Workers’ Health: From Diagnosis to Formative Intervention

Author(s):  
Rodolfo Andrade de Gouveia Vilela ◽  
Marco Antonio Pereira Querol ◽  
Ildeberto Muniz de Almeida ◽  
José Marçal Jackson Filho
Author(s):  
Rodolfo Andrade de Gouveia Vilela ◽  
Susana Vicentina Costa ◽  
Amanda Aparecida Silva Macaia ◽  
Marco Antonio Pereira Querol ◽  
Sayuri Tanaka Maeda ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (3sup1) ◽  
pp. 114-126
Author(s):  
Maria-Melania Lica ◽  
◽  
Annamaria Porkolab ◽  
Irina Muntean ◽  
Adriana Mihai ◽  
...  

The children with diabetes mellitus have often difficulties regarding school adaptation and integration, generated largely by the special conditions of the disease. On the other hand, how the child succeds in this adaptation, interferes with the management of chronic disease and the quality of his life. An important role for the child with diabetes in school is played by the head teachers.The informations about this disease and the attitude towards the children affected by this disease are important variables in this direction. The objective of our study is improving the teachers knowledge and attitude toward diabetes in children by providing quality information and practical intervention techniques. 86 head teachers from elementary and secondary schools were interviewed regarding their knowledge about diabetes in children, and participated to a formative course about this disease. After their participation in a theoretical and practical training course, their knowledge and their attitude have been improved considerably and the follow-up evaluation (after 3 months) indicated a stability of informations and practical techniques for granting first aid, over time. The conclusion is that formative intervention of teachers is an important step in helping children with diabetes to better school adaptation and, also in improving the quality of their life.


Author(s):  
Beth Ferholt ◽  
Monica Nilsson ◽  
Anders Jansson ◽  
Karin Alnervik

The goal of this chapter is to respond to the scarcity of literature on creativity that is relevant both to CHAT and in the field of education. The authors explore Vygotsky's writings on creativity, imagination, art, and play in relation to three Swedish preschool projects that practice a pedagogy of exploratory learning. Also included are discussions of imagination versus realistic thinking, syncretism in children's creative work, and play as a creative activity. Because this study was a formative intervention, the pedagogy of exploratory learning became significant in the analysis. The bulk of the chapter consists of thick descriptions of the projects and discussion of aspects of creativity as they appear in the projects. The data was collected by teachers and a research team that consisted of the authors of this chapter. Data collection in the three projects took place before the intervention took place, during the initial phases of the intervention, and after the intervention had become an annual theme for the preschools. The research was initially guided solely by a cultural historical understanding of creativity, while the analysis brought CHAT into dialogue with postmodern writings that are related to exploratory learning.


Gamification ◽  
2015 ◽  
pp. 139-158
Author(s):  
Beth Ferholt ◽  
Monica Nilsson ◽  
Anders Jansson ◽  
Karin Alnervik

The goal of this chapter is to respond to the scarcity of literature on creativity that is relevant both to CHAT and in the field of education. The authors explore Vygotsky's writings on creativity, imagination, art, and play in relation to three Swedish preschool projects that practice a pedagogy of exploratory learning. Also included are discussions of imagination versus realistic thinking, syncretism in children's creative work, and play as a creative activity. Because this study was a formative intervention, the pedagogy of exploratory learning became significant in the analysis. The bulk of the chapter consists of thick descriptions of the projects and discussion of aspects of creativity as they appear in the projects. The data was collected by teachers and a research team that consisted of the authors of this chapter. Data collection in the three projects took place before the intervention took place, during the initial phases of the intervention, and after the intervention had become an annual theme for the preschools. The research was initially guided solely by a cultural historical understanding of creativity, while the analysis brought CHAT into dialogue with postmodern writings that are related to exploratory learning.


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