Aimee Latta and Dr. Barbara Mandleco, College of Nursing Raising children with chronic conditions often is a source of stress on the family unit . While many studies in the past conducted in South Africa have focused on the etiology or disease process itself, the effects of the children’s condition on family adaptation and daily […]
Search Results for: family
MatrixGen: Customized Amino Acid Change Matrices to Study Protein Family Evolution
John J. Bowers and Dr. Keith A. Crandall Abstract Background: Algorithms for aligning protein and DNA sequences are dependent upon the scoring matrix used to generate accurate alignments. Most alignment applications offer only a few choices for such scoring matrices (typically PAM and BLOSUM series matrices). Results: We have developed software (http://inbio.byu.edu/Faculty/kac/crandall_lab/Computer.html) that calculates scoring […]
A RECORD OF A HUNGARIAN JEWISH FAMILY AND THEIR IMMIGRATION TO ARGENTINA
Christine Reading Porschet and Dr. Steven Epperson, History Tibor Feldmann, my grandfather, first married in 1938 in Szhekesfehervar to Magda, outside of Budapest. In 1944, while he was serving in the Hungarian army, fighting first against the Germans and then the Communists, his father, wife, and five month old daughter were taken to Auschwitz. He […]
Home and Family Living Analysis: The Family Meal Environment
Leah Schreiner and Professor Shirley Klein, Home and Family Living Family scholar Kerry Daly (2003) explains the need to examine aspects of everyday family activities that he describes as negative spaces. Two of these areas are time and space. The time and the space in which families do their work contribute to, and is the essence […]
Determining the Value of Subsistence and Cash Crop Farming in Tamil Nadu, Indian Family’s Subsistence Strategies
Joseph Neil Ransom and Dr. Charles Nuckolls, Anthropology Department It is nearly impossible to asses the true conditions of a community from older books or research papers about neighboring areas. That said my background reading leading up to this research project had left me with the impression a large percentage of Indian farmers completely subsisted […]
Creating a Family Process/Family Health Data Set
Jessica L. Smith and Dr. Randal D. Day, Marriage, Family, and Human Development Nationally representative data sets are crucial to timely and economical research. These data sets sample from the entire population, giving each member an equal opportunity to be chosen. Additionally, respondents are asked many questions to provide a wealth of analytical opportunities. Many […]
Family Recreation in the Home: Home & Family Living Analysis
Rachel Loser and Dr. E. Jeffrey, Hill, Home & Family Life The recent development of the Home & Family Living Analysis (HFL-A) by myself, other students, and faculty of the School of Family Life at Brigham Young University initiated research on the affects of the “home” by administering a home-based scholarly inventory to make visible […]
Principles of Family-Centered City Planning Achieving True Mixed-Income Housing in New Urbanist Developments
David Gray and Dr. Richard Jackson, Geography New Urbanism, or traditional neighborhood design (TND), is a growing trend in American real estate development. It is characterized by mixed-uses, a variety of housing sizes, and pedestrian-oriented streetscapes. It often encourages more efficient land uses, which, in turn, makes way for better transportation planning and less congested […]
Home, Family, and Nation – Inventory of the Manuscript Collections of Lucy Broadwood’s and Alice Gomme’s Pioneering Folksong Research in Great Britain
Sarah Perry and Professor Jerry Jaccard, Music Education Lucy Broadwood was a researcher with a specific interest in English folk song, including children’s singing games. She was at the forefront of the English folk song, folk dance, and folk art revival that set the stage for widespread reform in school music, serious musical composition, and music […]
Family Matters: Income Distribution Effects of Changing Family Structure; Honors Thesis
Julia DeLong and Dr. Clayne Pope, Economics One of the more profound and far-reaching social transformations America went through in the latter half of the twentieth century was the growing replacement of married households by single (never married) and divorced households. While the sociological consequences of this transformation are generally debated, we seldom consider the […]
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 3
- 4
- 5
- 6
- 7
- …
- 102
- Next Page »