11 results
Search Results
2. A figurational approach to understanding school climate and peer harassment: Possibilities from Norbert Elias's work.
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SCHOOL environment , *AFFINITY groups , *LABELING theory , *SOCIAL norms , *SCHOOL discipline , *SELF-management (Psychology) , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *SOCIAL work research , *EMOTIONS , *BULLYING , *SOCIAL case work - Abstract
Although psychological approaches have been the mainstay of scholarly research on school climate, offering state‐of‐the‐art measurements and methodologies, sociological perspectives remain essential perspectives because violence is essentially a social phenomenon. This paper offers a theoretical consideration of contributions to this field, focusing specifically on those that provide a critical historical lens. I suggest that while Foucault's approach to the disciplining of docile bodies and self‐restraint offers crucial conceptual tools, Norbert Elias's work—which is scarce in scholarly research on school climate—provides a complementary but necessary framework for understanding emotional and relational aspects of peer harassment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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3. Questioning Research with Children: Discrepancy between Theory and Practice?
- Author
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Uprichard, Emma
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SOCIOLOGY , *RESEARCH , *THEORY (Philosophy) , *SELF-discrepancy , *SELF-perception , *CHILD rearing , *CHILD psychology , *MORAL education , *PARENTING - Abstract
This paper argues that current child and childhood research is problematical in as much as there is a discrepancy between theory and research practice. Although in theory, children are conceptualised as active agents in the social world, the type of research that children are typically involved in implies that children are competent, knowledgeable and affective only in terms of their own lives, their own spaces, their own childhoods. The implications of this discrepancy are discussed. The paper concludes that although research that contributes to a greater understanding of childhood experiences is important, it is equally important to involve children in research that goes beyond ‘childhood’. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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4. A Method From the 'Lifeworld': Some Possibilities for Person Centred Planning for Children in Care.
- Author
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Houston, Stan
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CHILD care , *LEGAL status of children , *CHILD care services , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
This paper describes a method for working with children who are the subjects of care planning and review under the Children Act 1989. The person centred planning method, as it is termed, has been well established in working with adults with special needs but can be extrapolated to encounters with children. It focuses on three fundamental areas: relationship, meaning and narrative. In underscoring these areas, the method restrains the bureaucracy and experience of stigma that is often present for those residing in state care. On a wider plane, the paper argues that the method stands as a veritable example of Habermas's ideas concerning the application of communicative rationality and discursive democracy in social life. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2003
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5. Children as Research Subjects: a Risky Enterprise.
- Author
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Hood, Suzanne, Kelley, Peter, and Mayall, Berry
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CHILD research , *RISK , *PARENTS , *SOCIOLOGY , *RESEARCH , *SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
This paper is based on a qualitative research study, Children, Parents and Risk. This study looks at the ways in which risks to children are understood and managed by children and parents. The paper focuses on two areas of the research—gaining access and interviewing—in order to show how the research process itself has constituted an important source of data on childhood and risk. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1996
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6. The Ethics of Social Research with Children: An Overview.
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Morrow, Virginia and Richards, Martin
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CHILD research , *ETHICS , *SOCIOLOGY , *RESEARCH , *PHILOSOPHY - Abstract
This paper attempts to provide an overview of ethical issues related to social research with children. It sets the discussion in the context of current debates about researching children in the UK, and explores the extent to which children should be regarded as similar to, or different from, adults in social research, focusing on how children are positioned as vulnerable, incompetent and relatively powerless in society in general, and how this conceptualisation of children needs to be taken into account in social research. The paper concludes with some practical and methodological suggestions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Social Constructions of Young Children in 'Special', 'Inclusive' and Home Environments.
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Nind, Melanie, Flewitt, Rosie, and Payler, Jane
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TREATMENT of learning disabilities , *INTERVIEWING , *CASE studies , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH funding , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOUND recordings , *ETHNOLOGY research , *EARLY intervention (Education) , *HOME environment , *DATA analysis software - Abstract
The paper tells of the social constructs surrounding young children with learning difficulties in their home, 'special' early education setting and 'inclusive' or mainstream early education setting in England. The exploratory study focused on how three- to four-year-old children made sense of their environments and how their identities were constructed by different parties in the different contexts. Ethnographic case studies were conducted using semi-structured and informal interviews with parents and practitioners, documentary analysis, fieldnotes, and live and video observations. Shared constructions across the contexts for each child were common, with constructions of them being happy and making progress pervasive across the children and settings. Differences in constructions across settings indicated that qualities could shine or negative constructions be tempered, thus showing the role of the environment and the culture of inclusion in socially constructing children with special needs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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8. Participation and Emotions: Troubling Encounters Between Children and Social Welfare Professionals.
- Author
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Pinkney, Sharon
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PUBLIC welfare , *CHILD welfare , *EMOTIONS , *HUMAN rights , *JOB stress , *SOCIAL services , *PSYCHOLOGY of social workers , *SOCIOLOGY , *GOVERNMENT policy , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
This paper explores the emotional aspects of participation within social welfare contexts. The focus is on individual professionals, such as social workers and children's rights workers and their articulation, management and negotiation of the emotional when working with children and young people. The institutions of welfare are also shown to be ambiguous in their approaches to participation. Lastly, the dimensions of power that are enacted in relations between professionals and children reveal some of the complex dynamics in this fraught area of social welfare policy and practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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9. Children and Regeneration: Setting an Agenda for Community Participation and Integration.
- Author
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Matthews, Hugh
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COMMUNITY involvement , *CHILDREN , *DECISION making , *NEIGHBORHOOD change , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
Unlike other marginalised groups children are often not in a position to enter into dialogue with adults about their community needs and environmental concerns. Despite the current emphasis on involving communities in the regeneration of their own neighbourhoods, young people are still seemingly invisible in decision-making processes. This paper looks at recent attempts to increase public participation in local decision-making, proposes a typology of community action that recognises the different ways in which children may be drawn into the process of neighbourhood renewal and offers a set of recommendations that, if taken up, provide an agenda that will strengthen the active social commitment of young people in general. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
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10. Researching Children: Methods and Ethics.
- Author
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Mahon, Ann, Glendinning, Caroline, Clarke, Karen, and Craig, Gary
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CHILD research , *RESEARCH methodology , *ETHICS , *SOCIOLOGY , *RESEARCH , *SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
The appropriateness and desirability of researching children have been issues of some debate. Children may be perceived as non-competent or vulnerable, and proxies have been used as children's representatives. Increasingly researchers are speaking to children directly. Why is this so and what are the methodological and ethical implications of researching children's views? In this paper the authors draw on their own experiences of researching children in the fields of child carers and the impact of the Child Support Act 1991. A number of social, political and legal trends are identified which form a background to the growing interest in children as potential and actual participants in the research process. The theoretical, methodological, ethical and practical issues involved are then identified and described, using examples from two separate studies conducted by the authors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 1996
- Full Text
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11. Research with Disabled Children: How Useful is Child-centred Ethics?
- Author
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Alderson, Priscilla and Goodey, Christopher
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CHILD research , *ETHICS , *CHILDREN with disabilities , *SOCIOLOGY , *RESEARCH , *SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
The title of a collection on `ethics and methodology of research with children' implies that research with children necessarily raises unique questions about ethics and methods. Our paper questions whether this is so, what the unique questions might be and how they arise. We consider that any extra complications in research with children are common to research with other `minority' groups. The main complications do not arise from children's inabilities or misperceptions, but from the positions ascribed to children in late twentieth-century Western societies. Clarity about the social origins of any complications in research with children is crucial if these complications are to be addressed. Ethics, methods, theories, data and policy conclusions are inextricably interwoven, and it is important to acknowledge how initial theories inevitably shape policies. Reasons are given fir preferring rights-based to child-centred ethics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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