Sökning: "Parental Representations"
Visar resultat 1 - 5 av 11 avhandlingar innehållade orden Parental Representations.
1. Becoming a Parent of a Child with Intellectual Disability
Sammanfattning : When a child is diagnosed with intellectual disability (ID) parents’ reactions differ; some parents experience increased levels of stress and depression, while others find meaning in the duty of caring for a child with special needs. Parents’ reactions to diagnosis have also been found to be versatile within the person, with many parents expressing emotions that may be contradictory. LÄS MER
2. An Unequal Chance to Parent : Examples on Support Fathers Receive from the Swedish Child Health Field
Sammanfattning : Father involvement benefits children, mothers, and themselves in a number of ways. Swedish legislation and Swedish society have promoted father involvement. At the same time, the Swedish child health field has also unequivocally states that both parents should feel welcomed and supported within that sphere. LÄS MER
3. ADHD Symptoms : Objective Performance and Subject Perspective
Sammanfattning : ADHD research has mainly focused on objective performance measures. Performance, however, is only one aspect of functioning. Other aspects of how individuals function are their personal experiences and their evaluations of those experiences. LÄS MER
4. Dokument inifrån : Ultraljudsbilder och visualisering av det väntade barnet
Sammanfattning : Medical technology continuously shapes and transforms the image of the body. Within the social sciences, questions have been raised about how people make sense of new representations of the body in their everyday lives. LÄS MER
5. Attachment and Religion : An Integrative Developmental Framework
Sammanfattning : The aim of the thesis was to examine the applicability of attachment theory to adult and adolescent religiosity. Attachment theory is an empirically oriented research paradigm that takes evolutionary theory as the starting point in the study of child-parent relations and their socioemotional correlates in development. LÄS MER