Erratum

2014 ◽  
Vol 115 (3) ◽  
pp. 951-951

BROC, M. Á. (2014) Harter's Self-perception Profile for Children: an adaptation and validation of the Spanish version. Psychological Reports: Measures & Statistics, 115, 2, 444–466. DOI: 10.2466/08.07.PR0.115c22z5 The author wishes to clarify two references. The first was cited as: HARTER, S., & BROC, M. Á. (2012) Perfil de autoconcepto, autoestima y apoyo social para adolescentes. P4A. Madrid, Spain. COSPA & AGILMIC S.L.U. Retrieved from http://www.cospa-agilmic.com . This reference incorrectly included Dr. Harter's name. The corrected citation of this document, which is available only commercially, is as follows: BROC, M. Á. (2012) Perfil de autoconcepto, autoestima y apoyo social para adolescentes. P4A. Madrid, Spain. COSPA & AGILMIC S.L.U. Secondly, the reference below does include a Spanish translation by M. Á. Broc of an informal manual for the Self-concept, Self-esteem and Social Support Profile for Children, written originally in English by Dr. Harter, but should not have included Dr. Harter as the second author of the Spanish reference. BROC, M. Á. & HARTER, S. (2010) Self-concept, Self-esteem and Social Support Profile for Children (Elementary Education and first cycle of the High School Education). Transl. into Spanish: Perfil de autoconcepto, autoestima y apoyo social para niños de educación primaria y primer ciclo de la ESO. University of Zaragoza, Zaragoza, Spain: Service of Publications. (Limited Edition). The corrected reference is: BROC, M. Á. (2010) Self-concept, Self-esteem and Social Support Profile for Children (Elementary Education and fi rst cycle of the High School Education). Transl. into Spanish: Perfi l de autoconcepto, autoestima y apoyo social para niños de educación primaria y primer ciclo de la ESO. University of Zaragoza, Zaragoza, Spain: Service of Publications. (Limited Edition).

REPRESENTAMEN ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 4 (01) ◽  
Author(s):  
Cindy Imelda Rohmawati S ◽  
Achluddin Ibnu Rochim ◽  
Tri Yulianti

Success is not only desired and owned by people who are able, but those who cannot afford,even want to have it. For someone who is born from unrich people, having success thing is a pricelesshappiness. It is felt by Julianto Eka Putra who is growing in a regular neighborhood. Julianto EkaPutra initiated and motivated to make the VISION 2010 program with the aim is to establish freeschool and a charitable foundation that dedicated himself to help orphans in Indonesia who cannotafford to continue their study to high school education. The purpose of this study is to determine theeffect of Julianto Eka Putra’s self-concept on the students of Selamat Pagi Indonesia’s High SchoolBatu-Malang. The result of the first hypothesis reads the suspect classification and purpose of theinterpersonal communication affects the self-concept, is acceptable because of the calculation it tcount (1,944) > t table (1,667), second hypothesis is assumed to be accepted because of theeffectiveness of interpersonal communication is known that t count (4,335) > t table (1,667), thismeans that the independent variable X1 (classification and interpersonal communication objective)and X2 (interpersonal communication effectiveness) significantly affects the self concept of JuliantoEka Putra.Keywords: Classification and Interpersonal Communication Objective, Interpersonal CommunicationEffectiveness, Self Concept


Author(s):  
Juan Pablo Pizarro Ruiz ◽  
Patricia Guerra Mora ◽  
Teresa Bermúdez Rey

Abstract.GENDER DIFFERENCES IN EFFECTIVE PERSONALITY IN SECOND AND THIRD CYCLE OF PRIMARY EDUCATIONIn this communication, gender differences in personality Effective in Primary Education students (8 to 13 years) are studied. The sample consists of 412 students, out of whom 216 were girls (52.4%) and 196 were boys (47.6%). For the evaluation we used Effective Personality Primary 8-12/Extended Questionnaire (CPE-P/8-12/extended), which was elaborated by Pizarro Ruiz, Martín del Buey Palace. Four areas are evaluated within it: Strengths of Self (social self-concept and physical self-concept) Demands of the Self (effective attributions, punishment avoiding, optimistic behaviour expectatives, optimistic performance expectatives, effort attributions, intrinsic motivation), Challenges to the Self (social support searching, positive facing), Relations of the Self (own rights defense, assertiveness). The results show that only statistically significant differences were found in the area of Demands of Self. The girls’ average is higher than the boys’ average. Furthermore, in dimensions level, it has been found that only significant gender differences exist in: effective attributions, optimistic behaviour expectatives, effort attributions and intrinsic motivation. Girls have higher average in effective attributions, optimistic behaviour expectatives, effort attributions and intrinsic motivation than the boys.Keywords Effective Personality, Primary Education, GenderResumen.En esta comunicación se estudia las diferencias de género en la Personalidad Eficaz en alumnado de Educación Primaria (de 8 a 13 años). La muestra está formada por 412 estudiantes, de los cuales 216 son niñas (52,4%) y 196 son niños (47,6%). Para realizar la evaluación se empleó el Cuestionario Personalidad Eficaz-Primaria 8-12/Ampliado (CPE-P/8-12/ampliado), elaborado por Pizarro Ruiz, Martín Palacio y Martín del Buey, en el que se evalúan cuatro esferas: Fortalezas del Yo (autoconcepto social y autoconcepto académico), Demandas del Yo (atribuciones eficaces, evitación del castigo, expectativas optimistas de conducta, expectativas optimistas de rendimiento, atribuciones de esfuerzo, motivación intrínseca), Retos del Yo (búsqueda de apoyo social, afrontamiento positivo) y Relaciones del Yo (defensa de derechos propios y asertividad). Los resultados muestran que únicamente se encuentran diferencias estadísticamente significativas en la esfera Demandas del Yo, siendo la media de las niñas superior al del grupo de los niños. Por otro lado, a nivel de dimensiones, se ha encontrado que sólo se dan diferencias significativas por género en: Atribuciones Eficaces, Expectativas Optimistas de Conducta, Atribuciones De Esfuerzo y Motivación Intrínseca. Las niñas tienen una media superior en atribuciones eficaces, expectativas optimistas de conducta, atribuciones al esfuerzo y en motivación intrínseca.Palabras Clave. Personalidad Eficaz, Educación Primaria, Género


2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 99
Author(s):  
Kukuh Arisetyawan ◽  
Sasongko Sasongko ◽  
Rachmad Kresna Sakti

ABSTRAK Penelitian ini bertujuan untuk menganalisa pengaruh antara tingkat pendidikan kepala rumah tangga terhadap kesejahteraan rumah tangga di Indonesia. Model regresi logistic multinomial telah diperkirakan dengan peluang rumah tangga meraih kesejahteraan sebagai variable dependen dan satu set tingkat pendidikan yang ditempuh semua rumah tangga sebagai variable penjelas. Data diperoleh dari Indonesia Family Life Survey (IFLS) dengan penggunaan data longitudinal, IFLS 2000, 2007, dan 2014. Salah satu hasil utama adalah probabilitas rumah tangga meraih kesejahteraan lebih dapat diterima oleh rumah tangga dengan pendidikan SMA ke bawah. Resiko tidak sejahtera justru dimiliki oleh kepala rumah tangga yang berpendidikan SMA hingga perguruan tinggi. Hasil penting lainnya sesuai dengan analisa statistiknya adalah pengeluaran tertinggi terletak pada kepala rumah tangga berpendidikan SD dan yang ke dua ialah kepala rumah tangga berpendidikan SMA.  Kata Kunci: Pendidikan, Ekonomi, Rumah Tangga, Pengeluaran dan Kesejahteraan Rumah Tangga ABSTRACTThis study aims to analyze the influence of the level of education of the head of the household on the welfare of households in Indonesia. The multinomial logistic regression model has been estimated with the opportunity for households to achieve well-being as the dependent variable and a set of education levels taken by all households as explanatory variables. Data were obtained from the Indonesia Family Life Survey (IFLS) with the use of longitudinal data, IFLS 2000, 2007, and 2014. One of the main results was the probability of households achieving welfare more acceptable to households with lower secondary education. The risk of not being welfare is actually owned by the head of the household who has a high school education to college. Other important results according to the statistical analysis are the highest expenditure lies in the head of the household with elementary education and the second is the head of the household with high school education. Keywords: Education, Economics, Household, Expenditure and Household Welfare.


2020 ◽  
Vol 30 (Supplement_5) ◽  
Author(s):  
J Kalubi ◽  
Z Tchouaga ◽  
A Ghenadenik ◽  
J O'Loughlin ◽  
K L Frohlich

Abstract Background Tobacco use accounts for half the difference in life expectancy across groups of low and high socioeconomic status. The objective was to assess whether social inequalities in smoking in Canada-born young adults are also apparent among same-age immigrants, a group often viewed as disadvantaged and vulnerable to multiple health issues. Methods Data were drawn from the Interdisciplinary Study of Inequalities in Smoking, a longitudinal investigation of social inequalities in smoking in Montreal, Canada. The sample included 2,077 young adults age 18-25 (56.6% female; 18.9% immigrants). Immigrants had been in Canada 11.6 (SD 6.4) years on average. The association between level of education and current smoking was examined separately in immigrants and non-immigrants in multivariate logistic regression analyses controlling for covariates. Results Twenty percent of immigrants were current smokers compared to 24% of non-immigrants. In immigrants, relative to those who were university-educated, the adjusted odds ratio (OR) (95% confidence interval) for current smoking was 1.2 (0.6, 2.3) among those with pre-university or vocational training, and 1.5 (0.7, 2.9) among those with high school education only. In non-immigrants, the adjusted ORs were 1.9 (1.4, 2.5) among those with pre-university or vocational training and 4.0 (2.9, 5.5) among those with high school education. Conclusions Despite a mean of over 10 years in Canada, young adults who immigrated to Canada did not manifest the strong social gradient in smoking apparent in non-immigrants. Identification of factors that protect immigrants from manifesting marked social inequalities in smoking could inform the development of smoking preventive intervention sensitive to social inequalities in smoking. Key messages A social gradient in smoking apparent in Canada-born young adults was not observed in same-age immigrants. Factors that protect immigrants against social inequalities in smoking should be identified.


Cancers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (13) ◽  
pp. 3262
Author(s):  
Mark M. Aloysius ◽  
Hemant Goyal ◽  
Niraj J. Shah ◽  
Kumar Pallav ◽  
Nimy John ◽  
...  

Introduction: We aimed to assess the impact of socio-economic determinants of health (SEDH) on survival disparities within and between the ethnic groups of young-onset (<50 years age) colorectal adenocarcinoma patients. Patients and Methods: Surveillance, epidemiology, and end results (SEER) registry was used to identify colorectal adenocarcinoma patients aged between 25–49 years from 2012 and 2016. Survival analysis was performed using the Kaplan–Meir method. Cox proportional hazards model was used to determine the hazard effect of SEDH. American community survey (ACS) data 2012–2016 were used to analyze the impact of high school education, immigration status, poverty, household income, employment, marital status, and insurance type. Results: A total of 17,145 young-onset colorectal adenocarcinoma patients were studied. Hispanic (H) = 2874, Non-Hispanic American Indian/Alaskan Native (NHAIAN) = 164, Non-Hispanic Asian Pacific Islander (NHAPI) = 1676, Non-Hispanic black (NHB) = 2305, Non-Hispanic white (NHW) = 10,126. Overall cancer-specific survival was, at 5 years, 69 m. NHB (65.58 m) and NHAIAN (65.67 m) experienced worse survival compared with NHW (70.11 m), NHAPI (68.7), and H (68.31). High school education conferred improved cancer-specific survival significantly with NHAPI, NHB, and NHW but not with H and NHAIAN. Poverty lowered and high school education improved cancer-specific survival (CSS) in NHB, NHW, and NHAPI. Unemployment was associated with lowered CSS in H and NAPI. Lower income below the median negatively impacted survival among H, NHAPI NHB, and NHW. Recent immigration within the last 12 months lowered CSS survival in NHW. Commercial health insurance compared with government insurance conferred improved CSS in all groups. Conclusions: Survival disparities were found among all races with young-onset colorectal adenocarcinoma. The pattern of SEDH influencing survival was unique to each race. Overall higher income levels, high school education, private insurance, and marital status appeared to be independent factors conferring favorable survival found on multivariate analysis.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document