Researching Children's PerspectivesMcGraw-Hill Education (UK), 1999 M12 16 - 239 páginas "This is a book which I will return to over time. It carries a powerful, and empowering, message about the task of researching children's views...(It) deserves to find an automatic place in staffroom libraries. I happily recommed it." - Support for Learning" 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. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 6-10 de 88
... example , all members of the BPS must abide by its Code of Conduct . If a chartered psychologist is judged to have carried out research which offends against the Code that person may be sanctioned according to the judgement of ...
... example , a researcher may be insuf- ficiently competent , and hence fail to report all available findings to provide a balanced perspective ; or , in enthusiasm , may focus on one set of results which supports the position the ...
... example concerns psychology . The European Federation of Profes- sional Psychologists Associations ( EFPPA ) sought ... examples are not specific to research , which is just one activity to be undertaken by the professionals concerned ...
... example , if participants ' have the right to be informed of the aims , purposes and likely publication of findings involved in the research and of potential conse- quences for participants ' ( Clause 7 ) how is this to be ensured ? At ...
... example of intrusive research , we have probably come a long way since an experiment by Landis ( 1924 , described in Crafts et al . 1938 ) on emotional reactions . Landis ( 1924 ) compared 25 subjects , mainly adults but including one ...
Contenido
Part 2 Practical applications | 71 |
Part 3 Overview | 187 |
Appendices | 199 |
References | 219 |
Index | 235 |
Back cover | 241 |