672 resultados para Burnout, Construction Professionals, Higher Education, University Students
Resumo:
This qualitative study explored disordered eating in a small group of first-year undergraduate students and addresses a gap in the literature by exploring their lived experience.
Aims: To better understand student’s needs in those experiencing or at risk of developing disordered eating during their first year at university and to illustrate what support mechanisms and services are required to better support students experiencing or at risk during their first year at university.
Conclusion: The University could further develop its outreach to new students with a more consistently supportive programme providing better facilities and training for stress appraisal and coping and more support via student buddying. The University could also extend its programme on positive mental health in an attempt to better inform on disordered eating and to reduce a sense of stigma within the student population. Personal tutors and student health care facilities need to be consistently trained in the understanding and person centred approach to students experiencing disordered eating, particularly the sub-clinical group. In addition the University could consider some small changes and adaptations to the refectory eating areas to better facilitate students who may be at risk from disordered eating. Finally the University could perhaps better use the potentially liminal period within the first few months of student's arrival at university (a new beginning) to help embed a program to develop a stronger sense of coherence and well-being.
Resumo:
This discussion paper addresses the issue of mental distress, sometimes mis- perceived or misinterpreted as mental illness. The
focus is on positive psychology. Reflecting in part on a UK-based study with younger University students studying to health
related degrees, nursing, midwifery and medicine (N = 12), many of the students were apparently suffering dis-stress with
disordered eating at least in part being used as a coping mechanism. However notwithstanding that they were at the end of
their first year studies in health, a significant number of the students interpreted their approach to eating as a mental illness.
Consequently, many within the study felt stigmatised and were reluctant to acknowledge certainly to the University health care
authorities that there was an issue; perceiving both academic and career/professional consequences of mental health labelling. The
paper approaches the issue of mental health from a health promoting perspective, reflecting against the theory of salutogenesis
and its focus within the three dimensions of comprehensibility, manageability and meaningfulness as an approach to building
resilience and managing stressors to better facilitate a sense of coherence. Complex manifestations of distress and poor coping
mechanisms can in some cases be misinterpreted or miss perceived as mental illness. Promoting mental health and reducing the
stigma of mental illness or the misperception of mental distress as mental illness, would need to be addressed in order to more
effectively outreach certainly to younger University students who might be at risk. The focus should be on how better to promote
their sense of coherence.
Resumo:
A comparative examination of the role of higher education in promoting democratic values and practice in a changing world. The book examines case studies of regions facing specific challenges arsing form conflict or disadvantage, the role of universities as anchor institutions, strategies for inclusion and the role of new technologies.
Resumo:
In this paper we give an overview of current investigations into the incorporation of cutting edge technologies within the Higher Education teaching domain. In particular, the role of audio is discussed through a number of case studies. The paper then concludes with a discussion of the authors' plans to incorporate audio and video content as supplementary course material for a technical undergraduate module
Resumo:
O presente projeto pretende investigar as potencialidades das ferramentas Web 2.0 no desenvolvimento da competência comunicativa em língua inglesa no ensino superior. O referencial teórico que serve de sustentáculo ao estudo ancorou-se nas diretrizes emanadas pelos organismos nacionais e europeus no âmbito do Processo de Bolonha, analisando, por um lado, o papel da língua inglesa na consecução das metas de Bolonha e, por outro, os desafios ao nível pedagógico e metodológico decorrentes dos objetivos e linhas de ação traçados. Por sua vez, o Processo de Bolonha tem de ser enquadrado num vasto conjunto de mudanças de cariz económico e social, a que não são alheias as constantes inovações ao nível das Tecnologias de Informação e Comunicação, que têm gerado um ritmo acelerado de produção e disseminação da informação à escala global. Esta realidade implicou novos desafios e oportunidades, nomeadamente a criação de um contexto de aprendizagem dinâmico, potenciador de uma aprendizagem dialógica e dialética, contribuindo para um incremento de oportunidades para comunicar e agir em língua inglesa. A abordagem metodológica arquitetada caraterizou-se pela conceção e implementação de um projeto de investigação-ação ao longo de dois semestres nas unidades curriculares de Inglês II e Inglês III no curso de licenciatura em Turismo da Escola Superior de Tecnologia e Gestão do Instituto Politécnico de Viseu. Tomando como ponto de partida os resultados de aprendizagem e o tema aglutinador de cada unidade curricular, implementaram-se tarefas interacionais com recurso a ferramentas Web 2.0 (rede social, wiki, podcast) que implicaram a criação e manutenção de processos dialógicos com vista à produção de outputs colaborativos. A análise da informação recolhida aponta para um impacto marcadamente positivo da implementação de tarefas dialógicas com recurso à Web social no âmbito da aprendizagem da língua inglesa no ensino superior. Destaca-se, nomeadamente, um envolvimento ativo dos estudantes na resolução de atividades autênticas do ponto de vista situacional e interacional, a harmonização entre o estudo contextualizado da língua com a descoberta da cultura, bem como o desenvolvimento de capacidades de gestão do processo individual e colaborativo de aprendizagem.
Resumo:
Since the election of the Labour Government in 1997 there have been a series of policy initiatives emphasising the importance of co-ordinated and integrated approaches to the delivery of urban regeneration and in particular Sustainable Communities. This changing policy context has given rise to a shortage of practitioners with both the technical skills to deliver specific programmes, and more especially the generic skills to work in multi-disciplinary teams in conjunction with partnership-based management boards. This paper discusses the origins of the debate about skills shortages and deficiencies and reviews the main government reports which have advocated a new approach to the provision of skills for community regeneration. It focuses particularly on the work of the Planning Network which was funded by the Centre for Education in the Built Environment (CEBE) to examine the contribution of higher education to the wider skills debate. It concludes by arguing that higher education has an important part to play in the provision of a more appropriate skills set for professional practice within a broader and more inclusive strategy involving all key stakeholders. However, employers also have a major responsibility in ensuring that key skills are maintained and enhanced within their own organisations.
Resumo:
This research explores the experiences of five professional practitioners from disciplines including teaching, youth work, sport and health who had become lecturers in Higher Education. Their experiences are considered using Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis and tentative conclusions are reached on the meaning of such experiences for the individuals. The work extends previous studies (Shreeve 2010, 2011; Gourlay 2011a, 2011b; Boyd & Harris 2010) to consider the relationship between knowledge and influence and how institutional preference for knowledge gained from research impacts on the validity of knowledge derived from professional experience. The research finds shared feelings associated with inauthenticity and loss arising from concerns that the contribution of the professional in Higher Education is undervalued. The research challenges the assumption that professional practitioners adopt the professional identity of a lecturer in Higher Education instead finding that they create their own professional identities in the liminal space between the professional and academic domains, but points to difficulties associated with constructed nature of such professional identities within the institutional structure of a Higher Education institution.
Resumo:
This chapter compares recent policy on the use of English and Norwegian in Higher Education with earlier policies on the relationship between the two standard varieties of Norwegian, and it charts how and why English became a policy issue in Norway. Based on the experience of over a century of language planning, a highly interventionist approach is today being avoided and language policies in the universities of Norway seek to nurture a situation where English and Norwegian may be used productively side-by-side. However, there remain serious practical challenges to be overcome. This paper also builds on a previous analysis (Linn 2010b) of the metalanguage of Nordic language policy and seeks to clarify the use of the term ‘parallelingualism’.