18 results on '"Hamill, Kate"'
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2. Zine Production with Queer Youth and Pre-Service Teachers in New Brunswick, Canada: Exploring Connections, Divergences, and Visual Practices
- Author
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Burkholder, Casey, Hamill, Kate, and Thorpe, Amelia
- Abstract
Queer, trans, and non-binary youth navigate school spaces punctuated by erasures, silences, and oppression, and resist these experiences through solidarity-building, activism, and art practice. In this article, we seek to centre experiences of school and society as important spheres of inquiry through participatory visual research with queer, trans, and non-binary young people (ages 12 to 17) and pre-service teachers and community educators (ages 22 to 40) in Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada. Using an intersectional lens, we consider how intersecting power structures--gender, race, class, and disability--produce unequal impacts in relation to school and social experiences in New Brunswick. Centring youth agency, we position youth as knowledge producers through participatory visual methods of inquiry, including the making of zines (DIY print productions). With youth and pre-service teachers, through inquiry into existing and desired school and social experiences, we seek to make visual the practice of intergenerational solidarity building through zine production.
- Published
- 2021
3. ON ADAPTATIONS: hen writing an adaptation, what are your feelings about fidelity to the original source material?
- Author
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Cataluna, Lee, Hamill, Kate, Dickstein, Mindi, Lord, Tim J., Spangler, Matthew, and Hatcher, Jeffrey
- Subjects
ADAPTABILITY (Personality) ,SOCIAL adjustment - Abstract
The article focuses on the views of experts on adaptations including Lee Cataluna has written adaptations of children's books for the stage and young audiences have strong attachment to the original story, Kate Hamill take a new play approach which leads to irreverent, radical adaptation as a collaboration between herself and another author and Matthew Spangler written an adaptation for the stage and thinks that one needs to remember that adaptation has to function in a theatrical context.
- Published
- 2023
4. 42739 Microencapsulated Benzoyl Peroxide, 5%, Is Well Accepted by Patients With Rosacea: Patient- Reported Outcomes and Results From Two Phase 3, Randomized, Vehicle-Controlled Trials
- Author
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Bhatia, Neal D., Werschler, Wm. Philip, Levy-Hacham, Ofra, Hamill, Kate, and Baldwin, Hilary
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Supplemental Material, 815893_online_supplement - Development and Evaluation of a Recovery College Fidelity Measure
- Author
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Toney, Rebecca, Knight, Jane, Hamill, Kate, Taylor, Anna, Henderson, Claire, Crowther, Adam, Meddings, Sara, Barbic, Skye, Jennings, Helen, Pollock, Kristian, Bates, Peter, Repper, Julie, and Slade, Mike
- Subjects
FOS: Psychology ,FOS: Clinical medicine ,170199 Psychology not elsewhere classified ,110319 Psychiatry (incl. Psychotherapy) - Abstract
Supplemental Material, 815893_online_supplement for Development and Evaluation of a Recovery College Fidelity Measure by Rebecca Toney, Jane Knight, Kate Hamill, Anna Taylor, Claire Henderson, Adam Crowther, Sara Meddings, Skye Barbic, Helen Jennings, Kristian Pollock, Peter Bates, Julie Repper, and Mike Slade in The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. RECOLLECT Fidelity Measure
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Toney, Rebecca, primary, Knight, Jane, additional, Hamill, Kate, additional, Taylor, Anna, additional, Henderson, Claire, additional, Crowther, Adam, additional, Meddings, Sara, additional, Barbic, Skye, additional, Jennings, Helen, additional, Pollock, Kristian, additional, Bates, Peter, additional, Repper, Julie, additional, and Slade, Mike, additional
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Development and Evaluation of a Recovery College Fidelity Measure
- Author
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Toney, Rebecca, primary, Knight, Jane, additional, Hamill, Kate, additional, Taylor, Anna, additional, Henderson, Claire, additional, Crowther, Adam, additional, Meddings, Sara, additional, Barbic, Skye, additional, Jennings, Helen, additional, Pollock, Kristian, additional, Bates, Peter, additional, Repper, Julie, additional, and Slade, Mike, additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Mechanisms of Action and Outcomes for Students in Recovery Colleges
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Toney, Rebecca, primary, Elton, Daniel, additional, Munday, Emma, additional, Hamill, Kate, additional, Crowther, Adam, additional, Meddings, Sara, additional, Taylor, Anna, additional, Henderson, Claire, additional, Jennings, Helen, additional, Waring, Justin, additional, Pollock, Kristian, additional, Bates, Peter, additional, and Slade, Mike, additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Development and Evaluation of a Recovery College Fidelity Measure.
- Author
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Toney, Rebecca, Knight, Jane, Hamill, Kate, Taylor, Anna, Henderson, Claire, Crowther, Adam, Meddings, Sara, Barbic, Skye, Jennings, Helen, Pollock, Kristian, Bates, Peter, Repper, Julie, and Slade, Mike
- Subjects
COLLEGE teachers ,SEMI-structured interviews ,LOYALTY ,SERVICE learning ,ADULT learning ,RESEARCH ,SOCIAL participation ,RESEARCH evaluation ,RESEARCH methodology ,EVALUATION research ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MEDICAL care research ,REHABILITATION of people with mental illness ,COMPARATIVE studies ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,SCHOOLS ,IMPACT of Event Scale ,RESEARCH funding ,PATIENT education ,NONPROFESSIONAL education ,MENTAL health services - Abstract
Objective: Recovery Colleges are widespread, with little empirical research on their key components. This study aimed to characterize key components of Recovery Colleges and to develop and evaluate a developmental checklist and a quantitative fidelity measure.Methods: Key components were identified through a systematized literature review, international expert consultation (n = 77), and semistructured interviews with Recovery College managers across England (n = 10). A checklist was developed and refined through semistructured interviews with Recovery College students, trainers, and managers (n = 44) in 3 sites. A fidelity measure was adapted from the checklist and evaluated with Recovery College managers (n = 39, 52%), clinicians providing psychoeducational courses (n = 11), and adult education lecturers (n = 10).Results: Twelve components were identified, comprising 7 nonmodifiable components (Valuing Equality, Learning, Tailored to the Student, Coproduction of the Recovery College, Social Connectedness, Community Focus, and Commitment to Recovery) and 5 modifiable components (Available to All, Location, Distinctiveness of Course Content, Strengths Based, and Progressive). The checklist has service user student, peer trainer, and manager versions. The fidelity measure meets scaling assumptions and demonstrates adequate internal consistency (0.72), test-retest reliability (0.60), content validity, and discriminant validity.Conclusions: Coproduction and an orientation to adult learning should be the highest priority in developing Recovery Colleges. The creation of the first theory-based empirically evaluated developmental checklist and fidelity measure (both downloadable at researchintorecovery.com/recollect ) for Recovery Colleges will help service users understand what Recovery Colleges offer, will inform decision making by clinicians and commissioners about Recovery Colleges, and will enable formal evaluation of their impact on students. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. EXPANSIVE INSECTS
- Author
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Hamill, Kate
- Subjects
Insects ,Animal migration ,Anthropology/archeology/folklore ,Biological sciences ,Earth sciences ,Science and technology ,Zoology and wildlife conservation - Abstract
Climate warming has increased the amount of suitable breeding ground available to a few fortunate insects whose need for warmth used to confine them to scattered tepid areas. According to [...]
- Published
- 2001
11. 'Grease' pros
- Author
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Hamill, Kate
- Subjects
Arts and entertainment industries ,Business - Abstract
A quick snafu: In the Feb. 1 issue of Back Stage, the editorial, 'How Real Is the 'Grease' Reality Show?,' seemed to imply that many of the performers/competitors were untrained. [...]
- Published
- 2007
12. Jungle Theater.
- Author
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Hamill, Kate
- Subjects
THEATER ,THEATER production & direction - Abstract
The article discusses author's experience of working with theater, Jungle Theater located in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and production of the play "Little Woman" directed by artistic director Sarah Rasmussen and written by the author. She discusses the artistic director and team's efforts to encourage the writer and challenges faced for the feminist play.
- Published
- 2018
13. Mechanisms of action and outcomes for students in Recovery Colleges
- Author
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Toney, Rebecca, Elton, Daniel, Munday, Emma, Hamill, Kate, Crowther, Adam, Meddings, Sara, Taylor, Anna, Henderson, Claire, Jennings, Helen, Waring, Justin, Pollock, Kristian, Bates, Peter, Slade, Mike, Toney, Rebecca, Elton, Daniel, Munday, Emma, Hamill, Kate, Crowther, Adam, Meddings, Sara, Taylor, Anna, Henderson, Claire, Jennings, Helen, Waring, Justin, Pollock, Kristian, Bates, Peter, and Slade, Mike
- Abstract
Objective Recovery Colleges are widespread, with little empirical research on how they work and outcomes they produce. This study aimed to co-produce a change model characterising mechanisms of action and outcomes for mental health service users attending as students at a Recovery College. Methods A systematised review identified all Recovery College publications. Inductive collaborative data analysis by academic researchers and co-researchers with lived experience of ten key papers informed a theoretical framework for mechanisms and outcome for students, which was refined through deductive analysis of 34 further publications. A change model was co-produced and then refined through stakeholder interviews (n=33). Results Three mechanisms of action for Recovery College students were identified: empowering environment (safety, respect, supporting choices), enabling different relationships (power, peers, working together) and facilitating personal growth (e.g. co-produced learning, strengths, celebrating success). Outcomes were change in the student (e.g. self-understanding, self-confidence) and changes in the student’s life (e.g. occupational, social, service use). A co-produced change model mapping mechanisms of action to outcomes was created. Conclusions The key features identified as differentiating Recovery Colleges from traditional services are an empowering environment, enabling relationships and growth orientation. Recovery Colleges may benefit most attenders, but mental health service users to particularly encourage to enrol may include those who lack confidence, those who services struggle to engage with, those who will benefit from exposure to peer role models, and those lacking social capital. The change model provides the first testable characterisation of mechanisms and outcomes, allowing formal evaluation of Recovery Colleges.
14. Mechanisms of action and outcomes for students in Recovery Colleges
- Author
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Toney, Rebecca, Elton, Daniel, Munday, Emma, Hamill, Kate, Crowther, Adam, Meddings, Sara, Taylor, Anna, Henderson, Claire, Jennings, Helen, Waring, Justin, Pollock, Kristian, Bates, Peter, Slade, Mike, Toney, Rebecca, Elton, Daniel, Munday, Emma, Hamill, Kate, Crowther, Adam, Meddings, Sara, Taylor, Anna, Henderson, Claire, Jennings, Helen, Waring, Justin, Pollock, Kristian, Bates, Peter, and Slade, Mike
- Abstract
Objective Recovery Colleges are widespread, with little empirical research on how they work and outcomes they produce. This study aimed to co-produce a change model characterising mechanisms of action and outcomes for mental health service users attending as students at a Recovery College. Methods A systematised review identified all Recovery College publications. Inductive collaborative data analysis by academic researchers and co-researchers with lived experience of ten key papers informed a theoretical framework for mechanisms and outcome for students, which was refined through deductive analysis of 34 further publications. A change model was co-produced and then refined through stakeholder interviews (n=33). Results Three mechanisms of action for Recovery College students were identified: empowering environment (safety, respect, supporting choices), enabling different relationships (power, peers, working together) and facilitating personal growth (e.g. co-produced learning, strengths, celebrating success). Outcomes were change in the student (e.g. self-understanding, self-confidence) and changes in the student’s life (e.g. occupational, social, service use). A co-produced change model mapping mechanisms of action to outcomes was created. Conclusions The key features identified as differentiating Recovery Colleges from traditional services are an empowering environment, enabling relationships and growth orientation. Recovery Colleges may benefit most attenders, but mental health service users to particularly encourage to enrol may include those who lack confidence, those who services struggle to engage with, those who will benefit from exposure to peer role models, and those lacking social capital. The change model provides the first testable characterisation of mechanisms and outcomes, allowing formal evaluation of Recovery Colleges.
15. Mechanisms of action and outcomes for students in Recovery Colleges
- Author
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Toney, Rebecca, Elton, Daniel, Munday, Emma, Hamill, Kate, Crowther, Adam, Meddings, Sara, Taylor, Anna, Henderson, Claire, Jennings, Helen, Waring, Justin, Pollock, Kristian, Bates, Peter, Slade, Mike, Toney, Rebecca, Elton, Daniel, Munday, Emma, Hamill, Kate, Crowther, Adam, Meddings, Sara, Taylor, Anna, Henderson, Claire, Jennings, Helen, Waring, Justin, Pollock, Kristian, Bates, Peter, and Slade, Mike
- Abstract
Objective Recovery Colleges are widespread, with little empirical research on how they work and outcomes they produce. This study aimed to co-produce a change model characterising mechanisms of action and outcomes for mental health service users attending as students at a Recovery College. Methods A systematised review identified all Recovery College publications. Inductive collaborative data analysis by academic researchers and co-researchers with lived experience of ten key papers informed a theoretical framework for mechanisms and outcome for students, which was refined through deductive analysis of 34 further publications. A change model was co-produced and then refined through stakeholder interviews (n=33). Results Three mechanisms of action for Recovery College students were identified: empowering environment (safety, respect, supporting choices), enabling different relationships (power, peers, working together) and facilitating personal growth (e.g. co-produced learning, strengths, celebrating success). Outcomes were change in the student (e.g. self-understanding, self-confidence) and changes in the student’s life (e.g. occupational, social, service use). A co-produced change model mapping mechanisms of action to outcomes was created. Conclusions The key features identified as differentiating Recovery Colleges from traditional services are an empowering environment, enabling relationships and growth orientation. Recovery Colleges may benefit most attenders, but mental health service users to particularly encourage to enrol may include those who lack confidence, those who services struggle to engage with, those who will benefit from exposure to peer role models, and those lacking social capital. The change model provides the first testable characterisation of mechanisms and outcomes, allowing formal evaluation of Recovery Colleges.
16. Mechanisms of action and outcomes for students in Recovery Colleges
- Author
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Toney, Rebecca, Elton, Daniel, Munday, Emma, Hamill, Kate, Crowther, Adam, Meddings, Sara, Taylor, Anna, Henderson, Claire, Jennings, Helen, Waring, Justin, Pollock, Kristian, Bates, Peter, Slade, Mike, Toney, Rebecca, Elton, Daniel, Munday, Emma, Hamill, Kate, Crowther, Adam, Meddings, Sara, Taylor, Anna, Henderson, Claire, Jennings, Helen, Waring, Justin, Pollock, Kristian, Bates, Peter, and Slade, Mike
- Abstract
Objective Recovery Colleges are widespread, with little empirical research on how they work and outcomes they produce. This study aimed to co-produce a change model characterising mechanisms of action and outcomes for mental health service users attending as students at a Recovery College. Methods A systematised review identified all Recovery College publications. Inductive collaborative data analysis by academic researchers and co-researchers with lived experience of ten key papers informed a theoretical framework for mechanisms and outcome for students, which was refined through deductive analysis of 34 further publications. A change model was co-produced and then refined through stakeholder interviews (n=33). Results Three mechanisms of action for Recovery College students were identified: empowering environment (safety, respect, supporting choices), enabling different relationships (power, peers, working together) and facilitating personal growth (e.g. co-produced learning, strengths, celebrating success). Outcomes were change in the student (e.g. self-understanding, self-confidence) and changes in the student’s life (e.g. occupational, social, service use). A co-produced change model mapping mechanisms of action to outcomes was created. Conclusions The key features identified as differentiating Recovery Colleges from traditional services are an empowering environment, enabling relationships and growth orientation. Recovery Colleges may benefit most attenders, but mental health service users to particularly encourage to enrol may include those who lack confidence, those who services struggle to engage with, those who will benefit from exposure to peer role models, and those lacking social capital. The change model provides the first testable characterisation of mechanisms and outcomes, allowing formal evaluation of Recovery Colleges.
17. Mechanisms of action and outcomes for students in Recovery Colleges
- Author
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Toney, Rebecca, Elton, Daniel, Munday, Emma, Hamill, Kate, Crowther, Adam, Meddings, Sara, Taylor, Anna, Henderson, Claire, Jennings, Helen, Waring, Justin, Pollock, Kristian, Bates, Peter, Slade, Mike, Toney, Rebecca, Elton, Daniel, Munday, Emma, Hamill, Kate, Crowther, Adam, Meddings, Sara, Taylor, Anna, Henderson, Claire, Jennings, Helen, Waring, Justin, Pollock, Kristian, Bates, Peter, and Slade, Mike
- Abstract
Objective Recovery Colleges are widespread, with little empirical research on how they work and outcomes they produce. This study aimed to co-produce a change model characterising mechanisms of action and outcomes for mental health service users attending as students at a Recovery College. Methods A systematised review identified all Recovery College publications. Inductive collaborative data analysis by academic researchers and co-researchers with lived experience of ten key papers informed a theoretical framework for mechanisms and outcome for students, which was refined through deductive analysis of 34 further publications. A change model was co-produced and then refined through stakeholder interviews (n=33). Results Three mechanisms of action for Recovery College students were identified: empowering environment (safety, respect, supporting choices), enabling different relationships (power, peers, working together) and facilitating personal growth (e.g. co-produced learning, strengths, celebrating success). Outcomes were change in the student (e.g. self-understanding, self-confidence) and changes in the student’s life (e.g. occupational, social, service use). A co-produced change model mapping mechanisms of action to outcomes was created. Conclusions The key features identified as differentiating Recovery Colleges from traditional services are an empowering environment, enabling relationships and growth orientation. Recovery Colleges may benefit most attenders, but mental health service users to particularly encourage to enrol may include those who lack confidence, those who services struggle to engage with, those who will benefit from exposure to peer role models, and those lacking social capital. The change model provides the first testable characterisation of mechanisms and outcomes, allowing formal evaluation of Recovery Colleges.
18. IN SUM.
- Author
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Hamill, Kate, Weir, Kirsten L., and Van Doren, Heather
- Subjects
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NATURAL history , *TOBACCO , *WHITE shark , *INSECTS , *BREEDING - Abstract
Presents an update on discoveries in natural history as of October 2001. Types of chemical emitted by Nicotiana tabacum; Result of an analysis of the mitochondrial DNA of the great white shark; Effect of climate warming on the breeding of insects that need warm habitat.
- Published
- 2001
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