OAR@UM Collection:/library/oar/handle/123456789/39742025-12-26T01:23:03Z2025-12-26T01:23:03ZBook reviews [International Journal of Emotional Education, 3(1)]/library/oar/handle/123456789/586152020-07-19T05:16:38Z2011-04-01T00:00:00ZTitle: Book reviews [International Journal of Emotional Education, 3(1)]
Abstract: As with the last edition we have a smaller number of reviews than usual, mainly due to
requested books not arriving in time to send out for review! However, the next edition promises to
be fuller, thanks to a pack of books that arrived from Sage last week. This issue continues our
established trend of having an extremely diverse range of reviews, with texts on promoting safe
learning environments, lifespan development and helping children deal with stress, change and
anxiety – many thanks to Ann, Damian and Jitesh for their excellent reviews. As usual I will email
ENSEC members requesting volunteers to perform the reviews for the next issue (don’t forget, you
get to keep the book by way of thanks for your help) in the near future. In the meantime, please
enjoy the three
reviews below.2011-04-01T00:00:00ZEditorial [International Journal of Emotional Education, 3(1)]/library/oar/handle/123456789/586142020-07-19T05:16:37Z2011-04-01T00:00:00ZTitle: Editorial [International Journal of Emotional Education, 3(1)]
Abstract: There is no shortage of information about what mental health in children and young people and what
can be done about it. Newspapers, magazines, television and the internet are awash with information relating
to the topic. Academics from various disciplines generate voluminous theories and ideas on the topic on an
apparently daily basis. One of the problems that the reader is confronted by, however, is the challenge of
sifting through the sheer volume of available information and making judgements about the relative merits of
different views and positions. A major aim of the International Journal of Emotional Education is to help
readers from a range of disciplines to make sense of mental health issues in children and young people within
an evidence-based approach (cf. Cooper and Jacobs 2011).2011-04-01T00:00:00ZThe life-course transitions of young women in a Maltese contextSpiteri, DamianDe Giovanni, Katya/library/oar/handle/123456789/61302022-01-13T13:29:28Z2011-04-01T00:00:00ZTitle: The life-course transitions of young women in a Maltese context
Authors: Spiteri, Damian; De Giovanni, Katya
Abstract: This study analyzed how a cohort of eight young women who underwent certain
difficulties whilst at secondary school experienced their transition from secondary school
to either work or further education. It explores changes in their perception of events and
happenings that they classified as significant to them, and the influence that these
changes of perception had on their evolving life-course. While not formally classified as
emotionally or behaviorally challenged, all the participants in this study claimed to have
had varying depths of difficulty when at secondary school, some alleging that they had
been classified as troublesome by their teachers and others claiming to have seen
themselves as disruptive in classroom settings. The study was informed by the
participants’ voices about how they saw their transitions being forged and has a
phenomenological focus.2011-04-01T00:00:00ZA study of the concurrent validity between the Boxall profile and the strengths and difficulties questionnaireCouture, CarolineCooper, PaulRoyer, Egide/library/oar/handle/123456789/61052018-03-29T08:01:43Z2011-04-01T00:00:00ZTitle: A study of the concurrent validity between the Boxall profile and the strengths and difficulties questionnaire
Authors: Couture, Caroline; Cooper, Paul; Royer, Egide
Abstract: The aim of the study is to establish the level of concurrent validity between the Boxall
Profile, a diagnostic instrument used by teachers and teaching assistants in nurture
groups, and the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire, a widely used screening
instrument in the fields of education, mental health and social work. 202 children and
adolescents attending nurture groups in England, aged 3-14 years, participated in the
study. These consisted of142 boys and 60 girls and came from 25 schools in 8 LEAs.
School staff completed the Boxall Profile and Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire
for all pupils. . The results show a high degree of concordance between the two
instruments, with both measures appearing to identify similar behavioural characteristics
in the same children. Scores in specific domains of the Boxall Profile are shown to
predict performance on particular sub-scales of the Strengths and Difficulties
Questionnaire. These preliminary findings support the validity claims of the Boxall
Profile, indicating that it is a reliable tool for both diagnostic and research purposes.2011-04-01T00:00:00Z