scholarly journals The Impression of Training Entertainment on the Social Expansion of Kindergarten Kids

Author(s):  
Seyede Zohreh Hosseini Talari ◽  

Undoubtedly the most critical dimension of an individual’s personality in terms of society is the social dimension of personality. Social behaviour forms the basis of every person’s life. Man is a social being and needs to communicate with others. Many humans' significant needs and flourishing of their talents and abilities can only be entirely fined through interpersonal interaction and social communication—the necessity of social life psychological preparation, social skills, self-confidence and power of the social adjustment. Human growth and development in childhood in terms of social development emotional, cognitive and physical development has characteristics that can make the child vulnerable to mental health. Social development is the most critical aspect of every person’s existence. It is assumed that children can’t do without social development and having the necessary skills to perform their duties in social interaction with others. Social growth promotes intellectual growth and other aspects of one’s development. In the process, people learn skills, knowledge and adaptation techniques and the possibility of reciprocal relations in continuous interaction their considers social development in the form of the child’s mutual adaptation to the social environment and about peers and it is a process that enables the child to understand and predict the behaviour of others, to control their behaviour and regulate their social interactions.

AL- ADALAH ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 51
Author(s):  
Ngainun Naim

The reality of Indonesian society is a multicultural society. Therefore, religious understanding and toleration to differences and diversity is necessary to be developed in order to create peace and harmony in the social life. This paper aims to explore the concept of Islamic Jurisprudence in the context of social diversity. This concept is important because the old fiqh concept resting on normative-theological reasonings needs to be reconstructed and replaced with contextual-progressive ones. The changes in the fiqh epistemology from normative-theological to contextual-progressive reasonings are carried out through adaptation to principles of Maqâshid al-Sharîah (basic aims of religious provisions) which are contextualized according to the social growth. The new model of fiqh constructed through combination of religious teachings and social development is expected to make a valuable contribution to the establishment of peace and harmony among all elements of Indonesia society.


Jurnal CMES ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 21
Author(s):  
Eva Farhah

Al-Mu'tazilah is a portrait of the Egyptian society which lived at some point in time. As described by Thaha Husain in order to show the disparity in the social life of people who need assistance and attention from the government or the authorities. Although the society lived in modern times at that time, not few other inhabitants still remained in underdeveloped education and social life. Through his work Al-Mu'tazilah, Thaha Husain highlights a range of social dimensions of society. This is the central issue to be addressed in this study. To reveal this social dimension, the sociology of literature theory is used, which focuses on the discussion of the sociology of both the author and the literary works. Primary data relevant to the topic were examined using a qualitative method in order to obtain an objective and scientific analysis. After all course, this study is of interest to the academic community in particular, and to other communities. The benefits are to mimic the social attitudes that can be enforced in today's life. In addition, people may refrain from doing things which might harm the social environment, such as isolating someone from another society.


2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 30-39
Author(s):  
Novita Ashari

This study aims to see how the social maturity of adolescents at the Fahmi Orphanage Makassar. The research will use qualitative research methods. Qualitative research is the stage of the research approach and understanding that is sourced from the method of phenomena that occur in social life as well as problems between individuals. The subjects in this study were adolescents, both boys, and girls who were at the Fahmi Orphanage in Makassar. The results of this study are the social maturity of adolescents at the Fahmi Orphanage known by their family background. Adolescents who come from intact families have high self-confidence so that their social maturity is also good. Meanwhile, for adolescents who come from families who have low self-confidence so that their social maturity is not good.


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 119-142
Author(s):  
Dwi Andri Ristanto ◽  

Concerns that arise currently are the development of a culture of hatred, the fading of a culture of love, secularism and social injustice. In the midst of that situation, the Church stands as a concrete manifestation of the face of God's love in the middle of the world. In the Ecclesia de Eucharistia encyclical, John Paul II asserted that the eschatological character emphasize the Christian commitment to the world, especially establish the social life order (cf. EE 20). The Eucharistic dimension of the Eucharist implies that the world order must be transformed as a form of participation towards fulfillment at the end of time. Whereas in the Apostolic Exhortation Sacramentum Caritatis, Benedict XVI, asserted that the Eucharist celebration brings our whole lives into spiritual worship that pleases to God (cf SCar 70). From this research, it is known that the Eucharistic social dimension becomes a spirit of love culture according to the writer. This love culture finds its source and power in the Eucharist. Through the celebration of the Eucharist, people are mystically united with Christ. In the light of the theology of the Eucharistic social dimension of John Paul II and Benedict XVI, mystical union with Christ refers to the oneness of God's thankfulness to the fulfillment of the last days (cf. John 15:13).


1901 ◽  
Vol 47 (196) ◽  
pp. 164-165
Author(s):  
Havelock Ellis

This is a study not merely of the effects of alcohol, whether as manifested in inebriety or when taken for experimental purposes, but of the intoxication impulse generally. The author believes there is a danger of regarding natural phenomena too readily as abnormal. He considers that the methods used by many who have been inspired by Lombroso illustrate this, and remarks that the conclusion of Nordau that all society is pathological is the logical result of an indiscriminate search for abnormalities. Thus we must beware of too hastily regarding the intoxication impulse as abnormal. It has played a part of the first importance both among uncivilised and civilised peoples. “Indeed, it is hard to imagine what the religious or social consciousness of primitive man would have been without them [intoxicants].” The first part of the paper is devoted to an account of the part played by this impulse in the religious and social life of early civilisations. This is followed by an analysis of the state of intoxication, accounts of experiments with intoxicating doses of alcohol, and observations on a series of inebriates. The authors experiments show that in intoxication, unless well advanced, the rapidity of simple mental processes is not decreased. The rapidity of tapping was most affected. Ability to control a reflex wink was greatly increased. There is increased activity of the associations, emotions, and sensations which make up the self. The increase of self-confidence and the diminution of suspicion are important points in their social bearing. “The intimate relation of intoxication to the social impulse undoubtedly accounts—in part at least—for the widespread and persistent use of intoxicants. Doubtless it made possible wider social relations than could otherwise have been maintained.”


Author(s):  
Henry Louis Gates, Jr

Race is one of the most elusive phenomena of social life. While we generally know it when we see it, it's not an easy concept to define. Social science literature has argued that race is a Western, sociopolitical concept that emerged with the birth of modern imperialism, whether in the sixteenth century (the Age of Discovery) or the eighteenth century (the Age of Enlightenment). This book points out that there is a disjuncture between the way race is conceptualized in the social science and medical literature: some of the modern sciences employ racial and ethnic categories. As such, race has a physical, as opposed to a purely social, dimension. The book argues that in order to more fully understand what we mean by race, social scientists need to engage genetics, medicine, and health. To be sure, the long shadow of eugenics and the Nazi use of scientific racism have cast a pall over the effort to understand this complicated relationship between social science and race. But while the text rejects pseudoscience and hierarchical ways of looking at race, it makes the claim that it is time to reassess the Western-based, social construction paradigm. The chapters in this book consider three fundamental tensions in thinking about race: one between theories that see race as fixed or malleable; a second between the idea that race is a universal but modern Western concept and the idea that it has a deeper and more complicated cultural history; and a third between sociopolitical and biological/biomedical concepts of race. Arguing that race is not merely socially constructed, the chapters offer a collection of views on the way that social scientists must reconsider the idea of race in the age of genomics.


2014 ◽  
Vol 926-930 ◽  
pp. 4689-4692
Author(s):  
Yue Jun Zhou

Along with the rapid development of society and technology, modern information technology has been applied to almost every aspect of social production and social life. Moreover, applying modern information technology to education and binding modern information technology to education sufficiently can be a very effective method to improve the current situation of education, to raise the educational quality and to strengthen the development of information technology. Introducing information technology into PE(physical education) classes is not only a significant presentation of the reform for teaching forms in PE but also the satisfaction for the demands the social development making on education. This paper gives a brief analysis of how to introduce reasonable information technology into PE classes.


2021 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 154
Author(s):  
Henrique Duarte Neto

Resumo: O objetivo principal deste artigo é o de pensar de que forma há a ressonância da vida social brasileira na poesia de Ferreira Gullar (2001) e na de Tarso de Melo (2017), especificamente nas obras: Dentro da noite veloz, do primeiro, e Íntimo desabrigo, do segundo. Também se expõe a hipótese interpretativa de que em ambos surge uma espécie de “neorrealismo”, mas muito mais agudo e desenvolvido em Ferreira Gullar, com sua sede pelo referencial, pela realidade em toda a sua crueza. Por fim, conclui-se que ambos os poetas retratam de maneira contundente o contexto social brasileiro, com grande vigor expressivo e gerando poemas que tendem a permanecer não só enquanto retrato de uma época, mas, nos melhores casos, como produções artísticas de alto valor estético.Palavras-chave: Ferreira Gullar; Tarso de Melo; poesia social; neorrealismo.Abstract: The main objective of this article is to think about the resonance of Brazilian social life in Ferreira Gullar (2001) and Tarso de Melo (2017) poetry, specifically in the works: Into the fast night, of the first, and Intimate homelessness, of the second. It also exposes the interpretive hypothesis that in both a kind of “neorealism” appears, but much acuter and developed in Ferreira Gullar, with his desire to be referential, for the reality in all its rawness. Finally, it is concluded that both poets strongly portray the Brazilian social context, with great expressive vigor and generating poems that tend to remain not only as a portrait of an era, but, in the best cases, as high-value artistic productions aesthetic.Keywords: Ferreira Gullar; Tarso de Melo; social poetry; neorealism.


IKON ◽  
2009 ◽  
pp. 109-147
Author(s):  
Carlo Cristini ◽  
Giovanni Cesa-Bianchi

- This article is aimed to analyse immigrants' sociability and the social dimension of their cultural consumption, assuming that consumption itself is a social action embedded in subject's social and cultural sphere and that cultural object, at their time, are a fundamental resource for social and everyday life. The attention will be focused, in particular, on subject's "significant others" and their role in shaping and mediating subject's consumption and social life. Then the article will deepen the relationship between consumption and subject's cultural capital.


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