Friday, November 20, 2009

Why a Dog is a Woman's Best Friend

This is funny, so I just post it here.

***7 Reasons Why You Should Dump Your Boyfriend and Get a Dog***

A dog is not only a woman’s best friend. It makes a better friend than a guy. Dogs have such wonderful traits that few men can match up to them.

Attention Girls, if your boyfriend gives you an ultimate: “Either the dog goes or me”, here are 7 reasons why you should dump your boyfriend and keep the dog.

1. Dogs do not criticize your shortcoming - whether you are thin or fat; size does not matter. They do not criticize your cooking and they eat anything you cook – overcook or undercook. They are happy with whatever choice you make for them.

2. Dogs are always happy to see you and they show it. Dogs miss you when you are gone. They act excited when you come home. They are always in good mood, especially for a walk in the park. Their affection are contagious, they cheer you up. They make your day, any day, every day.

3. Dogs will love you unconditionally for life, for better or for worse. Dogs mean it when they kiss you. Dogs do not have problems expressing affection in public. They are loyal to you for life and will never leave you for another bitch.

4. Dogs don’t feel threatened by your intelligence. They don’t hold grudges against you. They don’t cheat on you. Instead they protect you. They look after your house against intruders while you sleep. They can take care of their own need. They can lick themselves so you don’t have. They spend time with you. They will always have time for you. Always.

5. Dogs can be trained. You can teach dog new tricks. Dogs can get out of the coach and do something. They don’t run your life. They don’t tell you what to do. They don’t complain about your friends. They don’t brag about who they sleep with.

6. They think you are god. They think you look great in everything. They don’t abuse you and they don’t get drunk.

7. They make great blankets. They love to snuggle. They are a friend for life.

http://hubpages.com/hub/7-Reasons-Why-You-Should-Dump-Your-Boyfriend-and-Get-a-Dog

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Nursing Home in JB

This is a very controversial topic- should Singaporeans consider nursing homes in Jb instead of Singapore when they are old? It seems that 99% of the singaporeans against this idea, based on what I read (comment of the webpage). We don't talk about whether it is good or bad to place old folks at the nursing home in this context, which is a different perpective ( Although i disagree). However, the cost of living is getting higher..I guess these people who disagreed today may 'forced' to agree after 20 years down the road. Do you know that the new HDB room size is smaller now? 9 sft? I heard that even the executive HDB size is 'downgrading' too. (Afterall, all are built on a tiny island) Pathetic but no choice.

Just a sharing: I used to rent a HDB (21th floor) common big bedroom (no aircon) in Queenstown for $380 back in year 2006. The scenary view from my bedroom was excellent, facing the Bukit Timah forest and a big grass field. Today, you have to pay atleast $700-800 for the same bedroom. Recently, I did check the market price for this queenstown HDB with 4 bedrooms ..and yes, it is estimated worth $700,000. This is so called the most expensive HDB area in Singapore...I guess that only atleast middle upper class ( or upper middle class?) families afford to stay there. No wonder the cars parked at the Q HDB downstairs are all...

My student told me that her dad got salary cut from 4k to 3.5k. Her mother is a housewife. So, the 3.5k salary is cater for 4 people, plus the HDB loan etc...then how about the grandparents if he is the only child? Medical fees for old folks? Government is planning to enforce the law for expecting people to taking care of their parents. Life is getting tough for everyone.

My good friend commented that " actually do you realise that ...you are getting starting to sound more and more like a s'porean?" As a PR here, I don't know what to say. Sigh.

http://theonlinecitizen.com/2009/02/nursing-homes-in-johor-bahru-revisited/

The following are three reports from the Straits Times (2009) and from Today (2006) reporting Health Minister Khaw Boon Wan’s remarks about cheaper nursing homes which Singaporeans can go to, in neighbouring countries, and the exchange in Parliament on 10 Feb, 2009, between Mr Khaw and Workers’ Party MPs, Low Thia Khiang and Sylvia Lim.
In 2009:
Straits Times, Feb 10:
SINGAPOREANS could consider living in nursing homes in neighbouring Johor Baru, Health Minister Khaw Boon Wan suggested yesterday.
It would be cheaper, yet be near enough to Singapore for family members to visit and for residents to return for medical care if necessary, he said.
He told Parliament yesterday that he recently visited a site in Johor Baru where a Singaporean investor was planning to build a 200-bed nursing home.
He asked the investor about the costs involved, and was stunned at how low they were.
He said: ‘It is mind-boggling. The cost of land and construction cost is so low that my cost of putting up just a polyclinic (in Singapore) is probably more than his cost of putting up a 200-bed nursing home (in Johor Baru).
‘The monthly cost of keeping a resident in a private nursing home in Singapore, you can stretch it easily to pay at least 2-1/2 months of nursing home care in Johor Baru.’
If any medical problems cropped up, the elderly could be taken back to Singapore by ambulance, he said.
For most Singaporeans, visiting a relative in a Johor Baru nursing home would not pose significant difficulties, he said.
The investor, who is a nursing home chief executive, told him that many people visited their relatives weekly, even in nursing homes in Singapore.
Mr Khaw added: ‘Of course many visit daily, but quite a significant number visit only during the weekends, so what is the difference in putting them in Johor Baru?’

In 2006
Today, April 22
Dumping parents worst sin, says Khaw
Minister clarifies comments made on creating retirement homes in nearby countries
HIS recent comments on creating retirement villages in neighbouring countries have caused a mini-controversy, but Health Minister Khaw Boon Wan said he was misquoted.
“My comment on retirement was completely incidental. Now it has blown up into a big story and there is so much misunderstanding and accusation (that) Khaw Boon Wan is proposing that we dump our parentsin Batam,” said Mr Khaw after an event on Friday.
He was referring to an interview done with MediaCorp’s Channel 8 this week, in which he was quoted as saying: “My personal view is, our land is expensive. But we have nearby neighbours in Johor, Batam andBintan. The elderly want to reach their doctors within half to one hour. So retirement villages in neighbouring countries is possible, barring the cross-border hassle. It is best to find cheap land onshort leases.”
This sparked a mini-debate, with readers cautioning against the “exile” or “banishment” of old folks away from their homeland and the implications of such a move.
Speaking to reporters on Friday, Mr Khaw said his proposal has been misunderstood to mean that Singaporeans “dump” their parents in nearby countries.
“The question (from the reporter) was that there were developers who said that land here is rather expensive,” he clarified. “And that’s why I notice that Minister Mah Bow Tan has now shortened the lease, so hopefully land price (in Singapore) will become cheaper. But then they (the developers) said all right, Batam is even cheaper. So I said well, if Batam is even cheaper, then it’s up to you.”
Hence, the decision to locate retirement villages outside of Singapore is up to the private developers and the market — not the Government, he said.
But no matter where the villages are, Singaporeans should not neglect the old, said Mr Khaw.
“You can have a retirement village in Toa Payoh but if your motive is really to dump your parents, that to me is wrong. Whether it’s in Batam or in Toa Payoh or in Ang Mo Kio, it’s all wrong.
Mr Khaw, a Buddhist who comes from a “absolutely Confucianist” background, said to him, not being filial is the worst sin possible.
“Many other sins you can plead to your God and say, sorry, I repent … But lack of filial piety, dumping your parents is inexcusable. Straight down to the 18th level of hell!”
————

2009
Response from the Workers’ Party MPs – Low Thia Khiang and Sylvia Lim (Straits Times, Feb 10)
A SUGGESTION by Health Minister that Singaporeans might want to consider staying at a nursing home across the Causeway in Johor where it is much cheaper drew flak from two oppostion MPs in Parliament on Tuesday.
Workers’ Party chairman and Non-Constituency MP Sylvia Lim said the suggestion was ‘quite a bad indication of affordability of our own health care services here, and also a reflection of our national values’.
Fellow WP member Low Thia Kiang (Hougang) asked: ‘Is the Minister suggesting that Singaporeans who cannot afford medical treatment or step-down care here should now consider such facilities in Johor?’
If so, is the minister ‘outsourcing the Government’s responsibility to provide affordable health care service to Malaysia’, he asked.
This riled Mr Khaw Boon Wan.
‘I’m not saying that if you are poor I will put you in an ambulance, send you across the Causeway to a Johor nursing home. That is not what I said and please don’t twist my words,’ he retorted.
In fact, the Johor option is not for the poor, who are heavily subsidised in Singapore.
‘Everybody can afford health care in Singapore whether acute care or long-term care,’ said Mr Khaw.
The suggestion was aimed at middle-income families who need to pay for the care themselves. It gives them choice.
‘I just wanted to point out to Singaporeans that there are options like this,’ Mr Khaw said.
The cost of nursing home care will always be more expensive in Singapore, as doctors and nurses are paid more, and construction cost is also higher.
Since many people visit the elderly in homes only on weekends, it makes little difference whether the person is housed here or in nearby Johor.
It’s part of globalisation and this is already happening with Singaporeans going to Bangkok for Lasik to treat short sightedness and Americans and Russians coming here for treatment.
It is also not something that should, or can, be prevented, said the minister.
Singaporeans are already crossing the causeway for cheaper petrol and medicine.
‘By allowing the flexibility of consumers walking across the Causeway… they benefit. I don’t think we should constrain them from doing so.’

Monday, July 20, 2009

Fetal Testosterone and Autistic Traits

Traditionally, psychology has developed more tools for analysing the individual than for analysing behaviour in the environment context (Pervin & Lewis, 1978, as cited in Sugarman, 2001). It was usually focused either on people or on the environment as the locus of Developmental Psychology. However, there is endless debate about which factor is more important in the question of nature VS nurture (Sugarman, 2001). I agree with Poh Lau’s point of view; this is actually a “chicken-and-egg” sort of argument. We never really know the proportion of the contribution for nature : nurture; only possibly making assumptions on a case-to-case basis. Perhaps, it is the gene-environment interaction that really matters?

Personally, I believe that the answers to these arguments are usually based on the perspective of the specific field in psychology. As for psychopathology related studies, genetic predisposition by employing twin studies is valued more than other factors like the environment. For example, the genetic link for risk of developing Schizophrenia in identical twins is higher than fraternal twins (Barlow & Durand, 2005). It was also found that there were some common genetic workings across autistic traits and ADHD behaviours in a community sample of twins (Ronald et al., 2008).

Educational psychology related studies may highlight the importance of the environment. I still remember how frustrated I was when I had to deal with mischievous young adolescents aged 13-14 in a private high school. My colleague, an experienced form teacher, advised me, “You have to put up a fierce look and enforce strict rules. Only then, the students would be more obedient. Otherwise, they are most likely to behave like little monkeys.” It seemed that her suggestions worked fairly well. So, is it not that the environment shapes behaviour as much as genetic predisposition?

It is very common that the mass media misinterprets report finding by jumping to conclusions based solely on a mere general understanding of a scientific research. I believe that this phenomenon is getting more widespread especially as seen from controversial research like Auyeung et al. (2009)’s finding. A blogger who claims to be a neuroscientist, had commented that “testosterone = maleness = autism” is a simple and logical statement that cannot be absolutely right but hard to say that it is wrong as well. I agree with this idea and that Auyeung et al. (2009)‘s study has only demonstrated the link between autistic traits and fetal testosterone. After all, there was no actual autistic samples used in the research (Autism, Testosterone and Eugenics, 2009).

However, without direct access to the original studies, parents rely on the information in the mass media which result in them considering another new early screening for autism for their children which may add to themselves problems and financial burden. As such, Harrell (2009) reported that “A British researcher claims his study may lead to early screening for autism via amniocentesis”; in which Auyeung et al. (2009), the original author never really stated such a bold claim. Do we really need this even if it is true? The extra effort may bring up unwanted side-effects as amniocentesis is not a risk-free procedure. Additionally, National Vaccine Information Center (n.d) revealed that some once-healthy kids developed autistics traits after receiving one or more vaccines (e.g., Hepatitis B). It seems that we prefer to hold on to the idea that “prevention is better than cure”?

I agree with the statement that it is unethical to place Eugenics in real life practice where “the rich becomes richer, the poor becomes poorer”. However, is it fair to the people to live a relatively less fortunate life just because they inherited so-called “bad genes” and are thus condemned to suffer (for serious cases) for the rest of their lives? As what my friend once lamented to me, “I did not choose to have an incurable disease which is genetically linked. I can only accept my fate.”

References:
Autism, Testosterone and Eugenics, (2009).Retrieved March 14, 2009, from http://neuroskeptic.blogspot.com/2009/01/autism-testosterone-and-eugenics.html

Auyeung, B., Baron-Cohen, S. Ashwin, E., Knickmeyer, R. Taylor, K. & Hackett, G. (2009). Fetal testosterone and autistic traits. British Journal of Psychology, 100, 1-22.

Barlow, D. H., & Durand, V. M. (2005). Abnormal Psychology: An Integrative Approach(4th ed). USA : Wadsworth.

Harrell, E. (2009). A link between autism and testosterone? Retrieved March 14, 2009, from http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1871515,00.html.

National Vaccine Information Center (n.d). Autism & Vaccines: A New Look At An Old Story. Retrieved March 14, 2009, from http://www.nvic.org/nvic-archives/newsletter/autismandvaccines.aspx

Ronald,A., Simonoff, E., Kuntsi, J., Asherson, P., & Plomin. R. (2008). Evidence for overlapping genetic influences on autistic and ADHD behaviours in a community twin sample. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 49, 535–542.

Sugarman, L. (2001). Life-spam development; Frameworks, accounts and strategies. (2nd ed.). New York: Psychology Press.

Sunday, May 17, 2009

HOW TO BE A GOOD WIFE Guide

Home Economics High School Text Book, 1954. It could be a fake one. Nobody knows, but it seemed matching to the mindset of the olden days.

1.Have dinner ready. Plan ahead, even the night before, to have a delicious meal, on time. This is a way of letting him know that you have been thinking about him and are concerned about his needs. Most men are hungry when they come home and the prospect of a good meal are part of the warm welcome needed.

2.Prepare yourself. Take 15 minutes to rest so that you'll be refreshed when he arrives. Touch up your makeup, put a ribbon in your hair and be fresh-looking. He has just been with a lot of work-weary people. Be a little gay and a little more interesting. His boring day may need a lift.

3.Clear away the clutter. Make one last trip through the main part of the home just before your husband arrives, gather up schoolbooks, toys, paper, etc. Then run a dust cloth over the tables. Your husband will feel he has reached a haven of rest and order, and it will give you a lift, too.

4.Prepare the children. Take a few minutes to wash the children's hands and faces (if they are small), comb their hair, and if necessary change their clothes. They are little treasures and he would like to see them playing the part.

5.Minimize all noise. At the time of his arrival, eliminate all noise of the washer, dryer, dishwasher, or vacuum. Try to encourage the children to be quiet. Be happy to see him. Greet him with a warm smile and be glad he is home.

6.Be happy to see him. Greet him with a smile and act glad to see him.

7.Make him feel comfortable. Have him lean back into a comfortable chair or suggest he lie down in the bedroom. Have a cool or warm drink ready for him. Arrange his pillows and offer to massage his neck and shoulders and take off his shoes. Speak in a soft, soothing, pleasant voice. Allow him to relax to unwind.

8.Listen to him. You may have a dozen things to tell him, but the moment of his arrival is not the time. Let him talk first.

9.Make the evening his. Never complain if he does not take you out to dinner or to other places of entertainment. Instead try to understand his world of strain and pressure, his need to be home and relax.

10.The goal, try to make your home a place of peace and order where your husband can renew himself in body and spirit.

Some don'ts, don't greet him with a problem or complaint. Don't complain if he's late for dinner or even if he stays out all night. Count this minor compared with what he might have gone through during the day.
Don't ask him about his actions or question his judgement or intergrity. Remember, he is the master of the house and as such will always exercise his will with fairness and truthfulness.
You have no right to question him . Agood wife should always knows her place.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Basically, society expected woman to be submissive especially in olden days. Just imagine how horrible it was -

US Courts 19th Century:
" The priviledge, ancient thought it be, to beat her with a stick, to pull her hair"

British Common law
The husband's priviledge " To control and correct his wife and "For some misdemeanours, to whip or beat his wife with a stick"

Roman laws of chastisement
- Domestic infractions physically punished by husband, murder for adultery

----------------------------------------------------

Now the updated version for the '90s woman.

1. Have dinner ready: Make reservations ahead of time. If your day becomes too hectic just leave him a voice mail message regarding where you'd like to eat and at what time. This lets him know that your day has been crappy and gives him an opportunity to change your mood.

2. Prepare yourself: A quick stop at the "LANCOME" counter on your way home will do wonders for your outlook and will keep you from becoming irritated every time he belches at the table. (Don't forget to use his credit card!)

3. Clear away the clutter: Call the housekeeper and let her know you'll need her for an extra day this week. Tell her that any miscellaneous items left on the floor by the children can be placed in the Goodwill box in the garage.

4. Prepare the children: Drop them off at grandma's!

5. Minimize the noise: When he arrives at home remind him that the washer and garbage disposal are still not working properly and the noise is driving you crazy (but do this in a nice way and greet him with a warm smile...this way he might fix it faster).

6. Some DON'TS: Don't greet him with problems and complaints. Let him speak first, and then your complaints will get more attention and remain fresh in his mind throughout dinner. Don't complain if he's late for dinner. Simply remind him that the last one home does the cooking and the cleanup.

7. Make him comfortable: Remind him where he can find a warm fuzzy blanket if he's cold. This will show you really care.

8. Listen to him: But don't ever let him get the last word.

9. Make the evening his: a chance to get the washer and garbage disposal fixed.

10. The Goal: To try to keep things amicable without reminding him that you make more money than he does.

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Reliability vs Validity problem

Reliability
Reliability is a vital component of a valid psychological test. What is reliability? How do we measure it? Reliability is an important part of any good psychological test. Simply put, reliability refers to the consistency of a measure. A test is considered reliable if we get the same result repeatedly. Learn more about reliability in psychology tests.

Validity
When determining the merits of a psychological test, validity is one of the most important factors to consider. What is validity? Psychological assessment is an important part of both experimental research and clinical treatment. One of the greatest concerns when creating a psychological test is whether or not it actually measures what we think it is measuring. For example, a test might be designed to measure a stable personality trait, but instead measure transitory emotions generated by situational or environmental conditions. A valid test ensures that the results are an accurate reflection of the dimension undergoing assessment.

Psychology Research Methods Link

I am very headache with my research project right now. I just realise that translated version is always have this reliability check but not neccessarily validated. How to solve this problem? Can't help not to stop worrying about this matter for these few days :(

Sunday, March 8, 2009

Emerging Adulthood

No longer adolescents, but not yet fully adult, today’s older teens and 20-somethings are charting a new path to maturity – quite different from the one taken by previous generations. What’s behind this new life stage, and what does it mean for parents of today’s teens and tweens?

By Sandra Whitehead

http://www.parenthood.com/article-topics/article-topics.php?Article_ID=9153

Katie Tripeau has spent much of her 20s exploring. After graduating from college, she found a job in advertising. She worked for about a year, long enough to afford a trip to Australia. At age 23, she spent six months traveling in Southeast Asia with friends who, like her, “weren’t ready to start their lives, so to speak.”

When she returned, Tripeau “temped around” to earn money. Now, at age 27, she’s back in her parents’ home while she studies to be an elementary school teacher.
“I didn’t feel any pressure to settle in a career,” she says. “It was a time to experience and think about what I want to do.”

A generation ago, young people like Tripeau finished college, started careers, moved out of their parents’ home and, in many cases, got married in their early 20s. These days, all of this is happening five to 10 years later as young people take longer to finish their schooling, are ambivalent about what they want to do with their lives and are not driven to start a career or a family. Many of them return to their parents’ homes sometime during their 20s to regroup, save money and ponder their next steps.

These are not merely the characteristics of this generation, social scientists say, but a new stage of development that we can expect our children and our children’s children to experience. Just as the teen years began taking on their own identity a half century ago, “emerging adulthood” has, in the past few decades, become a distinct period of development, according to psychologist Jeffrey Jensen Arnett, who first identified it. Arnett, a research associate professor of human development at the University of Maryland and editor of The Journal of Adolescent Research, says emerging adulthood is a period of exploration, instability, possibility, self-focus and a sustained sense of being in limbo.

The fact that children are taking a longer route to adulthood has important implications for parents, beyond the fact that we can expect to be actively parenting them for longer. Just as we had to learn the ropes of raising young children, we’ll be better parents if we can anticipate and understand the emotional needs and behaviors of our children as they become emerging adults. And, experts say, today’s parents of teens and tweens have an opportunity to help their children develop skills that will be useful when they become emerging adults.

Old Milestones
Sociologists have always defined the transition to adulthood in terms of distinct events: finishing education, entering full-time work, marriage and parenthood. Emerging adulthood, asserts Arnett, has been created particularly by the postponement of marriage and parenthood. In fact, couples today are typically marrying five years later in life than they did 30 years ago.
A key reason for this change was the invention of birth control, combined with less stringent sexual mores after the sexual revolution of the 1960s and ’70s, says Arnett. Today, most young people have a series of sexual relationships before getting married.

Another factor is the increase in years many young people now devote to pursuing higher education, Arnett says. About two-thirds of high school graduates now enter college, the highest proportion in American history. In addition, it now takes many students five years to earn an undergraduate degree, and there are rising expectations to earn advanced degrees.

“It takes longer now to be self-sufficient. It takes more education now than in the past to get a good job,” says Arnett. This pushes milestones, such as marriage and career, back to the mid- to late-20s and beyond.

Yet the most important factor delaying the transition to full adulthood is a change of attitude, Arnett says. While young people of previous generations were eager to take on adult roles and settle down, young people today are not. They look around and see adults who are overworked, divorced and generally stressed out – it doesn’t look like much fun. They see marriage, home and children as “perils to be avoided,” he says. These responsibilities represent “a closing of doors – the end of independence, the end of spontaneity, the end of a sense of wide-open possibilities.”

“They don’t want to settle. They have high expectations. They want meaningful jobs and a spouse who will be a soul mate,” Arnett continues. In fact, he adds, the extent of these expectations can make them “delusionally optimistic.”

New Definitions
Instead of using the traditional markers of adulthood, emerging adults have found new ways of defining what it means to be an adult, he says. For them, the benchmarks are less tangible and more psychological, such as being able to:
• accept responsibility for one’s actions;
• make independent decisions; and
• become financially independent.

The good news for parents, Arnett points out, is that, despite the media’s tendency to paint them as the Peter Pan generation, today’s emerging adults do want to grow up, and it’s unlikely that they’ll still be living in your basement when they’re 30. Almost all of them, he says, eventually succeed in getting a decent job. “They are taking their time because they don’t see a reason to rush,” Arnett explains. “They realize that once you take on typical adult responsibilities, you become fully adult; and that’s how you stay for the rest of your life. You can never get back the exceptional freedom of emerging adulthood.”

So, Is This a Good Thing?
Not surprisingly, researchers disagree about whether this new life stage is a positive or negative development. Arnett describes it as “the best opportunity for self-exploration.” Unencumbered by parents’ rules or the responsibilities of full adulthood, he says, emerging adults are free to explore possibilities in a variety of areas, especially love and work.
But James Côté, a professor of sociology at the University of Western Ontario and author of Arrested Development, says emerging adults don’t really have a choice; they have been put on hold by economic and social factors that keep some of them dependent on their parents well into their 20s. Real wages for most people have been dropping since the 1970s, and most professions have become highly competitive. This, combined with rampant downsizing, means that many Americans never experience occupational security, especially during their first years in the workforce. In other words, people in their 20s do not have the economic means to be financially independent, he says.

At the same time, Côté also sees a lot of social disorganization. “Parents have not given them the guidance and structure they needed growing up,” he says of today’s young adults. They’ve gone through adolescence without the parental support that previous generations had. With two parents working, children and teens often come home to neighborhoods where there are no adults around. This leaves teens with peers, rather than parents, as role models. Consequently, when it comes time to make the transition into adulthood, there is an absence of norms about what that should look like, says Côté.

Furthermore, he says, “baby boomers have left choices wide open for their children, not wanting to unduly influence them. For example, they decide to let them choose a religion when they grow up.” Yet values and beliefs are important to identity formation, he adds. “If you’re brought up without a strong sense of values or belief systems, it is difficult to make choices. It is better to give them something to rebel against than nothing.”

The bottom line, Côté concludes, is that “a significant number of people in their 20s are having real difficulties. It is most difficult for those with the least resources – economic, psychological and intellectual.”

Emerging adults themselves talk about the stress and anxiety they experience, calling it a “quarter-life crisis.” Musician John Mayer, 26, sings about it in his song “Why Georgia.” Twenty-something authors Alexandra Robbins and Abby Wilner write about it. In their book Quarterlife Crisis: The Unique Challenges of Life in Your Twenties, they describe it as a time full of self-doubt and anxiety. The media has sold young people the idea that if they play their cards right, they can have it all. Then, suddenly they realize they are not in the career of their dreams, they’re constantly worried about money, and they feel alone, Robbins and Wilner write.
Renowned pediatrician and learning expert Mel Levine is more blunt. He says he is “stunned by the plight of individuals – far too many – who seem unprepared for the crossover from education to work.” In his new book, Ready or Not, Here Life Comes, Levine describes what he calls “an epidemic of third-decade unreadiness.”
Today’s 20-somethings “seem clueless about careers, don’t really know themselves and seriously lack the insights and abilities necessary for the transition into the workplace.”

Specifically, he says, they lack:
• an inner sense of direction,
• the ability to interpret the world around them,
• organizational and decision-making skills, and
• communication and alliance-building skills.

We need “to reconsider the manner in which we are educating and rearing children,” Levine says. He is convinced that our culture and our educational practices are “harming children,” stunting their mental growth and leaving them unready to launch themselves into adulthood.
In Levine’s view, kids today are too:
• Indulged – Having been raised with a full slate of scheduled activities, many of today’s 20-year-olds “are having trouble making their own significant decisions,” Levine says. This, coupled with a steady diet of computer and video game entertainment during their formative years and parents who were ever eager to please, has left them ambushed by the demands of adulthood, he says.

• Pushed to be well-rounded – Levine casts a critical eye at what he calls “the dubious, but much-revered, trait of well-roundedness.” Pressured by the competition for college admission, many parents push their children to excel on all fronts – academically, athletically, politically and socially. The result, he says, is young people whose “very versatility makes it hard for them to commit to the deep and narrow grooves of adult work life.”

• Focused on rote-learning – “We overemphasize a host of facts and skills that will be of little or no use in the workplace,” Levine contends. Instead, he suggests, schools should emphasize skills that could make or break start-up adults: the ability to think critically, to brainstorm, to monitor and refine your own performance, to communicate convincingly, and to plan and preview work.

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Dog Behavior Answers Book

Author: Arden Moore

Some interesting points from this book~http://ardenmoore.com

- Sigmund frued believed that dogs possess a psecial sense for human emotions. His Chow, Jo-Fi, assisted the great psychoanalyst in his sessions byalerting him to patients' moods. The dog would stay across the room from patients who were stressed or tense. Freud also realized that petting a dog could help calm and relax people. Several scientific studies have shown that owning a pet may reduce blood pressure and lower cholesterol. Pets also seem to help people cope better with stress, loneliness, and depression.



- A case study:
Q: About three times a week, I take Nugget, my certified therapy dog, on visits to a nursing home and a children's cancer hospital.We spend an hour or two greeting the residents. However, she isn't as excited as she used to be when I put on her therapy vest after eight years.When she comes home from a the pay visit, she seems to be sad and a bit down. Why is she acting this way?
A: Animal-assisted programs can change and even save lives. It is just as important, however, that the therapy dogs' needs are met, too. Owner need to be on the lookout for signs of stress or burnout in their four-legged ambassadors of love. Therapy dogs are emotionally affected by sadness and pain n those they visit. They can get stressed and exhausted. It takes two to make a good therapay team, and both must be committed to performing the task. She is showing signs that she is ready for retirement.



- A tired dog is a more relaxed dog.
How true it is. A tired man is a more relaxed person too!

Sunday, February 8, 2009

Impoverished Environment & Drug-related behaviour

Focus Question: Ch9 (p.221-222) + Ch12 (p.292) + Readings
Discuss the following statement: 'Living in an impoverished environment can result in proportionally more time and/or effort being allocated to drug-related behaviours'
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The statement: 'Living in an impoverished environment can result in proportionally more time and/or effort being allocated to drug-related behaviours' is supported by numerous research, which demonstrated that the association of impoverishment environment and drug abuse. Inhalant users who were from low incomes families had higher rate of having drug or alcohol dependence in the past year (Wu, Howard, Pilowsky, 2008). Furthermore, it was found that female heads of household who were had alcohol and other drug abuse were associated with the employment issues (i.e., loss of jobs, lower income and less working hours), problematic situational factors (e.g., health, low self-esteem) and human capital deficits (e.g., poorly educated) (Chandler, Meisel, Jordan, Rienzi, Goodwin, 2004).

Behavioural Economics may help in explaining drug-abuse behaviours in the impoverishment environment. Drug-related behaviours may cut down the opportunities of individuals for getting other reinforcers and thus lead to a higher proportion time spent on the drug abuse. In other words, people live in impoverishment environment are more likely to have more drug reinforcers by significant people e.g., family members, or peers who have drug-abuse behaviours too. In contrast, positive reinforcers are limited, e.g., good education or income. Without strong competition of other reinforcers, individuals become harder to quit and consequently maintain drug abuse habit (Laraway et al., 2000).

Stein, Dixon and Nyamathi (2008) investigated the impact of psychosocial and situational Variables on substance abuse among homeless adults. Lower self-esteem served as the predictor in greater emotional distress, lower positive coping, greater negative coping, and more alcohol use. Meanwhile, social support was associated with less emotional distress and more positive coping. Thus, it was concluded that substance abuse programs and housing support need to address issues like psychological factors and environmental factors.

References:

Chandler, D., Meisel, J., Jordan, P., Rienzi, B. M., & Goodwin, S. N. (2004).
Substance Abuse, Employment, and Welfare Tenure. Social Service Review, 78, 628-651.

Laraway, S., Snycerski, S., Byrne, T. & Poling A. (2000). Introduction to behavioral pharmacology. In A. Poling and T. Byrne (Eds.). Drug Abuse. Reno N.V.: Context Press, pp. 219-248.

Mazur, J. E. (2006). Learning and Behavior. (6th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.

Stein, J. A., Dixon, E. L., & Nyamathi, A. M. (2008). Effects of psychosocial and situational variables on substance abuse among homeless adults. Psychology of addictive behaviours, 22(3), 410-416.

Wu, L. T., Howard, M. O., & Pilowsky, D. J. (2008). Substance use disorders among inhalant users: Results from the National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions. Addictive Behaviors, 33, 968-973.

TV Violence and Aggressive behavior in Children

Because much of the research on TV violence and aggressive behavior in children is correlational, it is difficult to determine cause and effect. Describe how some researchers have tried to get around this problem. What have they found?

Much research were sought after in finding the relationship between TV violence and aggressive behaviour in children. Bandura’s classical theory of generalised imitation was a landmark study on imitation of aggressive behaviour as immediate effect (Mazur, 1965 as cited in Mazur, 2006).

Huesmann, Lagerspetz and Eron (1984) investigated intervening variables in the TV Violence-Aggression Relation for 758 children in US and 220 children in Finland. By employing an overlapping longitudinal design, they used interviewed and tested for 3 years in the children. The result showed that TV violence viewing was significantly related to concurrent aggression and predicted future changes in aggression. Path analyses showed a bidirectional causal effect in which violence viewing engenders aggression, and aggression engenders violence viewing.

Later on, Huesmann, Moise-Titus, Podolski, and Eron (2003) used partially of the old data to do follow up on longitudinal relation to the TV violence and aggression. The old data, which was from the same participants who took part in the earlier studies conducted by Huesmann et. al. (1984). Follow up archival data (N=450) and interview data (N= 329) showed that childhood exposure to media violence predicts young adult aggressive behaviours in both genders. The relationship between TV violence and aggression remain strongly associated even after controlled other variables of socioeconomic status, intellectual ability and parenting factors.

The impact of watching TV violence of children who behave aggressively can be explained by the pattern of brain activation. Murray et al. (2006) examined brain activation in 8 children, aged 9-13 years old who watched televised violent and nonviolent video sequences. Meanwhile, children’s brain activities were measured with functional magnetic resonance imaging (FMRI). The result revealed that large number of aggressive scripts kept in long term-memory in the posterior cingulate. It is later recalled and subsequently acted upon when committing violent acts.

It is suggested that future studies may look into other possible variables, which are facilitating to the aggressive behaviour in children and TV violence.

References:

Huesmann, L. R., Lagerspetz, K., & Eron, L. D. (1984). Intervening variables in the tv violence-aggression relation:Evidence from two countries. Developmental Psychology, 20, 746-775.

Huesmann, L. R., Moise-Titus, J., Podolski, C., & Eron, L. D. (2003). Longitudinal relations between children’s exposure to TV violence and their aggressive and violent behavior in young adulthood: 1977-1992. Developmental Psychology, 39 (2), 201-221.

Mazur, J. E. (2006). Learning and Behavior. (6th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.

Murray, J. P., Liotti, M., Ingmundson, P. T., Mayberg, H. S., Pu, Y., Zamarripa, F., et al. (2006). Children’s brain activations while viewing televised violence revealed by fMRI. Media Psychology, 8, 25-37.

Discrete Trial procedure and a Free Operant procedure

Define spontaneous recovery, describe Pavlov's theory about why it occurs and outline one study, which demonstrates spontaneous recovery.

After extinction of conditional response due to time lapse, the return of conditional response drawn out by the conditioned stimulus (CS) is referred to as spontaneous recovery (Sandoz & Pham-Delègue, 2004). Pavlov addressed this phenomenon of spontaneous recovery as an evidence of CS-US association not fully eliminated in the extinction phase. This means that it is hard to erase the previous learning, and the time lapse served as a crucial factor to determine the level of spontaneous recovery (Mazur, 2006).

Sandoz & Pham-Delègue (2004) reproduced the study on how honeybees had been used, to test Pavlov’s theory about spontaneous recovery in controlled laboratory conditions. The proboscis extension response of the honeybees can be conditioned by associating an odour stimulus (CS) to a sucrose reward (US). After a single CS-US pairing in honeybees, extinction process occurs when conditioned responses to the CS are eliminated after repeated unrewarded presentation of the CS. The time intervals during training, the number of conditioning, and whether extinction trials have an influence on the amount of spontaneous recovery were investigated in this study. The result showed that spontaneous recovery mostly appeared in a massed fashion (1-min intertrial intervals) and highly relied on time intervals through conditioning and extinction (1 hr being an optimum). In addition, multiple conditioning trials improved the level of spontaneous recovery, whereas extinction trials lessen it. After the extinction process in the single-trial conditioning, spontaneous recovery appeared once only.

In short, the study of spontaneous recovery revealed that memory patterns of short-term and long-terms depends on the interval of conditioning and extinction trials.

References:

Mazur, J. E. (2006). Learning and Behavior (6th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.

Sandoz, J. C., & Pham-Delègue M., H. (2004). Spontaneous recovery after extinction of the conditioned proboscis extension response in the honeybee. Learning & Memory. 11. 586-597.

Pavlov's theory -spontaneous recovery

Define spontaneous recovery, describe Pavlov's theory about why it occurs and outline one study, which demonstrates spontaneous recovery.

After extinction of conditional response due to time lapse, the return of conditional response drawn out by the conditioned stimulus (CS) is referred to as spontaneous recovery (Sandoz & Pham-Delègue, 2004). Pavlov addressed this phenomenon of spontaneous recovery as an evidence of CS-US association not fully eliminated in the extinction phase. This means that it is hard to erase the previous learning, and the time lapse served as a crucial factor to determine the level of spontaneous recovery (Mazur, 2006).

Sandoz & Pham-Delègue (2004) reproduced the study on how honeybees had been used, to test Pavlov’s theory about spontaneous recovery in controlled laboratory conditions. The proboscis extension response of the honeybees can be conditioned by associating an odour stimulus (CS) to a sucrose reward (US). After a single CS-US pairing in honeybees, extinction process occurs when conditioned responses to the CS are eliminated after repeated unrewarded presentation of the CS. The time intervals during training, the number of conditioning, and whether extinction trials have an influence on the amount of spontaneous recovery were investigated in this study. The result showed that spontaneous recovery mostly appeared in a massed fashion (1-min intertrial intervals) and highly relied on time intervals through conditioning and extinction (1 hr being an optimum). In addition, multiple conditioning trials improved the level of spontaneous recovery, whereas extinction trials lessen it. After the extinction process in the single-trial conditioning, spontaneous recovery appeared once only.

In short, the study of spontaneous recovery revealed that memory patterns of short-term and long-terms depends on the interval of conditioning and extinction trials.

References:

Mazur, J. E. (2006). Learning and Behavior (6th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.

Sandoz, J. C., & Pham-Delègue M., H. (2004). Spontaneous recovery after extinction of the conditioned proboscis extension response in the honeybee. Learning & Memory. 11. 586-597.

Language is an Innate Human Ability

Describe some of the evidence supporting the view that language is an innate human ability.

Human language is described as a form of communication (Wesley, 1998). According to Wesley (1998), human language is unique in terms of how it uses the complex syntactic structure and how it is learned by observational learning. The reason of why humans have language could be due to the ability to learn any system of communication.

There are four thousand languages available in used throughout the world. Human being has no specific language, which is applicable universal as the speakers of different language are unable to understand each other’s language. However, common similarities among human languages are more remarkable than the differences among them (Gleitman, 2006).

The capacity to acquire a human language is innate since learners can naturally absorb the formal and substantive properties and readily pick up languages during the human development (Gleitman, 2006). The learner is equipped with a “bioprogram” that leads the learning process and makes the competence of learning a language possible (Luria et al., 2006). Gleitman (2006) argued that language learning proceeds evenly within and across linguistic communities even though a great variability of the language offered to each person regardless of races and culture. For example, in several countries like Hong Kong, Taiwan and Singapore, schoolchildren have to learn Chinese and English, in Malaysia, they have to learn three languages. It is expected that one may not master all languages concurrently, but it is possible to learn various languages in different environment as well. Secondly, children do not have particular experience of language, but have the capability to learn many linguistic generalisations. A person, who migrated to another country, is able to learn the new language and communicate with local residents after acculturation but not necessarily attending formal education.

References:

Gleitman, L. R. (2006). A Human Universal: The Capacity to Learn a Language. In H. Luria, D. M., Seymour, & S. Trudy (Eds.), Language and linguistics in context: Readings and applications for teachers (pp. 13-27). New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Publishers.

Wesley, O. M. (1998). Formal approach to innate and learned communication: Laying the foundation for language (Doctoral dissertation, University of California, San Diego, 1998). Dissertation Abstracts International, 59 , 1B.

Interaction of gene x parenting style in predicting depression

This is the reason why parents play a significant role in influencing the well-being of children. Other than the interaction of parent’s work stress and child’s psychological adjustments, Ecological systems Theory of Development has expanded into many related fields like depression study. In fact, I remember a psychology research article in a local newspaper a few years ago, which reported that the main stressor of key person in adolescent is ironically from his/her mother. Personally, I agree with this because my mother always has the greatest demand/expectation from me in becoming an ideal individual.

Psychologist, Gerald Haeffel, and colleagues examined whether a gene associated with dopamine interacted with maternal parenting style to predict episodes of depression. The sample consisted of 177 male adolescents from a juvenile detention center in Russia. Depression was diagnosed by employing a structured diagnostic interview; while aspects of maternal parental rearing (i.e. physical punishment, hostility, lack of respect for the child’s point of view, and unjustified criticism in front of others) were assessed by a questionnaire. It was reported that neither genes nor maternal parenting style alone can be used to predict depression. However, depression can be determined by a combination of the following factors: (1) The male adolescents with especially rejecting mothers, and (2) a specific form of the dopamine transporter gene. Therefore, it is suggested that the use of psychosocial interventions to increase dopamine activity in the brain (Association for Psychological Science, 2008). Most importantly, we need to aware of the impact of parenting styles on parents as part of a child’s immediate environment.

References:

Association for Psychological Science (2008, January 16). Nature And Nurture Are Both To Blame For Depression, Study Says. ScienceDaily. Retrieved September 28, 2008, from http://www.sciencedaily.com­ /releases/2008/01/080115102642.htm

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Moral issues changes during childhood and adolescence

With reference to theoretical and research literature, discuss how reasoning about moral issues changes during childhood and adolescence. Use examples to illustrate your response.

Fabes, Carlo, Kupanopff and Laible (1999) defined moral reasoning as “the ability or tendency to think about and make decisions in situations in which there may be conflicting values, norms, rules or laws, needs, or desires”. Generally, moral reasoning involves cognitive ability to judge and decide whether it is right or wrong.

Numerous studies on moral development of children and adults were based on Kohlberg (1981)’s six stages of moral development. Kohlberg refined on the Piaget’s work by identifying three distinct levels of moral reasoning in children and adults, namely pre-conventional, conventional and post-conventional. Each level consists of two stages. Kohlberg’s theory reflects a transition from egoistic, self-focused concerns to societal and conventional concerns, and it followed by universal and ethically principled human concerns. In short, moral development is also associated with age development.

Children aged 2-6 years (early childhood) learn to gradually understand the existence of different worldviews and be aware of other’s perspectives. However, their descriptions are only limited to the terms of physical characteristics and activities when they are requested to describe themselves and others. Children aged 6-12 years (middle childhood) start to learn more complex about moral reasoning as they develop the ability to perceive the world from other’s perspective. Children at this stage are able to describe people in terms of inner personality traits and motives (Sugarman, 2001). For example, Kohlberg’s theory on pre-conventional level can be applied to a scenario of a mother’s expectation on her children. The mother demands that her children must finish their schoolwork before they are allowed to watch television. Children may understand that “Mother is hoping that I can obtain better exam results, so I have to study hard first and play later.”

The adolescence is the bridge between childhood and adulthood where there are critical changes physically. Adolescents experience changes in personality, social interaction skills, and the ability to learn complex moral reasoning in depth. They start to use logical, abstract thinking in solving problems and apply concepts to various hypothetical situations (Sugarman, 2001). Puberty is also linked with the onset of sexual activities (Fabes et al., 1999). Adolescents may start to explore romantic relationship, which help to foster moral development too. For example, adolescent may hold moral belief about pre-marital sex and the relevant negative consequences: “If I agree to have sexual relationship with my partner, I may get pregnant and thus affect my studies. In addition, sexual intercourse is forbidden below 16 without consent according to the law.”

Besides that, Hoffman (1991, as cited in Fabes et al., 1999) stated that by late childhood and early adolescence, children can empathize with others and their life situation, which is aligned with perspective taking and self-concept development. Empathy combines both cognitive and affective dimension, hence the development of empathy is closely associated with the development of cognitive skills. Thus, the transition between childhood and adolescence may be important in the development of empathy and sympathy. This may help to explain complicated moral behaviours in adolescence and adulthood.

On the whole, Kolberg’s theory of moral development serves as a useful framework to explore moral development in childhood and adolescence. Fabes et al. (1999) suggested that more studies that examine the interactive nature of social cognitions, emotions and puberty would help us to gain insight in understanding the development of more refined theories of morality.

References:

Fabes, R. A., Carlo, G.,Kupanoff, K., & Laible, D. (1999). Early Adolescence and prosocial/moral behavior I: The role of individual processes. Journal of Early Adolescence, 19, 5-16.

Kolberg, L. (1981). The philosophy of moral development: Moral states and the idea of justice. San Francisco: Harper & Row.

Sugarman, L. (2001). Life-spam development: Frameworks, accounts and strategies. (2nd ed.). New York: Psychology Press.