The Influence of Physical Confidence of Taekwondo Participation of Adolescents by after School Activities in Self-esteem and School Work Stress

2008 ◽  
Vol 32 ◽  
pp. 517-526
Author(s):  
Hong Seok Kim
1999 ◽  
Vol 16 (5) ◽  
pp. 415-417 ◽  
Author(s):  
Herbert Jack Rotfeld

Comments on the frequent inappropriateness of marketing education. Also addresses some of the inappropriate methods of marketing schools. Considers that certain schools that are unable to attract top students are tempted to misplace marketing by focusing the attention on a school’s “values” other than education, for instance after‐school activities, discipline, or teachers’ concerns for children’s self‐esteem. In college education, these benefits might include a sports team’s winning record, fraternity or sorority parties and local drinking establishments. Finally, expresses dissatisfaction that many students now view graduation as job certification, not as a mark of education.


2018 ◽  
Vol 3 (66) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rasa Jankauskienė ◽  
Ramutis Kairaitis

Among adolescent boys a higher drive for muscularity is related with poorer self-esteem and more symptoms of depression. There is an agreement that male athletes, in general, experience greater body satisfaction compared to nonathletes of the same age, however there is lack of studies to demonstrate how participation in various sports relates in terms of drive for muscularity and global self-esteem among adolescent boys. One hundred adolescent boys (mean age — 14.63 ± 1.97) took part in the study. 29 boys were at 6 th  grade, 34 — at 8 th , and 37 — at 10 th  grade. All the participants completed the self-constructed questionnaire consisting of 21 items. The following blocks of questions or statements were included into the questionnaire: demographic variables (age, grade, the living place (urban or rural)), global self-esteem (Rosenberg’s (1989) questionnaire of self-esteem), body esteem (the satisfaction with one’s own appearance and appearance of various body parts), and involvement to after-school activities (involvement in activity (for at least half a year) was considered as formal belonging to a club, school, or group, but not independent activities at the leisure time). The participants also completed the questionnaire Drive for Muscularity Scale (DMS) (McCre-ary, Sasse, 2000). Results showed no signifi cant differences in the drive for muscularity among the boys involved in different after-school activities, while the greatest drive was demonstrated by adolescents involved in dancing. The adolescents involved and not involved in sport did not show signifi cant differences in global self-esteem and overall appearance evaluation while the lowest dissatisfaction was common to the boys involved in dancing. The drive for muscularity was not signifi cantly related to poorer overall appearance evaluation and self-esteem among adolescent boys involved in various after-school activities. Involvement in sport activities might mediate the negative effect of the drive for muscularity. The drive for muscularity might also be closely related to the demands of sport activities, but not to the improvement of personal appearance. However, it was found that dissatisfaction with body image and weight was more closely related to low self-esteem among girls, but not among boys, so our study partially supported the previous fi ndings. The future studies should investigate the drive for muscularity, body-esteem and self-esteem interrelation in the samples of adolescent boys involved in recreational and professional sport.Keywords: adolescent boys, drive for muscularity, self-esteem, afterschool activities.


Author(s):  
Joy G. Dryfoos

We have invited some practitioners who “do the work” to tell us what they do. Six program areas are covered here: parent involvement, after-school and summer programs, early childhood programs, primary health services, mental health services, and community development. These are the basic components of the community school model developed by The Children’s Aid Society (CAS); most other models include some or all of these activities as well. We have asked our experts from CAS to provide the rationale for what they do in their components, describe a working example, discuss implementation issues and sources of financing for the component, and tell us about the challenges they faced and the lessons they have learned from their experiences. Many of these components require space within the school—a designated area for parents to congregate, rooms for a primary health care clinic, private offices for mental health counseling, and classrooms and gyms for before- and after-school activities. Not every school can meet these space requirements, or at least many schools do not think that they have room for one more activity. I have observed, though, that more space becomes available in direct relationship to how essential the services become. One principal, reluctant to place a school-based clinic in his building, offered one very small room in a dark corner. Yet five years later, a full suite of rooms had been designated the “Health Place” with two examining rooms, a dental office, a meeting room, three private offices, and an attractive waiting room. The principal described the facility as “my clinic” when a newscaster came to do a story on the program. Unquestionably, full-service community schools require delicate negotiations over many issues, especially space. The CAS schools make full use of classrooms for after-school activities and need access to the gymnasium, auditorium, band room, restrooms, cafeteria, and playground. The principal and the community school director must work out the arrangements for the use of facilities and for cleaning and maintaining them. As you will see from these descriptions of the core components, this work is labor intensive. In every aspect of community school work, individual attention to students and their families is paramount.


2012 ◽  
Vol 48 (1) ◽  
pp. 45-51
Author(s):  
Peter Karlsudd

In the doctoral dissertation "Children with intellectual disability in the integrated school-age care system" the extent and goal fulfilment of after-school recreation centre activities in 19 Swedish municipalities were studied. The study gave high marks to these centres for integrating intellectually disabled children into their activities. The empirics of the dissertation revealed, however, a number of warning signals, which indicated an increase in offering “special solutions” to these children. This article will contain a comparison between the study from 1999 and the one carried out in the spring of 2011. The two studies have followed the same question construction in order to achieve a comparison over time. The aim of study, focusing on children received into schools for the intellectually disabled was to evaluate to what extent integrated activities occurred and to look for factors with a positive impact on the quality of those after-school activities which gathered children from these and compulsory schools in the same groups. On the basis of the comparison made between the 12 years that have passed from the earlier to the later study, it must be regretfully concluded that segregated activities have gained a firm hold on the activities of after-school recreation care centres. Key words: after-school activities, inclusion, integrated, intellectual disability, school-age care system.


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