y que entraña la propia construcción del habitante. Esta extensa taxonomía se organiza según tres ámbitos del ser humano, en el primero se expresan los factores relacionados con el modo de "estar físicamente" en el hogar, incluyendo: al propio habitante, la casa como espacio arquitectónico y como materialidad: objetos, muebles, iconos y símbolos que pueblan el hogar. En segundo lugar, se manifiestan los parámetros relacionados con el modo de “percibir”: por un lado, aquello que se deriva de lo que se ve, y por otro, lo que se deriva de aquello que no se ve, pero se siente. En tercer lugar, se explicitan los factores relativos al habitante que "crea/juega" su hogar, quién por un lado, es en el mundo actuando, y que por otro, siente el mundo construyéndolo mediante una serie de relaciones que establece con él. Finalmente, la investigación intenta revelar las sinergias, conexiones y relaciones, entre todos estos elementos extraídos del sentir del habitante común, y que fueron inducidos mediante el análisis y reinterpretación de los casos de estudio, poniendo de manifiesto un orden de cosas en el habitar occidental contemporáneo. ABSTRACT The photographic image is a frozen space time block, a fragment referred to a something before and after. When we stare at the photography of domestic interiors we discover a subtle interweaving between the inhabitant and her habitat. We are able to acknowledge infinite more details than the human eye, in its continuous quotidian vision always linked to the space time progression, appreciates. The act of photographing the home, of freezing infinitesimal inhabited units, reveals as a radical statement of the concept of inhabiting for each photographer, professional or amateur, and by extension, as we today all are photographers, for each inhabitant. On the one hand, photography is here conceived as a tool that is capable of revealing, "of placing in the world" the elements, perceptions and happenings that underlie imbricated in the construction of a home. On the other hand, image is thought as an expression and communication media, as the universal language of our time (as far as it is known and used by all of us). In this precise moment of maximum interconnection between networks, data and cognitive layers; of speed and acceleration, this PhD Dissertation is conceived as a return to reflection; to the contemplation of object image, from the certainty of its need of time for talking. Therefore, this research from an ontological and phenomenological base; from the experience of the self who inhabits a determined and concrete environment, that of the western countries at the present, pursues to unveil the meaning and way of inhabiting of a common dweller and manifest what conforms the transformation of any house, of any inhabitant into a home. The first clues will arise from the analysis and hermeneutical reinterpretation of the Atlas of inhabiting; an assembled body of images of anonymous inhabitants houses, brought into life through a group of artist´s glance. Afterwards, we will test the analysis´s acquired knowledge, while extending the investigation to the feel of the common inhabitant (and no longer the expert^ artist) through the execution of three participative experiments conceived as qualitative field works. The results of both case study groups, will be compiled, organized and structured in a taxonomy of the inhabiting. This taxonomy is composed by forty seven parameters that explicitly state the complex nature of the XXI century home, regarded as a personal construct of every single inhabitant, as a process that happens through time and space and that entails the construction of the inhabitant. This wide taxonomy is organized regarding three spheres of the human being, In first place, those elements related to the way of “physically being” at home are expressed, including: the inhabitant its self, the house as architectural space and as materiality: objects, furniture, icons and symbols that fill the home. In second place, parameters related to the way of “perceiving“ are manifested; on the one hand, those that derive from what we see; on the other hand, those that derive from what we do not see, but feel. In third place, those factors deriving from the inhabitant as a home "creator/player" who is acting in the world and feeling the world while constructing it through a myriad of relationships he establishes with it. Finally, the investigation tries to reveal the synergies, connections and relations between all these elements extracted from the feelings of the common inhabitant, induced through the analysis and reinterpretation of the case studies, and therefore exposing a state of things belonging to western world at present.

Relevância:

80.00% 80.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is one the most prevalent of childhood diagnoses. There is limited research available from the perspective of the child or young person with ADHD. The current research explored how young people perceive ADHD. A secondary aim of the study was to explore to what extent they identify with ADHD. Five participants took part in this study. Their views were explored using semi-structured interviews guided by methods from Personal Construct Psychology. The data was analysed using Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA). Data analysis suggests that the young people’s views of ADHD are complex and, at times, contradictory. Four super-ordinate themes were identified: What is ADHD?, The role and impact of others on the experience of ADHD, Identity conflict and My relationship with ADHD. The young people’s contradictory views on ADHD are reflective of portrayals of ADHD in the media. A power imbalance was also identified where the young people perceive that they play a passive role in the management of their treatment. Finally, the young people’s accounts revealed a variety of approaches taken to make sense of their condition.

Relevância:

40.00% 40.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Purpose: Young novice drivers continue to be overrepresented in fatalities and injuries arising from crashes even with the introduction of countermeasures such as graduated driver licensing (GDL). Enhancing countermeasures requires a better understanding of the variables influencing risky driving. One of the most common risky behaviours performed by drivers of all ages is speeding, which is particularly risky for young novice drivers who, due to their driving inexperience, have difficulty in identifying and responding appropriately to road hazards. Psychosocial theory can improve our understanding of contributors to speeding, thereby informing countermeasure development and evaluation. This paper reports an application of Akers’ social learning theory (SLT), augmented by Gerrard and Gibbons’ prototype/willingness model (PWM), in addition to personal characteristics of age, gender, car ownership, and psychological traits/states of anxiety, depression, sensation seeking propensity and reward sensitivity, to examine the influences on self-reported speeding of young novice drivers with a Provisional (intermediate) licence in Queensland, Australia. Method: Young drivers (n = 378) recruited in 2010 for longitudinal research completed two surveys containing the Behaviour of Young Novice Drivers Scale, and reported their attitudes and behaviours as pre-Licence/Learner (Survey 1) and Provisional (Survey 2) drivers and their sociodemographic characteristics. Results: An Akers’ measurement model was created. Hierarchical multiple regressions revealed that (1) personal characteristics (PC) explained 20.3%; (2) the combination of PC and SLT explained 41.1%; and (3) the combination of PC, SLT and PWM explained 53.7% of variance in self-reported speeding. Whilst there appeared to be considerable shared variance, the significant predictors in the final model included gender, car ownership, reward sensitivity, depression, personal attitudes, and Learner speeding. Conclusions: These results highlight the capacity for psychosocial theory to improve our understanding of speeding by young novice drivers, revealing relationships between previous behaviour, attitudes, psychosocial characteristics and speeding. The findings suggest multi-faceted countermeasures should target the risky behaviour of Learners, and Learner supervisors should be encouraged to monitor their Learners’ driving speed. Novice drivers should be discouraged from developing risky attitudes towards speeding.

Relevância:

40.00% 40.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Adult day care centres provide a means whereby frail or disabled older people can remain living at home particularly when their family care-givers engage in waged work. In Taiwan, adult day care services appear to meet the cultural needs of both older people and their families for whom filial care is vital. Little research attention has been paid to the use of day care services in Taiwan, the uptake rate of which is low. This grounded theory study explored the ways in which older people and family care-givers construct meanings around the use of day care services in Taiwan. Forty-four semi-structured interviews were undertaken with older people, care-givers and day care centre managers. The findings from grounded theory data analysis bring focus to the assumptions and structures that underpin the process of transition to day care services. A key feature of this process is the reconstruction of personal identity as both the older people and family care-givers work to make sense of the relationship between the self and a changing social structure. Reconstructing identity in a shifting world is the core category of the study and reflects a process of reframing whereby older people came to new definitions of social responsibility and independence within the context of the day care centre. Similarly, the family care-givers actively reformulated the concept of filial piety as they interacted with and interpreted the changes in economic and social conditions in Taiwan.

Relevância:

40.00% 40.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

This paper reports a study that explored a new construct: ‘climate of fear’. We hypothesised that climate of fear would vary across work sites within organisations, but not across organisations. This is in contrast a to measures of organisational culture, which were expected to vary both within and across organisations. To test our hypotheses, we developed a new 13-item measure of perceived fear in organisations and tested it in 20 sites across two organisations (N ≡ 209). Culture variables measured were innovative leadership culture, and communication culture. Results were that climate of fear did vary across sites in both organisations, while differences across organisations were not significant, as we anticipated. Organisational culture, however, varied between the organisations, and within one of the organisations. The climate of fear scale exhibited acceptable psychometric properties

Relevância:

40.00% 40.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

For the last decade, one question has haunted me: what helps people to cope with large-scale organisational change in their workplace? This study explores the construct of personal change resilience, and its potential for identifying solutions to the problems of change fatigue and change resistance. The thesis has emerged from the fields of change management, leadership, training, mentoring, evaluation, management and trust within the context of higher education in Australia at the beginning of the twenty-first century. In this thesis I present a theoretical model of the factors to consider in increasing peoples’ personal change resilience as they navigate large-scale organisational change at work, thereby closing a gap in the literature on the construct of change resilience. The model presented is based on both the literature in the realms of business and education, and on the findings of the research. In this thesis, an autoethnographic case study of two Australian university projects is presented as one narrative, resulting in a methodological step forward in the use of multiple research participants’ stories in the development of a single narrative. The findings describe the experiences of workers in higher education and emphasise the importance of considerate management in the achievement of positive experiences of organisational change. This research makes a significant contribution to new knowledge in three ways. First, it closes a gap in the literature in the realm of change management around personal change resilience as a solution to the problem of change fatigue by presenting models of both change failure and personal change resilience. Second, it is methodologically innovative in the use of personae to tell the stories of multiple participants in one coherent tale presented as a work of ethnographic fiction seen through an autoethnographic lens. By doing so, it develops a methodology for giving a voice to those to whom change is done in the workplace. Third, it provides a perspective on organisational change management from the view of the actual workers affected by change, thereby adding to the literature that currently exists, which is based on the views of those with responsibility for leading or managing change rather than those it affects. This thesis is intended as a practical starting point for conversations by actual change managers in higher education, and it is written in such a way as to help them see how theory can be applied in real life, and how empowering and enabling the actual working staff members, and engaging with them in a considerate way before, during and even after the change process, can help to make them resilient enough to cope with the change, rather than leaving them burned out or disengaged and no longer a well-functioning member of the institution. This thesis shows how considerately managed large-scale organisational change can result in positive outcomes for both the organisation and the individuals who work in it.

Relevância:

40.00% 40.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

This PhD Thesis is about certain infinite-dimensional Grassmannian manifolds that arise naturally in geometry, representation theory and mathematical physics. From the physics point of view one encounters these infinite-dimensional manifolds when trying to understand the second quantization of fermions. The many particle Hilbert space of the second quantized fermions is called the fermionic Fock space. A typical element of the fermionic Fock space can be thought to be a linear combination of the configurations m particles and n anti-particles . Geometrically the fermionic Fock space can be constructed as holomorphic sections of a certain (dual)determinant line bundle lying over the so called restricted Grassmannian manifold, which is a typical example of an infinite-dimensional Grassmannian manifold one encounters in QFT. The construction should be compared with its well-known finite-dimensional analogue, where one realizes an exterior power of a finite-dimensional vector space as the space of holomorphic sections of a determinant line bundle lying over a finite-dimensional Grassmannian manifold. The connection with infinite-dimensional representation theory stems from the fact that the restricted Grassmannian manifold is an infinite-dimensional homogeneous (Kähler) manifold, i.e. it is of the form G/H where G is a certain infinite-dimensional Lie group and H its subgroup. A central extension of G acts on the total space of the dual determinant line bundle and also on the space its holomorphic sections; thus G admits a (projective) representation on the fermionic Fock space. This construction also induces the so called basic representation for loop groups (of compact groups), which in turn are vitally important in string theory / conformal field theory. The Thesis consists of three chapters: the first chapter is an introduction to the backround material and the other two chapters are individually written research articles. The first article deals in a new way with the well-known question in Yang-Mills theory, when can one lift the action of the gauge transformation group on the space of connection one forms to the total space of the Fock bundle in a compatible way with the second quantized Dirac operator. In general there is an obstruction to this (called the Mickelsson-Faddeev anomaly) and various geometric interpretations for this anomaly, using such things as group extensions and bundle gerbes, have been given earlier. In this work we give a new geometric interpretation for the Faddeev-Mickelsson anomaly in terms of differentiable gerbes (certain sheaves of categories) and central extensions of Lie groupoids. The second research article deals with the question how to define a Dirac-like operator on the restricted Grassmannian manifold, which is an infinite-dimensional space and hence not in the landscape of standard Dirac operator theory. The construction relies heavily on infinite-dimensional representation theory and one of the most technically demanding challenges is to be able to introduce proper normal orderings for certain infinite sums of operators in such a way that all divergences will disappear and the infinite sum will make sense as a well-defined operator acting on a suitable Hilbert space of spinors. This research article was motivated by a more extensive ongoing project to construct twisted K-theory classes in Yang-Mills theory via a Dirac-like operator on the restricted Grassmannian manifold.

Relevância:

40.00% 40.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Conceptualization in theory development has received limited consideration despite its frequently stressed importance in Information Systems research. This paper focuses on the role of construct clarity in conceptualization, arguing that construct clarity should be considered an essential criterion for evaluating conceptualization and that a focus on construct clarity can advance conceptualization methodology. Drawing from Facet Theory literature, we formulate a set of principles for assessing construct clarity, particularly regarding a construct’s relationships to its extant related constructs. Conscious and targeted attention to this criterion can promote a research ecosystem more supportive of knowledge accumulation.

Relevância:

40.00% 40.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

This Thesis is an exploration of potential enhancement in effectiveness, personally, professionally and organisationally through the use of Theory as an Apparatus of Thought. Enhanced effectiveness was sought by the practitioner (Subject), while in transition to becoming Chief Executive of his organization. The introduction outlines the content and the structure of the University College Cork DBA. Essay One outlines what Theory is, what Adult Mental Development is and an exploration of Theories held in the Authors past professional practice. Immunity to change is also reflected on. Essay Two looks at the construct of the key Theories used in the Thesis. Prof. Robert Kegan’s Theory of Adult Mental Development was used to aid the generation of insight. The other key Theories used were The Theory of The Business, Theory of the Co‐operative and a Theory of Organisational Leadership. Essay Three explores the application of the key Theories in a professional setting. The findings of the Thesis were that the subject was capable of dealing with increased environmental complexity and uncertainty by using Theory as an Apparatus of Thought, which in turn enhanced personal, professional and organisational effectiveness. This was achieved by becoming more aware of the Theories held by the practitioner, the experiences from the application of those Theories, which then led to greater insight. The author also found that a detailed understanding of the Theory of the Business and a Theory of Leadership would support any new CEO in the challenging early part of their tenure.