The SafeCare Prevention Program for Child Neglect and Physical Abuse: Outcomes, Implementation, and New Directions

2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shannon Self-Brown
Author(s):  
Mualla Yılmaz ◽  
Ugur Kocak ◽  
Kamil Celebiyılmaz ◽  
Zeliha Yaman ◽  
Halis Dokgoz ◽  
...  

The aim of our research is to determine the awareness of primary school teachers on physical abuse in children according to their gender and professional experience. Material and Methods, Teachers in primary schools of four central distinct Directorate of National Education within Mersin province constituted the research population of the study. Teachers who agreed to participate in research based on a voluntary basis according to simple random sampling method (n:137) formed the research sample of the study. Data were collected using a survey having 21 questions which were rephrased by researchers. Research ethical committee and National Education Directorate approvals relating the study were taken prior to data collection. Results, In this study, teachers are determined to be female in 51%, to have a mean age of 37.58±7.64 to be married in 86.9%. “Bruises and wounds on child’s face” which is a physical abuse indication is regarded by teachers as a physical abuse indication in 88.3% while 11.7% of them do not regarded the marks as a physical abuse. Human bites are realized largely for the purpose of punishment and they show abuse. Child's hand and arm are the areas where an adult hold the child tightly. “Bruises and bite marks on child’s hand and arm” which is a physical abuse indication is regarded by teachers as a physical abuse indication in 93.4% while 6.6% of them do not regarded the marks as a physical abuse. 70.8% of the teachers have encountered “parental disregard to their children” finding within last two years. Conclusion, It is recommended that training about child abuse and child neglect which is qualified to meet the requirements of students and their families should be given to graduate teachers and student teachers studying in early childhood education.Keywords: child, abuse, physical, psychology


2002 ◽  
Vol 23 (6) ◽  
pp. 191-196
Author(s):  
Howard Dubowitz
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 20-37
Author(s):  
Deborah Wynne

Charlotte Brontë’s eighteen-page fragment, ‘The Story of Willie Ellin’, written shortly after the publication of Villette in 1853, combines the gothic and realism and uses multiple narrators to tell a disturbing story of cruelty towards a child. The generic instability and disordered temporal framework of this fragment make it unlike anything Brontë had previously written, yet it has attracted the attention of few scholars. Those who have discussed it have condemned it as a failure; the later fragment ‘Emma’, also left incomplete by the author's premature death, has been seen as the more likely beginning of a successor to Villette. ‘The Story of Willie Ellin’ reveals Brontë at her most experimental as she explores the use of different narrative voices, including that of an unnamed genderless ‘ghost’, to tell a story from different perspectives. It also shows Brontë representing a child's experience of extreme physical abuse which goes far beyond the depictions of chastisement in Jane Eyre (1847). This essay argues that ‘The Story of Willie Ellin’ affords rich insights into Brontë’s ideas and working practices in her final years, suggesting that it should be more widely acknowledged as a unique aspect of Brontë’s oeuvre, revealing the new directions she may have taken had she lived to complete another novel.


Author(s):  
Emma E. McGinty ◽  
Reshmi Nair ◽  
Luciana C. Assini-Meytin ◽  
Elizabeth A. Stuart ◽  
Elizabeth J. Letourneau

1991 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 87-101 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert T. Ammerman

Friedrich and Boriskin’s (1976) seminal review presented compelling evidence pointing toward the contribution of child factors in heightening risk for physical abuse. Indeed, many authors currently accept that certain child characteristics (e.g., prematurity, low birthweight) can directly lead to abuse. Much of the data in this area, however, is based on methodologically weak designs, and recent findings do not support the premise that children have a major role in the etiology of abuse. There is some suggestion that children with relatively circumscribed features may add to risk in families that already exhibit additional factors predisposing them to maltreatment. This paper re-examines the role of the child in abuse, reviews recent relevant research findings, and offers new directions that research in this area might take.


2014 ◽  
Vol 45 ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Annie Bérubé ◽  
Vicky Lafantaisie ◽  
Diane Dubeau ◽  
Sylvain Coutu ◽  
Josée Caron ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Whitaker ◽  
Shannon Self-Brown ◽  
Debra Hecht ◽  
Jane Silovsky
Keyword(s):  

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