Weston Hadlock and Dr. Katie Liljenquist, Department of Organizational Leadership and Strategy The initial goal of this study was to explore the different effects of counter-factual thinking on one’s assignment of meaning to life. The creation of these ‘what-if’ scenarios for many people has often been associated with regret. We, however, hypothesized that constructing these […]
Search Results for: experience
Attracting Female Students to Science: An Interdisciplinary Stress-Psychobiology Mentored Experience
Michael Larson Women have made considerable progress in education and the workplace; however, progress in science and technology fields continues to lag behind. Females remain underrepresented in science majors at the university level and, subsequently, represent less than a quarter of full professors in scientific fields. Increasing female representation in science is considered a national […]
Mentored Experience in Sports Journalism, Producing and Production
Jared L. Johnson Evaluation of how well the academic objectives were met In all, six mentored trips took place using funds provided through the MEG Gran. These trips took place between Winter Semester, 2012 and Fall Semester, 2013. Two of the trips were driving trips. The remaining four trips required airfare for participants. The following […]
Group Therapy Experience As A Factor In The Outcome Of Severely Mentally Ill Patients
Jennifer R. Ellsworth and Dr. Gary M. Burlingame, Psychology An interdisciplinary team of academicians from Brigham Young University’s Comprehensive Clinic initially developed a collaborative relationship with the Utah State Hospital for the purpose of improving the hospital’s group therapy program through staff group skills training and improving the hospital’s outcomes tracking system. They chose six […]
LIVES IN TRANSITION: EXPERIENCES IN THE PERSIAN GULF
Reinhold Hill, Communications It is with pleasure that I report on my research results to the Research and Creative Work Office. The Research and Creative Work Office provided funding for my proposed project of collecting oral narratives from Utah reservists who served in the Persian Gulf. I began work on the project in January. Contacting […]
Siblings of Children with Down Syndrome: Perceptions of their Experiences
Allison Ash Malnar and Dr. Barbara Mandleco, Nursing Approximately 350,000 families in the United States are affected by Down syndrome, and the vast majority of these families include one or more nondisabled children (National Down Syndrome Society, 1999). Because of this, many researchers are interested in how this disability affects the family. Marsha Van Riper […]
Assessment of Family Satisfaction of Intensive Care Unit Experience
Breann Brady and Dr. Joan Baldwin, College of Nursing When a patient enters the Intensive Care Unit (ICU), the experience is stressful and traumatic, for both the patient and their family members. The fast paced environment may seem scary to those unfamiliar with it. Families are left in a waiting room, only to enter and […]
THE GREAT DIVORCE: AN EXPERIENCE TOGETHER — HOW RELATIONSHIPS IN A COMPANY AFFECT THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN ACTORS AND AUDIENCE IN PERFORMANCE
Isaac Walter and Dr. Rodger Sorensen, Theatre & Film Both Peter Brook1 and Jerzy Grotowski,2 two of the most important theatre directors and theoreticians of this century, have stated that the basis for all theatre is the actor/audience relationship. It is what makes theatre a unique art form. Without this relationship you may have another […]
Fighting Cross-Cultural Battles: The Chinese-American Assimilation Experience
Karin Mei Li Inouye and Dr. David B. Honey, Asian and Near Eastern Studies The immigrant experience for overseas Chinese during the early 1900’s involved extreme adjustments to a new land, new communities, new occupations, new cultural standards, new language, and new livelihoods. The political background and social conditions left behind in China, as met […]
Openness in International Adoptions: An Idea Whose Time Has Come? The Experience of U.S. Families Who Adopted Children from the Marshall Islands
Jamie Wyatt and Professor Jini Roby, School of Social Work Increased globalization of today’s society is bringing about dramatic change; the social sciences are not exempt from the results of these changes. Particular to this research study is the issue of international adoptions, particularly those which are characterized as open. “Open adoption” was defined in this […]
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