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2. Telecollaboration in Secondary EFL: A Blended Teacher Education Course
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Whyte, Shona and Gijsen, Linda
- Abstract
Telecollaborative research often focuses on intercultural objectives rather than language learning, and highlights limitations due to technical difficulties and poor task design. This study redresses the balance by focusing on language and learner interaction in an exchange involving the English as a Foreign Language (EFL) learners of 35 secondary school student-teachers in two European countries. The teachers were enrolled in courses on technology for language education, and collaborated in a virtual environment to devise interactive tasks for their learners. Analyses of student-teacher course contributions, the teaching/learning materials they designed, and their reflections on this work shed light on the affordances of telecollaboration from a task-based language teaching perspective. [For the complete volume, see ED571330.]
- Published
- 2016
3. How Trust in Wikipedia Evolves: A Survey of Students Aged 11 to 25
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Mothe, Josiane and Sahut, Gilles
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Introduction: Whether Wikipedia is to be considered a trusted source is frequently questioned in France. This paper reports the results of a survey examining the levels of trust shown by young people aged eleven to twenty-five. Method: We analyse the answers given by 841 young people, aged eleven to twenty-five, to a questionnaire. To our knowledge, this is the largest study ever published on the topic. It focuses on (1) the perception young people have of Wikipedia; (2) the influence teachers and peers have on the young person's own opinions; and (3) the variation of trends according to the education level. Analysis: All the analysis is based on ANOVA (analysis of variance) to compare the various groups of participants. We detail the results by comparing the various groups of responders and discuss these results in relation to previous studies. Results: Trust in Wikipedia depends on the type of information seeking tasks and on the education level. There are contrasting social judgments of Wikipedia. Students build a representation of a teacher's expectations on the nature of the sources that they can use and hence the documentary acceptability of Wikipedia. The average trust attributed to Wikipedia for academic tasks could be induced by the tension between the negative academic reputation of the encyclopedia and the mostly positive experience of its credibility. Conclusion: Our survey demonstrates significant differences between the levels of education, both for Wikipedia use and its representation. This variable should be included in studies related to information behaviour by the young to avoid generalisations that deny the disparities between ages.
- Published
- 2018
4. Identifying and Responding to Learner Needs at the Medical Faculty: The Use of Audio-Visual Specialised Fiction (FASP)
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Franklin-Landi, Rebecca
- Abstract
Since the development of Task-Based Language Teaching (TBLT) in the 1980's, learner needs have been central to English for Specific Purposes (ESP) teaching and learning, including in the field of English for Medical Purposes (EMP). This paper reports on two studies, conducted at Nice University Medical Faculty between October 2015 and March 2016, designed to analyse and respond to learner needs in EMP. While the first study was a needs analysis of medical students, the second one concentrated on certain needs previously identified and sought to satisfy them using audio-visual specialised fiction or "Fiction À Substrat Professionnel" (FASP). It focusses on the use of a clip from a medical television series and how it was used in the classroom to reinforce good medical practice through the identification of on-screen procedural problems. Qualitative data were collected using questionnaires and interviews and data analysis showed an evolution in students' critical analysis and in their cultural and medical practice awareness. The study therefore suggests that it is possible to satisfy a demand for quality language education with students who are not language specialists and that audio-visual FASP seems to be an interesting and useful pedagogical tool in ESP to meet the differing needs of specific professions. [For the complete book, "New Developments in ESP Teaching and Learning Research," see ED578581.]
- Published
- 2017
5. Development and Validity Evidence of a Questionnaire on Teachers' Value Orientations in Physical Education
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Drouet, Océane, Roure, Cédric, Escriva Boulley, Géraldine, Pasco, Denis, and Lentillon-Kaestner, Vanessa
- Abstract
Based on previous research and the limitations of existing questionnaires on teachers' value orientations (VOs), the purpose of this study was to develop and provide validity evidence of two French-language versions of a physical education (PE) teachers' VO questionnaire (OVEPS). The two versions are based on a model of 3 VOs (i.e., motor skills, self-awareness, and social knowledge). This paper describes the development of two forms of the OVEPS, i.e., a Likert-scale OVEPS and a forced-choice OVEPS. Two studies were conducted; the first developed evidence of the internal structure (reliability and factorial structure) of the Likert-scale OVEPS. The second presented evidence of the internal structure of the forced-choice OVEPS and its relations to other variables (convergent and divergent correlations). The results showed that the forced-choice OVEPS was the best solution and revealed three distinct PE teacher priorities in France. This questionnaire is expected to be useful for developing future studies.
- Published
- 2021
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6. Multi-Role Project (MRP): A New Project-Based Learning Method for STEM
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Warin, Bruno, Talbi, Omar, Kolski, Christophe, and Hoogstoel, Frédéric
- Abstract
This paper presents the "Multi-Role Project" method (MRP), a broadly applicable project-based learning method, and describes its implementation and evaluation in the context of a Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) course. The MRP method is designed around a meta-principle that considers the project learning activity as a role-playing game based on two projects: a learning project and an engineering project. The meta-principle is complemented by five principles that provide a framework to guide the working practices of student teams: distribution of responsibilities; regular interactions and solicitations within the team; anticipation and continuous improvement; positive interdependence and alternating individual/collective work; and open communication and content management. This paper presents the implementation of MRP in a course teaching software engineering, UML language, and project management. The results show that MRP helped the course's students to acquire important professional knowledge and skills, experience near-real-world professional realities, and develop their abilities to work both in teams and autonomously.
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- 2016
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7. Challenge Based Innovation: Translating Fundamental Research into Societal Applications
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Kurikka, Joona, Utriainen, Tuuli, and Repokari, Lauri
- Abstract
This paper is based on work done at IdeaSquare, a new innovation experiment at CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research. The paper explores the translation of fundamental research into societal applications with the help of multidisciplinary student teams, project- and problem-based learning and design thinking methods. The theme is approached through challenge based innovation (CBI), a pilot course coordinated by IdeaSquare in 2013-2014 in collaboration with three universities. The approach, including a visit to CERN, appears to motivate the participating students to really strong, self-directed learning and can produce new, innovative concepts for societal applications with an inspirational connection to CERN. As a result of their iterative development, the student teams created two concepts: EDUMIND to help autistic kids to communicate through augmented reality technology, and CMPRSSD to use advanced data processing to record and compress project meetings. Both of the projects were also developed further by their stakeholders after the course.
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- 2016
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8. The ECO European Project: A New MOOC Dimension Based on an Intercreativity Environment
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Acedo, Sara Osuna and Cano, Lucía Camarero
- Abstract
The ECO European Project funded by the European Commission is dedicated to bringing MOOCs to a new dimension by taking advantage of the new possibilities offered by the Social Web (O'Reilly, 2005). This paper focuses on the intercreative aspects of MOOCs. It takes a look at the characteristics of the new ECO MOOCs to see if they are designed and implemented within an intercreative environment. The methodology is quantitative and data collection was conducted using self-administered questionnaires with closed or semi-closed questions. This study includes the so-called sMOOCs, which stress intercreativity to work towards collective intelligence.
- Published
- 2016
9. Teaching Shakespeare in the Digital Age: The eZoomBook Approach
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Evain, Christine and De Marco, Chris
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What collaborative process can teachers offer in order to stimulate their students' reading of and writing on Shakespeare's plays? How can new technologies contribute to facilitating the classroom experience? The eZoomBook (eZB) template was designed for teachers to create and share multi-level digital books called "eZoomBooks" that allow readers to access enriched versions of the original, organized according to different tabs related to places mentioned in the original text. A zooming in and out function enables the readers of the eZoomBooks to navigate freely between the original and the enriched tabulated versions. This paper focuses on a pilot study of the methodology using a simplified version of the template. The targeted learners were English as a Second Language engineering students. Our objective is to show that the eZB framework and pedagogical applications are especially appropriate in making a difficult subject easier to teach (giving and correcting group assignments) and learn by providing learners an innovative and motivating approach to reading literature.
- Published
- 2016
10. Conceptions of Pupils of the Primary on the Topic of an Electric Circuit in Three Countries (Canada, France and Morocco)
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Métioui, Abdeljalil, MacWillie, Mireille Baulu, and Trudel, Louis
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Qualitative research conducted with 237 pupils from Canada, France, and Morocco, between 10 and 12 years of age, on the setting and functioning of simple electric circuits, demonstrates that similar explanatory systems of the students. For this, we had given them a paper and pencil questionnaire of a sixty minutes duration. The first question was related to power a light bulb using wires and battery. The second issue was intended to determine whether pupils are conscious of the danger associated with a polarity battery. The third is related to the flow of electric current between the + and - terminals of a battery in an electric circuit. The last question requires an understanding of the law of conservation of the charge in a circuit constituted by a battery and a bulb. This research provides an answer to the question of ethnocentricity and universality of students' conceptions from different cultures and linguistic communities. In this research, the thesis of the universality was establish from the students' responses to a questionnaire.
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- 2016
11. A Blended Learning Scenario to Enhance Learners' Oral Production Skills
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Kim, Hee-Kyung
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This paper examines the effectiveness of a mobile assisted blended learning scenario for pronunciation in Korean language. In particular, we analyze how asynchronous oral communication between learners of Korean and native speakers via "kakaotalk" (an open source mobile phone application) may be beneficial to the learner in terms of pronunciation. Our methodological approach is based on task resolution (Ellis, 2003) in peer-to-peer collaborative settings and the spaced repetition concept (Ebbinghaus, 1885, cited by Dempster, 1988). The outcomes of our study show that the learners appreciated the possibility to interact with native speakers but most of them preferred synchronous communication for training their pronunciation skills.
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- 2015
12. Pupil's Beliefs about the Transformations of Energy in Three Countries (Canada, France and Morocco)
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Métioui, Abdeljalil and MacWillie, Mireille Baulu
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A qualitative research approach was chosen to analyse the conceptions of pupils attending elementary school from Canada (N = 135), France (N = 30) and Morocco (N = 92) between 10 and 12 years of age. Their conceptions were identified while being mobilised on energy transformations during the working of a simple electric circuit made of a battery, a bulb and electric wires: light, thermal, electrical and chemical. With paper and pencil, they completed a questionnaire made up of six questions during a forty-five minute period. The analysis of the data of the experimentation demonstrates that the majority of the conceptions identified are naïve compared to those constructed by the scientists. It also shows that their conceptions are similar in spite of the different cultures. The results confirm the findings of the international community of researchers in didactics of sciences regarding the universality of children's conceptions about the working of simple electrical circuits. These findings have implications on teacher training, science teaching and learning in a multiple cultural environment.
- Published
- 2015
13. How EFL Students Can Use Google to Correct Their 'Untreatable' Written Errors
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Geiller, Luc
- Abstract
This paper presents the findings of an experiment in which a group of 17 French post-secondary EFL learners used Google to self-correct several "untreatable" written errors. Whether or not error correction leads to improved writing has been much debated, some researchers dismissing it is as useless and others arguing that error feedback leads to more grammatical accuracy. In her response to Truscott (1996), Ferris (1999) explains that it would be unreasonable to abolish correction given the present state of knowledge, and that further research needed to focus on which types of errors were more amenable to which types of error correction. In her attempt to respond more effectively to her students' errors, she made the distinction between "treatable" and "untreatable" ones: the former occur in "a patterned, rule-governed way" and include problems with verb tense or form, subject-verb agreement, run-ons, noun endings, articles, pronouns, while the latter include a variety of lexical errors, problems with word order and sentence structure, including missing and unnecessary words. Substantial research on the use of search engines as a tool for L2 learners has been carried out suggesting that the web plays an important role in fostering language awareness and learner autonomy (e.g. Shei 2008a, 2008b; Conroy 2010). According to Bathia and Richie (2009: 547), "the application of Google for language learning has just begun to be tapped." Within the framework of this study it was assumed that the students, conversant with digital technologies and using Google and the web on a regular basis, could use various search options and the search results to self-correct their errors instead of relying on their teacher to provide direct feedback. After receiving some in-class training on how to formulate Google queries, the students were asked to use a customized Google search engine limiting searches to 28 information websites to correct up to ten "untreatable" errors occurring in two essays completed in class. The findings indicate that a majority of students successfully use material from the various snippets of texts appearing on the Google results pages to improve their writing.
- Published
- 2014
14. How Should Energy Be Defined throughout Schooling?
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Bächtold, Manuel
- Abstract
The question of how to teach energy has been renewed by recent studies focusing on the learning and teaching progressions for this concept. In this context, one question has been, for the most part, overlooked: how should energy be defined throughout schooling? This paper addresses this question in three steps. We first identify and discuss two main approaches in physics concerning the definition of energy, one claiming there is no satisfactory definition and taking conservation as a fundamental property, and the other based on Rankine's definition of energy as the capacity of a system to produce changes. We then present a study concerning how energy is actually defined throughout schooling in the case of France by analyzing national programs, physics textbooks, and the answers of teachers to a questionnaire. This study brings to light a consistency problem in the way energy is defined across school years: in primary school, an adapted version of Rankine's definition is introduced and conservation is ignored; in high school, conservation is introduced and Rankine's definition is ignored. Finally, we address this consistency problem by discussing possible teaching progressions. We argue in favor of the use of Rankine's definition throughout schooling: at primary school, it is a possible substitute to students' erroneous conceptions; at secondary school, it might help students become aware of the unifying role of energy and thereby overcome the compartmentalization problem.
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- 2018
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15. The Use of a Nonprobability Internet Panel to Monitor Sexual and Reproductive Health in the General Population
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Legleye, Stéphane, Charrance, Géraldine, Razafindratsima, Nicolas, Bajos, Nathalie, Bohet, Aline, and Moreau, Caroline
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Background: Reliability of nonprobability online volunteer panels for epidemiological purposes has rarely been studied. Objectives: To assess the quality of a questionnaire on sexual and reproductive health (SRH) administered in a nonprobability Web panel and in a random telephone survey (n = 8,992; n = 8,437, age 16-49 years). Especially, we were interested in the possible difference in the association of sociodemographic variables and some outcome variables in the two surveys that are in the reliability of analytical epidemiological studies conducted in such panels. Methods: Interventions to increase response rate were used in both surveys (four e-mail reminders, high number of call attempts and callbacks to refusals). Both were calibrated on the census population. Sociodemographic composition, effects of reminders, and prevalence were compared to their telephone counterpart. In addition, the associations of sociodemographic and sexual behaviors were compared in the two samples in multivariate logistic regressions. Results: The online survey had a lower response rate (20.0 percent vs. 44.8 percent) and a more distorted sociodemographic structure although the reminders improved the representativeness as did the analogous interventions on the telephone survey. Prevalences of SRH variables were similar for the common behaviors but higher online for the stigmatized behaviors, depending on gender. Overall, 29 percent of the 63 interactions studied were significant for males and 11 percent for women, although opposite effects of sociodemographic variables were rare (5 percent of the 171 tested for each gender). Conclusion: Nonprobability online panels are to be used with caution to monitor SRH and conduct analytical epidemiological studies, especially among men. [This paper was written with the FECOND research Team.]
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- 2018
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16. How Volunteering Helps Students to Develop Soft Skills
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Khasanzyanova, Albina
- Abstract
It is widely recognised that tertiary education does not provide all of the knowledge and skills required to succeed in modern societies. Personal and interpersonal skills--so-called "soft skills"--are also needed to complement professional skills and expertise, and become an essential part of an individual's personality. One way of acquiring soft skills is volunteering with associations and non-governmental organisations (NGOs). This paper discusses the involvement of French third-level students in voluntary activities and the skills they acquire as a result. The author presents the findings of a study involving a questionnaire and semi-structured interviews. Results show that many students develop skills linked to their future professional career, that they reflect on this consciously and feel enriched by the experience. The author argues that "non-professional" activities like volunteering can be actively incorporated into students' learning process, making their overall experience of higher education more active, enjoyable and relevant. Learning through action was found to be the most important factor in the acquisition of soft skills. This article aims to contribute to research on the educational dimension of volunteering, demonstrating that it benefits both personal and professional development.
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- 2017
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17. Using GIS in an Earth Sciences Field Course for Quantitative Exploration, Data Management and Digital Mapping
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Marra, Wouter A., van de Grint, Liesbeth, Alberti, Koko, and Karssenberg, Derek
- Abstract
Field courses are essential for subjects like Earth Sciences, Geography and Ecology. In these topics, GIS is used to manage and analyse spatial data, and offers quantitative methods that are beneficial for fieldwork. This paper presents changes made to a first-year Earth Sciences field course in the French Alps, where new GIS methods were introduced. Students use GIS in preparation to explore their research area using an elevation model and satellite images, formulate hypotheses and plan the fieldwork. During the fieldwork, a pilot group managed their field-observations using GIS and made digital maps. Students praise the use of quantitative digital maps in the preparation. Students made use of the available techniques during the fieldwork, although this could be further intensified. Some students were extra motivated due to the technical nature as well as the additional analytical possibilities. The use of GIS was experienced as a steep learning curve by students, and not all staff members are confident in supervising students using GIS, which calls for a sufficient preparation and training of both students and staff. The use of GIS adds abstract analyses and quantitative assessment, which is a complementary learning style to fieldwork that mostly focuses on practical skills.
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- 2017
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18. The Treatment Effect of Grade Repetitions
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Mahjoub, Mohamed-Badrane
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This paper estimates the treatment effect of grade repetitions in French junior high schools, using a value-added test score as outcome and quarter of birth as instrument. With linear two-stage least squares, local average treatment effect is estimated at around 1.6 times the standard deviation of the achievement gain. With non-linear full-information maximum likelihood, average treatment on the treated ranges between one and one-quarter of the standard deviation of the outcome. Grade repetition in junior high school is also shown to increase the probability of graduating from junior high school by 2.5 probability points.
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- 2017
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19. Questioning Discrimination through Critical Media Literacy. Findings from Seven European Countries
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Ranieri, Maria and Fabbro, Francesco
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This paper presents the main findings of an action-research study that took place in seven European countries in order to develop effective educational responses to prevent and combat discrimination. The study entailed the design of media and citizenship education activities, their implementation in the different educational contexts and the evaluation of their effectiveness in raising young people's awareness of discrimination. The results of the study shed light both on the advantages and constraints of educational practice, variations that often depend on the specific cultural and social context. On the one hand, the analysis and the evaluation of educational experiences suggest that critical media literacy can enable the development of critical reading/viewing skills as well as acts of participatory and inclusive citizenship that question derogative and essentialist media representations of the Other. On the other hand, the results highlight the difficulty of promoting young people's awareness of discrimination through active methods of teaching and learning or through media content which is far from young people's experience, interests and concerns.
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- 2016
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20. Exploring the Mastery of French Students in Using Basic Notions of the Language of Chemistry
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Canac, Sophie and Kermen, Isabelle
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Learning chemistry includes learning the language of chemistry (names, formulae, symbols, and chemical equations) which has to be done in connection with the other areas of chemical knowledge. In this study we investigate how French students understand and use names (of chemical species and common mixtures) and chemical formulae. We set a paper and pencil test composed of open-ended and multiple choice questions (5 questions in total) to students (N = 603) who have been learning chemistry for 2 years (age 14) and others for up to 7 years (age 19, first year university). For all grade levels we found that the students have great difficulties understanding notions introduced right from the first two years of chemistry teaching. The scientific name opposed to a common name does not seem to be a relevant tool used by the students to classify chemical species and mixtures. They struggle to decode a chemical formula out of the context of a chemical equation and fail to decode them in that context. The students surveyed are not able to correctly associate with a name or a formula, both macroscopic (a pure substance or a mixture) and microscopic (an atom or a molecule) criteria. They seem to have mainly a microscopic reading of the names and the chemical formulae. Therefore we think that the language of chemistry could be a source of trouble for the learning of the notion of substance. These results confirm the need to offer teachers new didactical tools to develop the teaching of the language of chemistry.
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- 2016
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21. A Comparative Analysis of Graduate Employment Prospects in European Labour Markets: A Study of Graduate Recruitment in Four Countries
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Branine, Moham and Avramenko, Alex
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The aim of this paper is to provide a comparative analysis of higher education and the graduate labour markets in selected European countries (France, Germany, Spain and United Kingdom) in the context of the expectations of graduates and prospective employers, and respective recruitment and selection practices. Expectations of graduating students from a number of European collaborating universities are sought and analysed in order to find out about a match between the knowledge and skills of graduates and the needs of European employers. The study examines the process of graduate recruitment, employee and employer expectations, and the role of higher education institutions in meeting such expectations. Primary data was gathered from 252 employers and 485 final year (graduating) students through the use of questionnaires. The analysis of the data collected has revealed different approaches to but similar methods of graduate recruitment between the four countries. Despite the current differences in higher education systems and labour market trends, the expectations of employers and graduating students are more similar than different. It is concluded that EU graduates will have good employment prospects in an integrated labour market.
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- 2015
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22. Self-Assessments or Tests? Comparing Cross-National Differences in Patterns and Outcomes of Graduates' Skills Based on International Large-Scale Surveys
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Humburg, Martin and van der Velden, Rolf
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In this paper an analysis is carried out whether objective tests and subjective self-assessments in international large-scale studies yield similar results when looking at cross-national differences in the effects of skills on earnings, and skills patterns across countries, fields of study and gender. The findings indicate that subjective skills measures do not correlate well with objective measures of similar constructs when looking at cross-national differences. Countrywise associations between subjective skills measures and earnings do not correlate well with those found using objective skills measures. Moreover, cross-national differences in the level of subjective skills measures do not correlate well with cross-national differences in skill levels based on objective tests. Nor do gender differences found using subjective skills measures correlate with those found using objective skills measures. This does not mean that self-assessments cannot be used, but they need to be restricted to analysing within-country differences. Within countries, self-assessments do a good job in predicting skills differences across fields of study and also in predicting the effect of skills on earnings. When comparing gender differences in skills levels within countries, however, one needs to be aware that females tend to overestimate their skills levels in typical "female" domains like literacy.
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- 2015
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23. The Development of Social Relations during Residence Abroad
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Mitchell, Rosamond
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Language students in the UK undertake their "year abroad" with high hopes for a linguistic and social "immersion" experience. However, past research shows that language learning success, while real, can be uneven, and that many Erasmus exchange students form social relations largely with other international students. New virtual media make it easy and cheap for the current student generation to sustain existing social networks, blurring previous clear distinctions between "home" and "abroad". This paper draws on data from a larger two-year study of UK students undertaking residence abroad in France, Spain and Mexico (the LANGSNAP project). The participants were involved in three different placement types: teaching assistants, exchange students and workplace interns. A series of pre-sojourn and in-sojourn interviews with 28 students spending an academic year in France are analysed, to identify both the social networking opportunities available and the actual social relationships which were developed. The analysis shows that all three placement types offered structured opportunities for interaction with French nationals which led for almost all participants to moderate degrees of social networking. However, only a minority of participants developed closer relationships or friendship with locals, from which they drew emotional support.
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- 2015
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24. Success in Higher Education: The Challenge to Achieve Academic Standing and Social Position
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Life, James
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When students look at their classmates in the classroom, consciously or unconsciously, they see competitors both for academic recognition and social success. How do they fit in relation to others and how do they succeed in achieving both? Traditional views on the drive to succeed and the fear of failure are well known as motivators for achieving academic success but is it that simple a dichotomy? Do students also view success through a fear of success and a purposeful intent to fail--referred to in this text as the drive to fail? Students recognize the importance of social position in class but how is this perceived and will they sacrifice social position for academic standing or vice versa? This paper considers these issues by analyzing the results of a student survey and opinions offered by the students. The discussion considers the survey, academic standing, social position, cultural variables, perception of success and failure, and concluding comments.
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- 2015
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25. LaboREM--A Remote Laboratory for Game-Like Training in Electronics
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Luthon, Franck and Larroque, Benoît
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The advances in communication networks and web technologies, in conjunction with the improved connectivity of test and measurement devices make it possible to implement e-learning applications that encompass the whole learning process. In the field of electrical engineering, automation or mechatronics, it means not only lectures, tutorials, demos and simulations, but also practical labwork for training with real-world devices that are controlled remotely. To make e-labs attractive, they should be easily implemented and accessed on the web by a client. This keypoint raises technical issues that are recalled in this paper. Nonetheless pedagogical issues are equally important. The benefit of a remote lab must be evaluated and compared to simulation labs or hands-on. Here, to foster student motivation, a game-like scenario embedded in a learning management system is proposed.
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- 2015
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26. The Relationship Between Forgiveness and Health Outcomes Among People Living with HIV: A Cross-Sectional Study in France.
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Toussaint, Loren L., Skalski-Bednarz, Sebastian Binyamin, Lanoix, Jean-Philippe, Konaszewski, Karol, and Surzykiewicz, Janusz
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HIV-positive persons ,HIV infections ,EVALUATION of medical care ,FORGIVENESS ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,CROSS-sectional method ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,REGRESSION analysis ,SATISFACTION ,PEARSON correlation (Statistics) ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,FACTOR analysis ,CHI-squared test ,DATA analysis software ,EVALUATION - Abstract
Research to date has shown that HIV infection is a highly stressful experience for individuals, and one of the key adaptive resources after such painful experiences may be forgiveness. The aim of the present study was to examine the associations between dispositional forgiveness (assessed using Mullet's Forgivingness Questionnaire and Toussaint's Forgiveness Scale), perceived stress (single-item measure of stress symptoms), health perception (EuroQol visual analogue version of the scale) and life satisfaction (Satisfaction With Life Scale) in people living with HIV (PLWH) in France. Paper surveys were completed by 222 PLWH aged 18–78 (57% male). Multiple regression analysis revealed that sensitivity to circumstances, unconditional forgiveness, self-forgiveness, and forgiveness of others were significant predictors of health and happiness. Mediation analysis showed that these relationships are completely mediated by perceived stress. The present findings suggest that forgiveness and perceived stress may be important variables for healing in PLWH. Interventions designed to improve forgiveness and self-forgiveness may result in improved health and life satisfaction in PLWH. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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27. Roles of parental smoking and family structure for the explanation of socio‐economic inequalities in adolescent smoking.
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Legleye, Stéphane, Bricard, Damien, and Khlat, Myriam
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SMOKING & psychology ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,CROSS-sectional method ,PARENTING ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,TEENAGERS' conduct of life ,SOCIAL classes ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,FACTOR analysis ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SMOKING ,ODDS ratio ,FAMILY relations ,FAMILY structure ,SECONDARY analysis ,POISSON distribution ,ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Background and aims: Among European countries, France is particularly concerned by adolescent tobacco smoking, especially in disadvantaged socio‐economic backgrounds (SES). We measured the respective contributions of parental smoking and family living arrangement to social disparities in smoking during adolescence. Design: Secondary analysis of survey data. Setting: A cross‐sectional nation‐wide exhaustive 12‐day survey in March 2017 of French youth aged 17–18.5 years participating in the national mandatory civic information day. Participants: A total of 13 314 adolescents answering a pen‐and‐paper questionnaire about their own tobacco consumption and the smoking of their parents. Measurements Risk ratios (RRs) were computed using modified Poisson regressions, and population‐attributable fraction (PAF) was used as a measure of the explanatory roles of the different factors as mediators of SES. Findings Adolescents living within very privileged and privileged SES were significantly less likely to report daily tobacco smoking (20.4 and 22.7%, respectively) than those within modest and disadvantaged ones (26.0 and 28.6%, respectively). Parental smoking and family living arrangement independently explained the smoking inequalities among adolescents. After adjusting for schooling factors, the risks associated with parental smoking ranged between RR = 1.64 [95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.50–1.79] when the father only smoked and RR = 2.17 (95% CI = 1.99–2.36) when both parents smoked, compared with non‐smoking parents; the risk associated with living in a non‐intact family was 1.35 (95% CI = 1.26–1.43) and that of living outside the parental home was 1.20 (95% CI = 1.10–1.30). Apprentices and adolescents out of school had higher risks than those at school (RR = 1.82, 95% CI = 1.68–1.98) and RR = 2.10, 95% CI = 1.92–2.29). The contribution of parental smoking to adolescent smoking (PAF = 32%) was greater than that of SES (PAF = 9%), family living arrangement (PAF = 17%) or schooling factors (14%). The share of SES decreased from 18 to 9% when considering these mediating factors. Conclusion: In France, parental smoking appears to be the factor that most influences adolescent smoking, followed by family living arrangement; the role of family socio‐economic status is small in comparison. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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28. The Amplification of Cyberhate Victimisation by Discrimination and Low Life Satisfaction: Can Supportive Environments Mitigate the Risks?
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Görzig, Anke, Blaya, Catherine, Bedrosova, Marie, Audrin, Catherine, and Machackova, Hana
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PREVENTION of cyberbullying ,AFFINITY groups ,SCHOOL environment ,SOCIAL support ,SATISFACTION ,FAMILIES ,REGRESSION analysis ,SOCIAL context ,SUPPORT groups ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CYBERBULLYING ,VICTIMS ,DATA analysis software ,STATISTICAL models ,PERCEIVED discrimination ,CHILDREN ,ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
There is some indication that discrimination as well as low levels of life satisfaction render young people at risk of cyberhate victimization. Adopting a socio-ecological perspective, this paper examines whether supportive family, peer and school environments may buffer against the effects of perceived discrimination and low life satisfaction on cyberhate victimization. Data from four countries (N = 3396) of the EU Kids Online IV survey on children aged 11–17 (51% girls) revealed a positive association between perceived discrimination and cyberhate victimization, but this impact was moderated by supportive family and peer environments. A negative association between life satisfaction and cyberhate victimization was mitigated by peer support. However, no associations with the school context were found. The current study provides new insights on how social support on different levels of the social environment may buffer against potential risk factors for cyberhate victimization and can inform decision-makers towards intervention and prevention strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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29. The Wales Endoscope: The First American Cystoscope.
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Patel, Sutchin R., Moran, Michael E., Rugendorff, Erwin W., and Rabinowitz, Ronald
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- *
ENDOSCOPES , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *MILITARY personnel - Abstract
Introduction: Philipp Bozzini, a German army surgeon, in 1807 invented the Lichtleiter, the predecessor of the modern cystoscope. By the mid-1800s, several new instruments were created including one, a variation on Bozzini's instrument by Antoine Desormeaux in Paris. The William P. Didusch Museum of Urologic History acquired the Wales endoscope, a rare and unique cystoscope that was invented around the same time in the United States.Methods: We researched the life of Philip Wales and the description of his cystoscope as well as Horatio Kern, the instrument maker that produced Wales' instrument. We examined the Wales cystoscope acquired by the William P. Didusch Museum.Results: Philip Skinner Wales (1837-1906) was a surgeon who entered the United States Navy in 1856 and served throughout the Civil War. He organized and held charge of the Naval Hospital at New Orleans during the operations of Admiral Farragut's fleet in the Mississippi River. He was one of the first surgeons to attend President Garfield when he was shot. He was Surgeon General of the Navy (1879-1884) and founded the Museum of Naval Hygiene in Washington D.C. which later, combined with the naval laboratory and Department of Instruction, became the prototype of the Naval Medical School. In 1868 he published a series of papers in the Philadelphia Medical and Surgical Reporter on "Instrumental Diagnosis," with a paper entitled "Description of a New Endoscope." The instrument contained a metal shaft with an acute beak and used an ophthalmologic mirror to reflect light down the channel. The surgeon peered through the center hole to look into the bladder. Wales used his instrument multiple times in his private practice. Wales writes that the advantages of his cystoscope were that it was simple to produce and cheap compared to Desormeaux's endoscope. Furthermore it was light, weighing approximately 2 pounds. The main drawbacks of Wales' cystoscope were the inadequate illumination, as the light source was external and projected from the outside through a narrow channel into the bladder, and that without an optical system the image appeared relatively small. Horatio Kern, a well-known instrument maker in Philadelphia, that also supplied surgical sets and instruments for the U.S. Army during the Civil War, produced Wales' cystoscope. While he was Chief of the Bureau of Medicine, a subordinate embezzled Navy funds and Dr, Wales was court-martialed. Though he was eventually exonerated, he lived the rest of his life in disgrace in France.Conclusion: The Wales endoscope is unique in that it had an American inventor, was simple in design and cheap to produce. It is an important historical artifact and is one of the earliest and rarest cystoscopes developed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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30. New Keratoconus Risk Factors: A Cross-Sectional Case—Control Study.
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Debourdeau, Eloi, Planells, Gabriel, Chamard, Chloe, Touboul, David, Villain, Max, Demoly, Pascal, Babeau, Fanny, Fournie, Pierre, and Daien, Vincent
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KERATOCONUS ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,DRY eye syndromes ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,CROSS-sectional method ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,CASE-control method ,RISK assessment ,ITCHING ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SMOKING ,ALLERGIES ,ODDS ratio ,FAMILY history (Medicine) ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Purpose. To evaluate risk factors associated with keratoconus in a monocentric cross-sectional case-control study. Methods. This observational study occurred from June 2019 to February 2021 in a university hospital (France). The case group consisted of 195 patients with keratoconus in at least one eye who were followed up by a corneal specialist. The control group consisted of 195 patients without any evidence of keratoconus on slit-lamp examination and corneal topography, who were matched 1 : 1 to controls by age and sex. Data were collected by a self-completed paper questionnaire before the consultation, and a multivariate logistic regression was performed. Results. Multivariate analysis revealed significant associations of keratoconus with family history (odds ratio [OR] = 22.2, p < 0.001), rubbing eyes (OR = 10.9, p < 0.001), allergy (any kind) (OR = 3.80, p < 0.001), smoking exposure (OR = 2.08, p = 0.017), and dry eyes (OR = 1.77, p = 0.045 f). The worst eye was associated with the more rubbed eye (p < 0.001) and the more pressed eye during the night according to sleeping position (p < 0.041). Conclusion. This study confirmed the association between keratoconus and eye rubbing, family history, and allergy. It highlighted the role of pressure on the eyes during sleep. Other less known risk factors such as dry eyes and smoking exposure should be explored in future studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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- View/download PDF
31. Study of the psychometric properties and population norms of the C-SHARP in a representative French population.
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Oubrahim, Leïla and Combalbert, Nicolas
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RESEARCH evaluation ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,INTER-observer reliability ,FACTOR analysis ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,PEOPLE with intellectual disabilities ,AGGRESSION (Psychology) - Abstract
Purpose: To fill this gap, this paper aims to translate the children's scale of hostility and aggression: reactive/proactive (C-SHARP) into French and then tested its psychometric properties and established the first French standards. Design/methodology/approach: This paper assess the aggressive behavior of 305 children and adolescents with intellectual disability (ID). This paper tested the scale's factor structure (confirmatory factor analysis), internal consistency and inter-rater reliability. Findings: The results support a factor structure similar to the US version. Factor analysis yielded a five-factor solution, namely, verbal aggression (12 items), bullying (12 items), covert aggression (11 items), hostility (9 items) and physical aggression (8 items). The French-speaking version of the C-SHARP shows good reliability (internal consistency) and good inter-rater reliability. The French version demonstrated encouraging evidence of validity. This paper also established French norms that were similar to US norms. This paper concludes that the French-speaking version of the C-SHARP must benefit from additional psychometric analyzes to confirm its adaptation for research and the clinic. Originality/value: There is no tool currently available in France for the evaluation of aggressive behavior in children and adolescents with ID. The C-SHARP (Farmer and Aman, 2009) is the only questionnaire that specifically assesses aggression in children and adolescents with ID, its form, frequency and its proactive or reactive qualities. The French version of the C-SHARP could be a useful diagnostic tool to assess aggressive behavior in children and adolescents with ID and to identify and set up appropriate support strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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32. Strategy to Develop a Common Simulation Training Program: Illustration with Anesthesia and Intensive Care Residency in France.
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Buléon, Clément, Minehart, Rebecca D., Rudolph, Jenny W., Blanié, Antonia, Lilot, Marc, Picard, Julien, Plaud, Benoît, Pottecher, Julien, and Benhamou, Dan
- Subjects
- *
NATIONAL competency-based educational tests , *ANESTHESIA , *SIMULATION methods in education , *CURRICULUM , *INTERNSHIP programs , *HUMAN services programs , *CRITICAL care medicine , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH funding , *THEMATIC analysis , *DATA analysis software - Abstract
Phenomenon: The urgency of having fair and trustworthy competency-based assessment in medical training is growing. Simulation is increasingly recognized as a potent method for building and assessing applied competencies. The growing use of simulation and its application in summative assessment calls for comprehensive and rigorously designed programs. Defining the current baseline of what is available and feasible is a crucial first step. This paper uses anesthesia and intensive care (AIC) in France as a case study in how to document this baseline. Approach: An IRB-approved, online anonymous closed survey was submitted to AIC residency program directors and AIC simulation program directors in France from January to February 2021. The researcher-developed survey consisted of 65 questions across five sections: centers' characteristics, curricular characteristics, courses' characteristics, instructors' characteristics, and simulation perceptions and perspectives. Findings: The participation rate was 31/31 (100%) with 29 centers affiliated with a university hospital. All centers had AIC simulation activities. Resident training was structured in 94% of centers. Simulation uses were training (100%), research and development (61%), procedural or organizational testing (42%), and summative assessment (13%). Interprofessional full-scale simulation training existed in 90% of centers. Procedural training on simulators prior to clinical patients' care was performed "always" in 16%, "most often" in 45%, "sometimes" in 29% and "rarely" or "not" in 10% of centers. Simulated patients were used in 61% of centers. Main themes were identified for procedural skills, full-scale and simulated patient simulation training. Simulation activity was perceived as increasing in 68% of centers. Centers expressed a desire to participate in developing and using a national common AIC simulation program. Insights: Based on our findings in AIC, we demonstrated a baseline description of nationwide simulation activities. We now have a clearer perspective on a decentralized approach in which individual institutions or regional consortia conduct simulation for a discipline in a relatively homogeneous way, suggesting the feasibility for national guidelines. This approach provides useful clues for AIC and other disciplines to develop a comprehensive and meaningful program matching existing expectations and closing the identified gaps. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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33. Artificial Intelligence and Clinical Decision Support Systems or Automated Interpreters: What Characteristics Are Expected by French General Practitioners?
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TABLA, Smaïn, CALAFIORE, Matthieu, LEGRAND, Bertrand, DESCAMPS, Axel, ANDRE, Charlotte, ROCHOY, Michaël, and CHAZARD, Emmanuel
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ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,ELECTRONIC health records ,COMPUTER-aided diagnosis - Abstract
Development of artificial intelligence (AI) modules should rely on technical progress, but also on users' needs. Our objective is to identify criteria that make a hypothetical AI module desirable for general practitioners (GPs). Method: random selection of 200 French GPs, and paper-based questionnaire. Results: the population was representative. GPs expect AI modules to diagnose or eliminate an urgent pathology for which they are not competent and for which specialists are not available. They also demand interoperability, automated electronic health record integration and facilitated information sharing. GPs would like AI modules to make them save time, simplify some procedures and delegate tasks to the secretary. They expect AI modules to allow them to associate the patient with the care, to reassure him or her, and to personalize the care. Interestingly, GPs would also rely on a machine to cut off abusive requests, such as work stoppages or certificates of convenience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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34. Nudging health care workers towards a flu shot: reminders are accepted but not necessarily effective. A randomized controlled study among residents in general practice in France.
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Barbaroux, Adriaan, Benoit, Laurie, Raymondie, Romain A, and Milhabet, Isabelle
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MEDICAL personnel ,OCCUPATIONAL health services ,INFLUENZA ,HAWTHORNE effect ,MONETARY incentives ,INFLUENZA vaccines ,RESEARCH ,FAMILY medicine ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,EVALUATION research ,COMPARATIVE studies ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,QUESTIONNAIRES - Abstract
Background: A nudge corresponds to any procedure that influences choice architecture, without using persuasion or financial incentives. Nudges are effective in increasing vaccination with heterogeneous levels of acceptability.Objective: To evaluate the effectiveness and acceptability of a nudge promoting influenza vaccination for general practice trainees, also called residents.Methods: The hypothesis was that a reminder would be efficient and accepted and that prior exposure to a nudge increases its acceptability. Residents were randomly divided into three parallel experimental arms: a nudge group, a no-nudge group and a control group in order to evaluate the Hawthorne effect. The nudge consisted of providing a paper form for the free delivery of the vaccine and contacts for occupational health services.Results: The analysis included 161 residents. There was a strong consensus among the residents that it is very acceptable to nudge their peers and patients. Acceptability was better with residents exposed to the nudge and with residents included in step 1 (Hawthorne effect). The nudge did not increase vaccination coverage.Conclusion: The failure of this nudge highlights the importance of matching an intervention to the population's needs. The experimental approach is innovative in this context and deserves further attention.Clinicaltrials.gov Pre-registration: NCT03768596. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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35. Depressive symptoms and perception of risk during the first wave of the COVID‐19 pandemic: A web‐based cross‐country comparative survey.
- Author
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Terraneo, Marco, Lombi, Linda, and Bradby, Hannah
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MENTAL depression risk factors ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,CROSS-sectional method ,MEDICAL care costs ,MENTAL health ,RISK perception ,RISK assessment ,COMPARATIVE studies ,MEDICAL care use ,MENTAL depression ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,STATISTICAL sampling ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Evidence is accumulating of the negative impact of the COVID‐19 pandemic and related public health measures on mental health. In this emergent field, there has been little research into the role of risk perception on depressive symptoms and the contribution of health‐care resources to model risk perception and mental health. The aim of this paper is to describe the relationship between individual‐level perception of risk and depression, controlling for a set of confounders and for country‐level heterogeneity. A cross‐sectional and observational online survey was conducted using a non‐probability snowball sampling technique. We use data on 11,340 respondents, living in six European countries (Italy, Sweden, United Kingdom, France, Poland, Czech Republic) who completed survey questionnaires during the first months of the pandemic. We used a fixed‐effect approach, which included individual and macro‐level variables. The findings suggest that a high proportion of people suffering from depression and heightened risk perception is positively associated with reporting depressive symptoms, even if this relationship varies significantly between countries. Moreover, the association is moderated by contextual factors including health‐care expenditure as a percentage of Gross Domestic Product, hospital beds for acute care, and number of medical specialists per head of population. Investment in health care offers a concrete means of protecting the mental health of a population living under pandemic restrictions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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36. Development and Validity Evidence of a Questionnaire on Teachers' Value Orientations in Physical Education.
- Author
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Drouet, Océane, Roure, Cédric, Escriva Boulley, Géraldine, Pasco, Denis, and Lentillon-Kaestner, Vanessa
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EXPERIMENTAL design ,TRAINING of physical education teachers ,RELIABILITY (Personality trait) ,MENTAL orientation ,FACTORIAL experiment designs ,RESEARCH evaluation ,RESEARCH methodology ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,SELF-consciousness (Awareness) ,HEALTH literacy ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,MOTOR ability - Abstract
Based on previous research and the limitations of existing questionnaires on teachers' value orientations (VOs), the purpose of this study was to develop and provide validity evidence of two French-language versions of a physical education (PE) teachers' VO questionnaire (OVEPS). The two versions are based on a model of 3 VOs (i.e., motor skills, self-awareness, and social knowledge). This paper describes the development of two forms of the OVEPS, i.e., a Likert-scale OVEPS and a forced-choice OVEPS. Two studies were conducted; the first developed evidence of the internal structure (reliability and factorial structure) of the Likert-scale OVEPS. The second presented evidence of the internal structure of the forced-choice OVEPS and its relations to other variables (convergent and divergent correlations). The results showed that the forced-choice OVEPS was the best solution and revealed three distinct PE teacher priorities in France. This questionnaire is expected to be useful for developing future studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
37. Modernizing quality of life assessment: development of a multidimensional computerized adaptive questionnaire for patients with schizophrenia.
- Author
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Michel, Pierre, Baumstarck, Karine, Lancon, Christophe, Ghattas, Badih, Loundou, Anderson, Auquier, Pascal, and Boyer, Laurent
- Subjects
DIAGNOSIS of schizophrenia ,COMPUTER adaptive testing ,QUALITY of life ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,MEDICAL practice ,COMPUTER engineering ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,RESEARCH ,SCHIZOPHRENIA ,CROSS-sectional method - Abstract
Objective: Quality of life (QoL) is still assessed using paper-based and fixed-length questionnaires, which is one reason why QoL measurements have not been routinely implemented in clinical practice. Providing new QoL measures that combine computer technology with modern measurement theory may enhance their clinical use. The aim of this study was to develop a QoL multidimensional computerized adaptive test (MCAT), the SQoL-MCAT, from the fixed-length SQoL questionnaire for patients with schizophrenia.Methods: In this multicentre cross-sectional study, we collected sociodemographic information, clinical characteristics (i.e., duration of illness, the PANSS, and the Calgary Depression Scale), and quality of life (i.e., SQoL). The development of the SQoL-CAT was divided into three stages: (1) multidimensional item response theory (MIRT) analysis, (2) multidimensional computerized adaptive test (MCAT) simulations with analyses of accuracy and precision, and (3) external validity.Results: Five hundred and seventeen patients participated in this study. The MIRT analysis found that all items displayed good fit with the multidimensional graded response model, with satisfactory reliability for each dimension. The SQoL-MCAT was 39% shorter than the fixed-length SQoL questionnaire and had satisfactory accuracy (levels of correlation >0.9) and precision (standard error of measurement <0.55 and root mean square error <0.3). External validity was confirmed via correlations between the SQoL-MCAT dimension scores and symptomatology scores.Conclusion: The SQoL-MCAT is the first computerized adaptive QoL questionnaire for patients with schizophrenia. Tailored for patient characteristics and significantly shorter than the paper-based version, the SQoL-MCAT may improve the feasibility of assessing QoL in clinical practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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38. An explanatory model of authentic leadership, flourishing and work–family balance of nurses in French hospitals.
- Author
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Chevalier, Séverine, Coillot, Hélène, Colombat, Philippe, Bosselut, Grégoire, Guilbert, Laure, and Fouquereau, Evelyne
- Subjects
STRUCTURAL equation modeling ,STATISTICS ,NURSING models ,CROSS-sectional method ,SELF-evaluation ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,WORK-life balance ,MENTAL health ,SATISFACTION ,HOSPITAL nursing staff ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,PUBLIC hospitals ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,MANAGEMENT styles ,FAMILY relations ,PROPRIETARY hospitals ,INDUSTRIAL hygiene ,SUPERVISION of employees ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
Purpose: This study aims to investigate the relationship between a positive leadership style [i.e. authentic leadership (AL)] and nurses' psychological health (i.e. nurses' flourishing and satisfaction with work–family balance), including psychological capital (PsyCap) as a mediational variable. Design/methodology/approach: A cross-sectional study was conducted with a self-report questionnaire including 1,076 nurses from public and private hospitals in France. Findings: Structural equation modeling results revealed that AL is related to nurses' flourishing and satisfaction with work–family balance and that PsyCap acted as a partial mediator between this leadership style and positive outcomes. Practical implications: This research indicated that hospitals can enhance nurses' psychological health not only in their work but also in their lives in general by improving leaders' authentic management style and developing PsyCap (e.g. staffing, training and development). Originality/value: An original feature of this paper concerns its focus on the mediating role of PsyCap in the relationship between AL and these positive outcomes. Moreover, this study underlined the influence of leadership style on nurses' psychological health beyond occupational health. The research makes a valuable contribution to the existing AL literature by establishing a new explanatory model of AL and nurses' psychological health in the French context. It also highlights the interest in developing this leadership style in health-care settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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39. The Omission of Young Children in the French Census: What Can Linked Census Data Reveal?
- Author
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Tomkinson, John
- Subjects
CHILDREN ,SURVEYS ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DATA quality - Abstract
Copyright of Population (00324663) is the property of Institut National d'Etudes Demographiques and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Effects of self‐generated graphic organizers on learning depend on in‐task guidance.
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Colliot, Tiphaine and Jamet, Éric
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LEARNING assessment ,ANALYSIS of variance ,AUDIOVISUAL materials ,COMPARATIVE studies ,COMPUTER assisted instruction ,STATISTICAL correlation ,GRAPHIC arts ,LEARNING strategies ,MEMORY ,MULTIMEDIA systems ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,PSYCHOLOGY ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SCHOOL environment ,TIME ,STATISTICAL power analysis ,TASK performance ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,PRE-tests & post-tests ,EDUCATIONAL outcomes ,INTER-observer reliability ,UNDERGRADUATES ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
We investigated the effects of readymade versus self‐generated graphic organizers (GOs) on learning, comparing the performances of undergraduates (N = 81) tasked with learning a multimedia document. This document was either presented on its own (control group), with a readymade GO, or with a blank GO that students had to fill in either before or during the learning of the document. In line with previous research, adding a readymade GO increased students' memorization and transfer scores, compared with controls. By displaying the main ideas in the text and their hierarchical relations, GOs act as visual aids to learning. Results showed that self‐generating a GO was no more beneficial than viewing a readymade GO when students were placed in a dual‐task situation (generation + learning). However, when the students' information processing was guided by sequencing these tasks (generation then learning), they outperformed the control and readymade groups on memorization and comprehension. Lay Description: What is already known about this topic: Graphic organizers (GOs) consist in visual displays showing the main ideas of a text and their interrelations.Adding GOs to pedagogical document have been shown to improve students' learning.However, self‐generating GOs has been proven to be detrimental for learning in several studies. What this paper adds: In previous studies, self‐generation of graphic organizers (GOs) have often been carried out while learning, however this task should be separated from the learning task.In the present study, students' learning performances increased when the self‐generated task was separated from the learning task compared to a condition with a readymade GO.These benefits on learning were not observed when the self‐generated activity was not guided. Implications for practitioners: Graphic organizers gathering all the key elements of a multimedia document and highlighting the structure of this document should be used in order to increase students' learning.Students should not be placed in double‐task situation when learning from a pedagogical document.In‐task guidance should be provided when self‐generative tasks are performed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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41. Nurses' and nursing assistants' emotional skills: A major determinant of motivation for patient education.
- Author
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Lelorain, Sophie, Bachelet, Adeline, Goncalves, Virginie, Wortel, Erica, Billes, Marine, Seillier, Mélanie, Bertin, Nicole, and Bourgoin, Maryline
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ABILITY ,ANALYSIS of variance ,AUTONOMY (Psychology) ,CHI-squared test ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,STATISTICAL correlation ,EMOTIONS ,FACTOR analysis ,HOSPITALS ,MATHEMATICAL models ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,PSYCHOLOGY of nurses ,NURSES' aides ,NURSING ,PATIENT education ,PERSONNEL management ,PROFESSIONS ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,STATISTICS ,TRAINING ,THEORY ,DATA analysis ,JOB performance ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,CROSS-sectional method ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Advanced Nursing (John Wiley & Sons, Inc.) is the property of John Wiley & Sons, Inc. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. On the ability of the SF-6D to capture the consequences of chronic illnesses on subjective well-being: Evidence from France.
- Author
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Tessier, Philippe and Wolff, François-Charles
- Subjects
- *
CHRONIC diseases & psychology , *CROSS-sectional method , *MENTAL health , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *MENTAL illness , *ANXIETY , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHRONIC diseases , *SURVEYS , *QUALITY of life , *HAPPINESS , *FACTOR analysis , *WELL-being , *MENTAL depression , *EVALUATION - Abstract
Using cross-sectional data from a representative sample of the French population (the 2008 Disability Health survey), this paper examines whether the SF-6D, a widely used preference-based measure of health-related quality of life in economic evaluations, fully captures the variation in subjective well-being (SWB) due to chronic illnesses. We conduct a mediation analysis to disentangle the direct and indirect, through the SF-6D, effects of various chronic conditions on SWB (happiness). Our results show that the SF-6D reflects changes in happiness due to most illnesses except mental illness. Changes in SWB mediated by the SF-6D account for 74% of the total effect. The variation unexplained by the SF-6D is significant and increases substantially in the presence of multimorbidity when a chronic illness is combined with anxiety or depression. Overall, our results suggest that the SF-6D incompletely captures the subjective experience of chronically ill patients, especially those with comorbid conditions. • 74% of the effect of chronic illness on happiness is captured by the SF-6D. • The SF-6D does not fully capture the effect of mental illness on happiness. • The effect not captured by the SF-6D increases significantly with multimorbidity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
43. Development and evaluation of the psychometric properties of a new measure of athlete insomnia: Insomnia in Response to Sports‐related Stress Test questionnaire.
- Author
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Nédélec, Mathieu, Chauvineau, Maxime, and Martinent, Guillaume
- Subjects
RISK assessment ,MULTITRAIT multimethod techniques ,CRONBACH'S alpha ,AROUSAL (Physiology) ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,ELITE athletes ,INSOMNIA ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,RESEARCH methodology ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,SPORTS events ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,CONVALESCENCE ,DISEASE susceptibility ,FACTOR analysis ,MEDICAL screening ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,SENSITIVITY & specificity (Statistics) ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
To develop and validate the Insomnia in Response to Sports‐related Stress Test (IRSST) questionnaire, a new specific instrument with the goal of sensitively measuring vulnerability to sport‐specific stressful situations among elite athletes. Five hundred and thirty‐one competitive elite athletes (mean age = 17.6 ± 4.4 years) completed the Ford Insomnia Response to Stress Test (FIRST) questionnaire and the IRSST, a six‐item questionnaire developed to assess the level of sleep disturbance in response to the commonly experienced sport‐specific stressful situations. A development and validation process including substantive, structural, and external stages was used in the present study. One eigenvalue of the exploratory factor analyses was greater than 1.0 (i.e., 2.91, 48.52% of explained variance) whereas the scree test provided evidence for a one‐factor solution, with all the six items achieving a loading of 0.40 or higher on the factor. Cronbach alpha was 0.77 and provided evidence for the reliability of the IRSST score. The correlation between IRSST and FIRST scores was 0.47 (p < 0.001, moderate effect size). These results provide strong evidence for construct validity, indicating that the IRSST is a promising scale for assessing the likelihood of sleep disruption due to sports‐related stressful situations. The results of reliability and correlational analyses provided further evidence of the promising psychometric properties of the IRSST. We believe that the IRSST could provide to the sport and sleep science communities a sleep screening tool for use in this unique population. Highlights: The Insomnia in Response to Sports‐related Stress Test (IRSST) questionnaire is a promising new specific instrument for assessing the likelihood of sleep disruption due to sports‐related stressful situationsThe IRSST could provide to the sport and sleep science communities a sleep screening tool for use in the unique population of competitive elite athletesThe IRSST can be used to identify athletes with sleep difficulties related to sports‐specific stressful situations (e.g., training, competition, injury) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
44. Smoking increases the risk of post-acute COVID-19 syndrome: Results from a French community-based survey.
- Author
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Barthélémy, Hugues, Mougenot, Emmanuelle, Duracinsky, Martin, Salmon-Ceron, Dominique, Bonini, Jennifer, Péretz, Fabienne, Chassany, Olivier, and Carrieri, Patrizia
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HYPERTENSION ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,POST-acute COVID-19 syndrome ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,SELF-evaluation ,CUTANEOUS manifestations of general diseases ,RISK assessment ,MUSCLE weakness ,DYSPNEA ,TACHYCARDIA ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SMELL disorders ,SMOKING ,DATA analysis software ,FATIGUE (Physiology) ,HEADACHE ,ODDS ratio ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
introduction We aimed to estimate the prevalence and incidence of specific symptoms and predictors of post-acute COVID-19 syndrome using data collected from an anonymous online survey. methods We included adult participants with symptoms ≥60 days (D60+), fulfilling the World Health Organization COVID-19 cases definition, and/or hospitalized for COVID-19 at the time of infection (D0). Self-reported symptoms were collected at D0 and D60+. Logistic regression was performed to identify factors associated with self-reported cutaneous signs prevalence and self-reported tachycardia and/ or HBP incidence on D60+. results From April to June 2020, 956 members of a Twitter long-term COVID-19 community were included in the study population: 81% were women, 81% were aged <50 year, 22% were smokers, and 95% have never been hospitalized. At D60+, the 956 participants reported a broad spectrum of symptoms which were also present at D0+. At D60+, 16% and 39% of participants reported cutaneous signs and tachycardia and/or hypertension, respectively. The incidence of self-reported tachycardia and/or hypertension at D60+ was 12%. Female gender (AOR=2.56; 95% CI: 1.22-6.1) and smoking (AOR=2.34; 95% CI: 1.39-3.92) were associated with prevalence of cutaneous signs at D60+. Smoking (AOR=2.05; 95% CI: 1.23.47) was the main correlate of tachycardia and/or HBP incidence at D60+. conclusions The incidence of self-reported tachycardia and/or hypertension is not negligible and suggests an interaction between COVID-19 and smoking. Reinforcing symptoms monitoring of people after acute COVID-19, mainly women and smokers, and expanding the promotion of smoking cessation strategies are novel priorities in this COVID-19 era. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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45. Evaluating the Peer Education Project in secondary schools.
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Eisenstein, Carin, Zamperoni, Victoria, Humphrey, Neil, Deighton, Jessica, Wolpert, Miranda, Rosan, Camilla, Bohan, Helen, A. Kousoulis, Antonis, Promberger, Marianne, and Edbrooke-Childs, Julian
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ABILITY ,CHILD behavior ,CLINICAL trials ,CONFIDENCE ,EMOTIONS ,HEALTH education ,HEALTH promotion ,PSYCHOLOGY of high school students ,MENTAL health ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SCHOOL environment ,HEALTH self-care ,TEACHER-student relationships ,TRAINING ,AFFINITY groups ,GROUP process ,SOCIAL support ,PRE-tests & post-tests ,EDUCATIONAL outcomes ,HEALTH literacy ,EVALUATION of human services programs - Abstract
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to determine the efficacy of the Peer Education Project (PEP), a school-based, peer-led intervention designed to support secondary school students to develop the skills and knowledge they need to safeguard their mental health and that of their peers.Design/methodology/approach Six schools from across England and the Channel Islands took part in an evaluation of the PEP across the 2016/2017 academic year. In total, 45 trained peer educators from the sixth form and 455 Year 7 students completed pre- and post-questionnaires assessing their emotional and behavioural difficulties, perceived school climate, and knowledge, skills and confidence related to mental health.Findings Results indicate that participation in the PEP is associated with significant improvement in key skills among both peer educators and student trainees, and in understanding of key terms and readiness to support others among trainees. Most students would recommend participation in the programme to other students.Originality/value While peer education has been found to be effective in some areas of health promotion, research on the effectiveness of peer-led mental health education programmes in schools is limited. This study contributes evidence around the efficacy of a new peer education programme that can be implemented in secondary schools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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46. Beliefs about group malleability and out-group attitudes: The mediating role of perceived threat in interactions with out-group members.
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Simão, Claudia and Brauer, Markus
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ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,STATISTICAL correlation ,FEAR ,GROUP identity ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,PREJUDICES ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,STATISTICS ,GROUP process ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Recent research suggests that inducing fixed (rather than malleable) beliefs about groups leads to more negative attitudes toward out-groups. The present paper identifies the underlying mechanism of this effect. We show that individuals with a fixed belief about groups tend to construe intergroup settings as threatening situations that might reveal shortcomings of their in-group (perceived threat). In the present research, we measured (Study 1) and manipulated (Study 2) participants' lay theories about group malleability. We found that the extent to which individuals had an entity (versus an incremental) group theory influenced the level of threat they felt when interacting with out-group members, and that perceived threat in turn affected their level of ethnocentrism and prejudice. These findings shed new light on the role of lay theories in intergroup attitudes and suggest new ways to reduce prejudice. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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47. The role of scaffolding in improving information seeking in videos.
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Cojean, Salomé and Jamet, Eric
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ANALYSIS of variance ,CHI-squared test ,COLLEGE students ,PHILOSOPHY of education ,MATHEMATICAL models ,HUMAN multitasking ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,REGRESSION analysis ,RESEARCH funding ,SCHOOL environment ,SUCCESS ,THOUGHT & thinking ,TIME ,VIDEO recording ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,THEORY ,TEACHING methods ,INFORMATION-seeking behavior ,SCREEN time ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Information seeking (IS) has become a critical activity in video‐based environments. Up to now, the effects of support on information seeking (i.e., scaffolding) have seldom been assessed. The twofold aim of the current study was to (a) assess the effects of scaffolding on IS in videos and (b) determine the characteristics of the users' mental models after an IS activity with or without scaffolding. We divided 50 participants into two groups that either did or did not benefit from initial scaffolding during an IS task. Both groups then had to perform a localization task without any further access to scaffolding. Results showed that scaffolding the video by providing a table of contents and markers on a timeline helped students to engage in highly efficient IS, but they had less accurate mental representations of the video than those without scaffolding. The hypothesis that scaffolding provides a usable but external model was therefore supported. Lay Description: What is already known about this topic: Videos are increasingly used in learning.Searching for information in videos may be a complex activity.So far, very few studies have been conducted on the potential effect of scaffolding videos during an information‐seeking (IS) task. What this paper adds: In this study, we put in place the scaffolding of the video by adding a table of contents and markers on the timeline.Structuration and segmentation have positive effects on the performance in IS, in terms of response success, time spent on each search, relevance, and perceived difficulty.Scaffolding has a negative impact on the users' internal representations of the video. Implications for practice: Incorporating a table of contents and a structured timeline into a video facilitates the search activity.Without scaffolding, the search activity is longer and cognitively more costly.Paradoxically, users have a poorer representation of the video (i.e., poorer mental model) after the IS task when they were given scaffolding.Future studies should focus on the benefits of providing structuring and segmentation in learning tasks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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48. From childhood to adulthood: health care use in individuals with cerebral palsy.
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Roquet, Marion, Garlantezec, Ronan, Remy‐Neris, Olivier, Sacaze, Elise, Gallien, Philippe, Ropars, Juliette, Houx, Laetitia, Pons, Christelle, Brochard, Sylvain, and Remy-Neris, Olivier
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CHILDREN with cerebral palsy ,OUTPATIENT medical care ,MEDICAL care ,REHABILITATION centers ,DEVELOPMENTAL disabilities ,AGE distribution ,CEREBRAL palsy ,EVALUATION of medical care ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,DISEASE progression ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Copyright of Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2018
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49. Factors associated with the introduction of complementary feeding in the French ELFE cohort study.
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Ksiazek, Eléa, Nicklaus, Sophie, Bournez, Marie, Wagner, Sandra, Charles, Marie‐Aline, Lioret, Sandrine, de Lauzon‐Guillain, Blandine, Kersuzan, Claire, Tichit, Christine, Gojard, Séverine, and Thierry, Xavier
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ARTIFICIAL feeding ,CAREGIVERS ,DEMOGRAPHY ,INTERVIEWING ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,TELEPHONES ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,DEMOGRAPHIC characteristics - Abstract
Abstract: The objectives of this study were to estimate the age of complementary feeding introduction (CFI) and investigate the related health, demographic, and socio‐economic factors. Analyses were based on 10,931 infants from the French national birth cohort ELFE, born in 2011. Health, demographic, and socio‐economic data concerning infants and parents were collected at birth (face‐to‐face interviews and medical records) and 2 months (telephone interviews). Data on milk feeding and CFI practices were collected at birth and 2 months then monthly from 3 to 10 months using online or paper questionnaires. The associations between both health and social factors and CFI age were tested by multivariable multinomial logistic regressions. The mean CFI age was 5.2 ± 1.2 months; 26% of the infants started complementary feeding before 4 months of age (CF < 4 months), 62% between 4 and 6 months of age, and 12% after 6 months of age (CF > 6 months). CF < 4 months was more likely when mothers smoked, were overweight/obese, younger (<29 years), and used their personal experience as an information source in child caregiving and when both parents were not born in France. CF < 4 months was less likely when the infant was a girl, second‐born, when the mother breastfed longer, and had attended at least one birth preparation class. Mothers of second‐born infants and who breastfed their child longer were more likely to introduce CF > 6 months. Couples in which fathers were born in France and mothers were not born in France were less likely to introduce CF > 6 months. CF < 4 months occurred in more than 25% of the cases. It is important to continue promoting clear CFI recommendations, especially in smoking, overweight, young, not born in France, and nonbreastfeeding mothers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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50. Use of infant formula in the ELFE study: The association with social and health-related factors.
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Wagner, Sandra, Lauzon-Guillain, Blandine, Davisse-Paturet, Camille, Lioret, Sandrine, Charles, Marie Aline, Ksiazek, Eléa, Bournez, Marie, Nicklaus, Sophie, Dufourg, Marie-Noëlle, and Bois, Corinne
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ALLERGIES ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,DIARRHEA in children ,ELEMENTAL diet ,EMPLOYMENT reentry ,GASTROESOPHAGEAL reflux in children ,HEALTH status indicators ,INCOME ,INFANT formulas ,PREMATURE infants ,INTERVIEWING ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,PROBABILITY theory ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,SEX distribution ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,PROBIOTICS ,PREBIOTICS ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ODDS ratio - Abstract
Breastfeeding is recommended until 6 months of age, but a wide range of infant formula is available for nonbreastfed or partially breastfed infants. Our aim was to describe infant formula selection and to examine social- and health-related factors associated with this selection. Analyses were based on 13,291 infants from the French national birth cohort Etude Longitudinale Française depuis l'Enfance. Infant diet was assessed at Month 2 by phone interview and monthly from Months 3 to 10 via internet/paper questionnaires. Infant formulas were categorized in 6 groups: extensively or partially hydrolysed, regular with or without prebiotics/probiotics, and thickened with or without prebiotics/probiotics. Associations between type of infant formula used at 2 months and family or infant characteristics were assessed by multinomial logistic regressions. At Month 2, 58.1% of formula-fed infants were fed with formula enriched in prebiotics/probiotics, 31.5% with thickened formula, and 1.4% with extensively hydrolysed formula. The proportion of formula-fed infants increased regularly, but the type of infant formula used was fairly stable between 2 and 10 months. At Month 2, extensively hydrolysed formulas were more likely to be used in infants with diarrhoea or regurgitation problems. Partially hydrolysed formulas were more often used in families with high income, with a history of allergy, or with infants with regurgitation issues. Thickened formulas were used more with boys, preterm infants, infants with regurgitation issues, or in cases of early maternal return to work. The main factors related to the selection of infant formula were family and infant health-related ones. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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