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World War One Sources Questions
... important evacuation was.
People who were fortunate enough to have family and friends who live in the country, made their own arrangements to stay with them. Other people considered going to countries which weren't involved in the war, such ...
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WRITE A BRIEF CRITIQUE OF THE RESPONSE OF UK GOVERNMENTS TO THE UN CONVENTION ON THE RIGHTS OF THE CHILD. The United Kingdom ratified the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child on December 1991
... down the number of refugees.
These measures affect the children as much as the parents. Jill Rutter mentioned that asylum seekers are liable to detention at immigration centres along with their children. This has an impact on the life of the ...
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Write a detailed 1,500 word critique of Piaget’ theories. Include the work of Vygotsky, Bruner, Donaldson and Rogoff to discuss and analyse Piaget’s theories
... where they have pulled previous schemas together then adapted and changed them to fit their task through accommodation. Piaget theorised that children's thinking goes through changes at each of four stages (sensory, motor, concrete operations and formal operations) of development ...
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write a holistic and analytical account concerning one aspect of care in a chosen individual who has complex needs, down's syndrome and diabetes
... lives in a six bedded private home for adults with moderate learning disabilities. Previous to this Henry lived at home with his parents until his father died three years ago. After this Henry received counselling through his community nurse in ...
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Young Peoples Attitudes to Fatherhood
... being British white and the rest Asian, black-British, afro-Caribbean, European, Chinese or Arab.
Most of the children were living in two parent households with a third having some kind of parental change. Their background was mostly working class.
Triangulation was also ...
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young peoples' rights - sociology
... young females and ten young males. I am choosing this sample of young people because I want opinions from a wide range of young people aged from eleven to sixteen.
I will also use a sampling frame of adults in which ...
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Youth Curfews What are they and do we need them? A short definition of a curfew is a time of night that if you are under 18 , 16 or whatever the age is
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problems lead to even bigger problems such as deaths, drugs and little children
being educated to think that gang wars and drug lords are the way of life. This will
never stop unless strong actions are taken and maybe a ...
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‘Are Mothers Necessary?’
... baby now occurs. The arousal relaxation cycle leads to trust, security and ultimately attachment. The verbal comfort will lead to self worth, self-esteem that is just one of the many benefits of attachment. Other benefits of attachment are; it helps ...
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‘Due to the Heterogeneous Nature of Sex Offenders as an Offender Groups, the Punishment(s) Available are Inadequate’. Discuss This Statement.
... system of punishment is too largely based on the moral and mental maturity of adults, and is therefore inadequate for children. This issue is the basis behind the introduction of the 'Doli Incapax'. This act stated that 'Children from the ...
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‘Heroines’ is a poem written by Penny Windsor. The poem is about struggling mums trying to escape their lives as mums. By using different techniques the poet makes the poem memorable.
... like heroines". The mums are being compared to a phoenix. A phoenix is said to go up into flames then is reborn from its ashes, stronger. The mums are going to become stronger and better by rising from the household ...
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‘I blame it on their parents’
... to keep these issues in mind as they will have bearing on our understanding of the causes of disturbing behaviour.
For the purposes of this essay however, disturbing behaviour is that which has been identified as causing problems for the ...
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‘Labourer or Worker?’
... about children working 18 hours a day in factories, where some of them weave carpets, in small and congested dark rooms, heads bended , striving to see their woven designs in dim light. Newspapers accuse the sponsors and the owners ...
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‘Non Human animal testing is crucial to the understanding of how humans learn and behave’
... introduce a stimulus and it is in a real environment. Yet this can be hard to examine as there may be many other variables affecting the study and would make it hard to evaluate.
The definition of learning is ...
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‘Policies are developed with the needs and interests of specific individuals and groups in mind’ Using examples from the course, discuss how different kinds of policies affect the lives of children and families in the UK today.
... parents that raise the child and therefore any policy aimed directly at the needs of children is likely to affect the family as well.
Most of us are aware of existing legislation of the protection of children who are ...
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‘Studies have shown that under certain circumstances children can recover from even severe privation’ Bowlby’s maternal deprivation hypothesis stated that a child who is
... room at her home. She was found in 1970 when she was 13 1/2 . She had not been fed adequately, could not stand and had no social skills. She was given education and assistant. Her language railed to reach ...
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“ Children can’t be disciples so they can’t be Christians either
... not be able to be to be disciples.
Some Christians disagree with the statement claim; from a young age children are taught the difference between right and wrong through their parents, Godparents and extended family, children are also very important as ...
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“A Children’s Gathering for Peace”
... school children and the founder of Children Sing for Peace, leading the crowd in singing "We are Children of Peace", written by both the founder and her school age students. The music festival was being recorded to later be aired ...
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“Discuss two explanations of attachment”
... from their mothers at birth and placed in a cage with 2 surrogate mothers, one mother was made of wire and the other was covered in cloth, milk was provided by the wire mother. Harlow found that the monkeys spent ...
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“Evacuation was a great success” Do you agree with this interpretation? Explain your answer using the sources and your own knowledge.
... whenever you see a camera you smile, especially in 1939 when cameras were rare things. The children in the picture may not have been happy about leaving but simply excited about having their picture taken. The photograph also appears to ...
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“Everything that is legal is not necessarily ethical” Critically discuss this statement, drawing on your knowledge and understanding of ethical and legal issues relating to research with children and young people.
... but not all that is legal can be said to be ethical. Ethical practices seek to reach a higher plane than merely attaining legality. Having first ensured that what they plan is legal, researchers must then ensure that the research ...
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“Explain Concepts from the Behaviourist perspective and evaluate strengths and limitations of this perspective in relation to understanding and caring for patients”
... this reason every healthcare professional should have a good understanding of psychology and how psychology can be used to help clients. This essay will firstly give a brief introduction to the behaviourist perspective, then move on to describe how classical ...
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“Fear is a contributing factor in power relations between adults and children”. Critically discuss this statement in relation to at least two of the research papers you have studied so far.
... what rights children should have. This can be seen as an indication of the power adults exercise over children which confines them to subordinate roles within society. Power means different thing to different people, however, it is generally thought of ...
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“Let your children go if you want to keep them.”
... to keep me. By now, I am sure, if I had not been allowed to leave by then, I would have probably developed a burning desire for freedom and, thus, would have left my parents´ "prison" right after my graduation. ...
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“Psychologists are divided in the extent to which they see day care as beneficial to children’s development.” To what extent does day care have a beneficial effect on cognitive and social development?
... order to raise their children at home. This issue is becoming increasingly popular, as the number of mothers' in the United States with young children working outside the home rises. Figures show that between 1975 and 1998 the percentage of ...
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“…play is central to the life of the child…” (Sayeed & Guerin, 200, p.2). Discuss the role of play in young children’s learning with reference to key theories of cognitive development.
... characteristics of play. One of the universal features of play is that it includes motor patterns that are taken from other functions, such as eating and exploring, but in play they don't serve the same function. The motor patterns are ...