Researching Children's PerspectivesAnn Lewis, Geoff Lindsay Open University Press, 2000 - 239 páginas The 1990s have been marked by a growing emphasis, in various professional contexts, on obtaining the views of clients, including children. This position is an international one, shared across the developed world, and encapsulated in the UN Convention on the rights of the child. This book addresses the issues and practicalities surrounding the obtaining of children's views, particularly in the research context. The book takes a deliberately and explicitly pluralist stance. Its distinctiveness rests on the scrutiny of methodological issues pertaining to the collection of children's views and practical applications. The book is structured around two main sections. Section 1 examines five aspects of theoretical and conceptual issues (ethical issues and codes of conduct, children's rights, the legal perspective, developmental dimensions and sociological issues). Section 2 illustrates these aspects by focusing on methods and applications in obtaining children's views in specific projects. |
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Página 38
... exercising parental responsibility . Parental responsibility ( the parental right to make decisions ) is not absolute but ... exercise it are obviously curtailed . Only where there is a care order does the local authority have parental ...
... exercising parental responsibility . Parental responsibility ( the parental right to make decisions ) is not absolute but ... exercise it are obviously curtailed . Only where there is a care order does the local authority have parental ...
Página 45
... exercise of parental responsibility but the integrity of the family is protected by requiring those who are not parents , step- parents or long term carers of the child to obtain the prior permission of the court before making their ...
... exercise of parental responsibility but the integrity of the family is protected by requiring those who are not parents , step- parents or long term carers of the child to obtain the prior permission of the court before making their ...
Página 118
... exercise power by controlling when she used her switch ; and through all this demonstrated much greater cognitive skills than had previously been recognised . ( Detheridge 1996 ) The effect of the environment in which the activity took ...
... exercise power by controlling when she used her switch ; and through all this demonstrated much greater cognitive skills than had previously been recognised . ( Detheridge 1996 ) The effect of the environment in which the activity took ...
Contenido
ethical issues | 3 |
legal issues | 37 |
a sociological | 59 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
activity adults analysis approach argued asked assessment behaviour bereavement boys British Psychological Society chapter childhood Children Act 1989 children and young children's responses children's rights children's views classroom codes communication competence concerned confidentiality consider constructs context data collection David Fulton decision Detheridge disabilities discussion Educational Research effect ensure ethical example experience explore Falmer feel fieldwork focus gender girls grid gurdwara Hindu important individual informed consent interactions interpretation involved issues language learning difficulties London methodological methods National Curriculum Nesbitt NSPCC Open University parents participant observation particular perceptions practice problem professional protection psychologists Punjabi pupils reflect relation relationship reliability religion religious research process research questions research with children researching children's perspectives role Routledge scale self-concept sensitive topics Sikh situation social Special Educational Needs special schools Stoke-on-Trent Syndrome teachers tion Tracey Tracey's understanding University of Warwick validity Warwick studies young people's young person