Sunday, December 17, 2006

James Blunt Hair Style

and Youth Risk Behavior

RISK BEHAVIOR IN YOUTH STAGE.
http://www.cinterfor.org.uy/public/spanish/region/ampro/cinterfor/temas/youth/bajarch/doc/not/word/libro37/libro37.doc

KRAUSKOPF

DINA 1. Introduction.

In recent decades there have been many advances in health and attention to the situation youth. The prolongation of life expectancy, modernity and globalization with its wide range of complex stimuli, increases the need for adolescents and young people to find, in the new circumstances that surround them, the elements to assume the biopsychosocial changes they experience in building a social role that matches the identity, organize their behavior from a do in the world that objectifies positively and sustain a life plan that gives meaning to your present relationship with the environment, which in many areas of Latin America also includes the difficulties of poverty.

Advances in medicine have great potential in reducing of suffering and prolongation of life, what attention has increasingly specialized to different life stages and even consider gender differences. From the perspective of disease was observed that juvenile mortality was the particular and important characteristic of being desecadenada mainly by external and behavioral factors: drugs, accidents, suicides, escapes, dropouts, pregnancies, STDs, violence, bringing to organize care for adolescents through these issues. This led to the concept that was, of adolescence as a healthy age, is passed to the emphasis of the behavior risk and that the programs for that age period will be focused in a specific way for each of the problems. Thus the vertical programs as adolescents received separate responses to each risk or harm, drugs, accidents, STDs / AIDS, pregnancy, and articulate a plan that would meet health in adolescence. The experiences showed that the problems were related and also damage and risk behaviors, protective factors were therefore approaches began to get rich (Donuts, 1992).

other hand many of the issues that affect youth social peace are associated with risky behaviors, adolescents named more attention when problems were outsourced when suffering from depression, isolation, sexual abuse, etc., which attracted wide attention from various social sectors, as communicators, teachers, etc., and youth became increasingly identified as a segment of the population problem that often reached a stigmatized perspective. This has consequences risky, because the recognition pejorative people who cross the adolescent period, facilitates the construction of the negative identity (Erikson, 1974), as the social value contributes to the development of identity and youth need to be recognized as someone has to prefer to be someone feared, hated to be anybody.

socializing agencies such as family, school, media, etc., Meet new contexts to address the various social changes and generate feedback that seek to be channeled in youth policies that set the challenge respodan appropriate options for this strategic sector of society and have the sign of the problematization and exclusion of youth, the positive sign for incorporating personal and social development.

is especially accomplished in the decade after the declaration of the Youth Year in 1985, accumulating studies perspectives are promoted positive proposals and programs that offer a more complex view of youth, recognizing their importance in social development, their contributions and difficulties, the interaction of its features with the possibilities of the environment.

The concept of risk in the juvenile period has been highlighted by the possibility that the behaviors or situations lead to developmental damage that can affect all of its damage potential as well-being and health (Weinstein, 1992). Currently, the focus of attention to youth health, try on a more comprehensive and articulated to reduce risk factors, increasing protective factors and provide reconstruction and development opportunities of the situation. The conceptualization of health is therefore relates to a goal, a process, not a state, particularly in people who are in a critical period of growth and not merely undergoing a transition from childhood to adulthood.

In order to identify the key dimensions to consider in a comprehensive vision of youth risk behaviors, this paper will begin with a characterization of the risk approach in health promotion, and then differentiate high-risk behaviors behaviors that involve the risks inherent in the process of identity development in adolescence addition to analyzing the relationship between risk and protective factors of vulnerability, the damage and the ability to overcome adversity. Finally some guidelines outline the strategies for intervention in youth health to promote full development potential, contribute successfully to their social integration and reduce the prominence of morbid processes.

2. The risk approach in health care.

Risk involves the likelihood that the presence of one or more characteristics or factors increase the occurrence of adverse consequences for health, life planning, personal survival or others. Awareness of risk is a measure of the need for care and comprehensiveness of the factors taken into account, the possibility that the intervention is appropriate. However it leads to the certainty that the damage occurs. It has been found, for example, that the risk of a crash is different for individuals and groups of individuals of a given population (Suárez and Krauskopf, 1992).

The risk approach assumes that greater knowledge about negative events more likely to act on them in advance to avoid them by changing the conditions that expose an individual or group to acquire the disease or injury-prevention-primary, modified consequences ensuring the presence of services if the problem arises, to intervene in the early stage of the disease process and prevent the development or spread-secondary prevention. Primordial prevention aims to promote the development and its terms and tertiary prevention is aimed at those already damaged or diseased and intervenes to address the pathological symptoms, control the progression and prevent further complications and to control its spread (Silber , 1992).

The potential risk approach is to set goals aimed at identifying factors that lead to undesirable results, measure the association between these factors and the results to plan intervention actions in reducing the damage (Backett, et al, 1984). These interventions are guided by one side to the general population may be affected, but in particular focus on those who are most at risk.

is present the risk approach by emphasizing the action wherever they are the greatest potential for emergence of diseases, disorders and injuries, for which should be recognized protective factors (family support, vaccinations, stay in the educational system, safe work access to health care), risk behaviors (driving car at high speed, impulsive behavior) and risk factors (Unemployment, stagnant water) to reach its reduction or elimination. Actions toward people should be organized according to life cycle stage, gender, cultural background and other (Donuts, 1994).

Jessor (1991) explains that the epidemiological tradition, the concept of risk is associated particularly with the results leading to morbidity and mortality and possible breakthroughs in control factors such as water pollution, reduced levels cholesterol linked to cardiovascular disease, etc.

This approach also led to social and behavioral factors identified as leading to increased risk elements to be damaged, such as social accessibility to alcohol and snuff and personal stress. A risk factor may be a link in the chain leading to disease or injury, can also be an indicator of the presence of this link, The usefulness of these factors is that they are observed or identified before the event occurs they predict. A simplified example would predict that if a guy riding a motorcycle can have an accident.

On the other hand, the risk approach led to the identification of protective factors, understood as the conditions that prevent the emergence of the risk behaviors that lead to it, thus decreasing the vulnerability and promote damage resistance.

From the angle of health care, attacking the risk factors was a great success in reducing perinatal problems, other aspects of maternal and child health especially in the application to cardiovascular problems, as identify the factors significantly associated with the presentation of such damages in situations allowed to increase above the predictability of its occurrence and prevent acting on them. However, when these criteria are applied to adolescent development, predictions are not met so linearly. Suárez (1993) gives an interesting example of how the psychosocial analysis can change the negative weight attributed to risk factors illustrate the existing U.S. studies concluded that the son of an unmarried adolescent Latina mothers tend to be criminals or drug addicts, a conclusion that was broken when it was recognized that the presence in those cases extended family, favored Latino children compared with whites.

Importantly, the situation may be at high risk at a time when the life cycle and cease to be in another period. This is because the personal development gains such as skills acquisition biological, psychological and social resources affect well as environmental conditions according to the degree that they are protective, dangerous, disabling, capacitate them. Their interaction with potential and personal skills will largely determine the vulnerability of the individual or group. Therefore, the destructive consequences of risk vary during the life cycle in relation to the aging process, the conditions of protection and personal resources to make adjustments or additions that transform the situation.

addition, biological and psychosocial damage that an individual experience, may not be evident at the time of the conditions of risk: childhood settings affect aspects presented in the juvenile phase or vulnerabilities suffered in the adolescent period may adversely affect the adult stage. So there will be youth behaviors in adulthood will result in drug addiction, alcoholism, crime, AIDS (Weinstein, 1992).

3. Youth problems in the risk approach.

The risk approach, as applied to adolescents, particularly mentioned risk behaviors of young people themselves as a factor leading to mortality. As Irwin points out: "The behaviors associated with mortality and morbidity prevalent in adolescence involving a common theme: the taking of risks."

3.1. Damage

Damage most frequently encountered are: car accidents, death by drowning, unwanted pregnancy, AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases, suicides, homicides, other unintended injuries, drug addiction, criminal behavior, chronic promiscuity. A national survey in Costa Rica revealed that while health statistics confirm the accident as one of the significant injuries in their teens, are not identified by this age group, or their relatives, as a priority issue requiring immediate attention to prevent risk (Krauskopf et. al. 1992).

3.2. behaviors as a risk factor.

behaviors juveniles have been identified as a risk factor are: sex, particularly early, unprotected and with multiple partners, the intensive consumption of alcohol and other drugs, including snuff, driving at an early age and without use of protection devices (seat belts, helmets for motorcycles), drunk or being a passenger of a drunk driver, prone to physical fights, carrying weapons or particular fire (Department of Health, United States 1994).

Interestingly, the gender difference against the risk noted by Silber (1992) and that is reflected, for example in which males are more severely affected in the statistics of accidents, homicides and suicides. It is a fairly widespread, they are more suicide attempts in women and that actual suicides are more common in men. In the same vein, Weinstein said that there is an increased psychosocial risk among men than among women, vulnerability is the result of the difficulty of access to education and employment, their more risky with addictions, sexuality, criminal justice system and lack of support networks.

3.3. Risk circuits.

has been established that the specific behaviors of adolescence que favorecen los daños de la salud se encuentran interrelacionados. Weinstein (1992:8) señala que "existen ciertos circuitos de riesgo y que el joven que ha ingresado a uno de ellos va adicionando vulnerabilidades de distinto orígen". Irwin (1990) reporta estudios de diversos autores que observan la relación entre el alcohol, consumo de cigarrillos y accidentes vehiculares. El consumo de alcohol es considerado también un predictor de ingestión de drogas ilícitas y actividades de sexo no protegido. Silber (1992:550,551) concuerda con esta posición al señalar que una conducta juvenil aislada como fumar, puede ser el preanuncio de otras conductas de alto riesgo a corto plazo y sugiere que en tales circunstancias es recomendable assess more carefully the possibility of other drug use, unprotected sex and establish peer groups. He adds that high-risk behaviors occur more frequently in adolescents with a psychological profile "characterized by aggression, excessive emphasis with respect to personal independence and the tendency to deviant activities."

3.4. Predictors of increased vulnerability.

The start of certain activities becomes a more serious risk predictor when it occurs at younger ages. So Weinstein stresses the early entry into employment, job performance marginal, early school dropout, sexual initiation at an earlier age. Bejarano and Jimenez (1993) highlights the start of the drinking career in the early stages of adolescence as a predictor of deterioration of this and other addictions in the future.

Important factors that come directly from their behaviors have been identified as links that increase youth vulnerability that are present in the media or social contexts where the individual is developed and its antecedents of personality. Among the various factors related to risk behaviors in adolescent development, Irwin (1990), like many researchers, emphasizes the child's academic success and behavior problems in school. Literature indicates that agrees to pay particular attention to environmental changes occurring in the school system and highlights the passage from primary to secondary schooling. These and other transitions in school life are particularly stressful nature, which results in frequent disruptive behaviors in adolescence. In Latin America there are various circumstances, such as the fact that in rural areas of some countries there are no secondary schools and migrations occur to swell the ranks of poor urban youth, without further preparation for the cultural and employment needs.

Several studies identified low education or desertion as a factor associated with pregnancy teenager. Krauskopf and Cabezas (1989) found that in the metropolitan area of \u200b\u200bSan Jose, pregnancy occurred mainly in girls who had dropped out of school, which is consistent with other Latin American research and differs from U.S. data, which indicate the dserción pregnancy as a cause of school (although there appears to be associated with previous difficulties in performance). In rural areas, on the other hand, establishing a union is a cause of dropout and dedication to home, which includes the procreation of children (Porras, 1993).

Torres Rivas (1989) reports that, according to the Census of Costa Rican prison population, conducted in 1982, illiteracy remains the property of many young offenders (40% of those under 17 years). In addition 63.4% had incomplete primary and all had no permanent job. Weinstein

highlights some behaviors that are the product of poverty in Latin America as the premature entry to employment, job performance and lower marginal contractualism, which leads to lack of health protection and labor rights, the prolonged unemployment ; conflicts of legal or criminal, especially those that lead to experiences of arrest and detention, the repeated repetition while within the school system and the expulsion for academic or disciplinary reasons, and early dropout from the system, lack of support networks to cope with the difficulties experienced in family, employment, sexuality, addictions, depression, etc. ..

Several authors indicate that the environment of extreme poverty is thus more exposed to serious risks and lower protective resources, the chronic high conflict family environment especially if accompanied by neglect, abuse, expulsion from home, presence of alcoholism, physical abuse and sexual, not having family, peer group membership that focus on social transgression, violence or addiction to drugs, stay in center legal detention, lack of support networks (Blum, 1995; Weinstein, 1992), no study or work, lack of opinions on development of skills that enable self-reliance and social recognition. It is important to recognize that among the risk factors are specific aspects of psychological and social functioning of youth such as low self-esteem and lack of a future project.

4. risky behaviors in the juvenile period.

the juvenile period in the biological, social and psychological staff and rethinking the definition of the human being through a second individuation process of exploration that moves, differentiation the family environment, looking for belonging and meaning of life, anxiety involving transitional and specific vulnerabilities (Bloss, 1981, Ausubel, 1954, Erikson, 1974).

4.1. The context of modernity.

Modernization has brought a weak and often contradictory structure of programming offered at this period of growth. In this context, the everyday becomes a challenge and uncertainty in time through which young people develop their identity. Our society, unlike primitive societies, it is not clear to raise public requirements to engage young people ritually as a member of recognized value.

Larson (1988) notes that "If we seek an equivalent of the adolescent rite of passage in our society we can see that, at present, the brave challenges that are designated to serve as a decisive demonstration prestigious roles in our society, probably not are both physical strength as his own personal independence and ability to think and work. The academic projects, dissertations and theses are closer to this description. " Obviously this option is only available to a small number of young people, and that even for them, these rituals appreciate the intellectual sphere only and do not consider the physical and socio-affective aspects.

may risk behaviors such as smoking, boldly drive cars, drink, equal rites of passage, generated in the youth subculture itself when there are opportunities to prove their passage to adulthood by testing their emerging skills to a society that welcomes them. In this regard, countries that have implemented the delivery of the Youth Card, fill part of the void indicated.

4.2. identity.

The construction of identity can be resolved through the recognition of personal characteristics and exploration of new possibilities from the perspective of a future commitment of its staff and society. When the behavior Risk appears in this direction, may be part of the meeting with the potential and enriching experience. It is increasingly evident in current studies that certain behaviors, even if they involve risks "may also lead to the contrary, becoming a source of learning and a kind of antidote to any damage (Weinstein, 1992:8).

When the bases of identity development are deficient, the claim states lacking teen structuring a compromise that seeks to avoid hazards in order to preserve the present achievements and Furuta. Instead, increase risky behavior who seek instant gratification or affirmation through actions that are fleeting sensations of achievement and recognition.

4.3. options.

satisfaction or dissatisfaction with personal performance has implications for the balance staff (self-image), social integration (social value) and the development of capacities to respond to this and plan ahead. The lack of solution to these problems affect the health and welfare of young people, leading to increased risk behaviors, and contributes to lower their chances of successful social integration. In these circumstances, the youth is vulnerable to obtaining rewards through behavior indiscriminate, short-range, immediate and accessible "to affirm their self-esteem, feelings of success find the same risk, finding emotional support in dangerous activities that do not provide consequences or anesthetized (drugs, mass activities, games that isolate them from reality ) to not feel overwhelming frustration, all of which leads to damage.

opportunities opening expands the range of experience enables the adolescent to have credentials for successful integration and provides goals to which no motivation to postpone pseudosolutions immediate risk. The reduction of negative chain reactions repeat prevents maladaptive responses and does not give the negative attitudes of others.

If the situation in which such perspectives are not offers, adolescents themselves revert to vent their dissatisfaction and anger against the environment, which provides them with the feeling of power. Your vulnerbilidad has increased and consequently increases susceptibility to reactively avoid frustration by risky and fleeting satisfaction of their needs for self-esteem and belonging.

4.4. risk behaviors.

agree with Jessor (1991) when he suggests differences between 1) risk behaviors are those that undertake aspects of psychosocial development or survival of the person during their youth development and even, on occasion, seek the danger in itself and 2) behaviors that involve risks, which are specific to young people who take risk assessments (not very different from adults) aware of it and how part of the commitment and the need for a richer and fuller development. Jessor considered unfortunate tendency to treat all adolescents as people who have risk behaviors, as the generalization leads to risky behavior are explained by occur in adolescents and can not delve into those young people who really have a style of life consistent in risky behaviors (true risk factors), which constitute important vulnerability of target groups to promote their health, welfare and social integration.

psychosocial The reformulation of the concept of risk led to a cost-benefit analysis of behavior, which is particularly important in the approach to be given to youth. Jessor (1991) exemplifies his position with the anti-drug campaigns that teach the teenager to say No. It raises the possibility that teens leave as risky behavior is strongly related to the possibility that astisfacción offered valuable alternative for them.

dissatisfaction and concern that adolescents have for their personal performance (both educational and labor) lack of socio-affective and cognitive nutrients, show their need for a present that will open possibilities for discovery and certainty about their own abilities and value. This is particularly important in the considerations of preventive interventions, because the issues dealt with are of high sensitivity, intimacy and have numerous personal and sociocultural implications.

Jessor (1991:598) notes that "smoking, drinking, dangerous driving of vehicles or early sexual activity can be ways to gain acceptance and respect from peers, to establish autonomy from their parents, in repudiating the conventional authority , its values \u200b\u200band standards in managing their anxiety, frustration and anticipation of failure or to assert their maturity and show the transition from childhood to adulthood. "Jessor's position is not aimed at justifying the continuation of these behaviors but to highlight the complexity of the intervention to be effectively achieved.

5. damage, protective factors and resilience.

In previous issues we have mentioned risk factors, and vulnerability. The picture would not be complete (at least at the current level of contributions on the subject) if resilience considered an important factor that is reflected in the amazing ability shown by many human beings grow and develop in adverse media and competency levels and health that in other cases, not enough individuals were not subjected to severe trauma or negative situations.

5.1. Resilience

The term resilience, which Rutter (1992) conceptualized with important research and theoretical developments, comes from a company identified in metals that can withstand shocks and recover its internal structure. It refers to the ability of humans to recover from adversity and, indeed, transform adversities into an element of encouragement and development. It is the ability to effectively confront adverse events, which may even be a factor for improvement (Smith, 1993).

Resilience provides a lower susceptibility to stress and reduces the potential of being affected by negative events, even some damage. Reflected in the fact that at different times of life of people show greater ability to cope, resist and recover from factors that can be destructive.

factors that increase resilience, Rutter (1992) highlights the previous exposure to psychosocial adversity with a successful coping with stress and danger. Graded doses of coping with difficulties may operate similarly to the immunizations. Conversely, overprotection appears to act in the opposite direction. One possible explanation for this is that in overprotection, decisions and their consequences are in the hands of others, which fosters an external locus of control and individual self-esteem does not consolidate the testing of their skills and personal and social recognition of the outcome of their responsibilities, so which is more at the mercy of external events. On the other hand, are permanently subjected to hardships and stress, seems to greatly reduce the development of resilience (Grottberg, 1992).

5.2. protective factors. Notes

Rutter that the same factor may be at risk and / or protection (for the development of new attitudes and skills) in the circumstances. That is, reducing the impact to vulnerability occurs to understand more fully the meaning of danger have been gradual exposure to this type of situation or ability to respond effectively to have the necessary support and learning to develop alternative non-destructive response, significant adults receive the modeling approaches developmentally appropriate responses to resolve problems that are part of human life. In a small study in Costa Rica it was found that adolescents whose homes they discussed the problems facing any member and usually talking about real alternative solution or confrontation, developed a greater sense of competence to conduct themselves in situations conditions (Krauskopf, 1994).

The possibility of establishing a positive self-esteem based on achievement, performance and recognition of responsibilities, opportunities to develop social skills, cognitive and emotional coping, decision making and anticipate consequences, increasing internal locus of control (ie recognize itself the possibility of transforming circumstances so that they respond to their needs, preservation and aspirations) personal protective factors can be promoted, which are connected with the development of resilience.

family needs to support the adolescent growth, confirm the process of individuation, can analyze the new expressions emerging changes in the juvenile phase without stigma; solve emerging affective dimensions in the context of acceptance of family system dynamics, share the needs of new roles and may, from an empathic perspective, guide, advise, assist, monitor . The protection from physical self-care (nutrition, exercise, safe sex) development of new interests, of rewards through the expression of talent and social participation to reduce the exposure risk free.

are also key external protective factors. It is not like the fate of a teen & Researchers who have the ability to access non-repudiation prenatal care, can continue with their education, with the support and guidance dealing with their situation, a young woman who happens otherwise. Nor will the equally effective AIDS prevention workshops for teens that promote responsible sexual relations with a capacity of assertiveness, internal locus of control and protection through condom use, if desired external protective factors are not consistent. Examples may be: censorship pharmacy clerk at the request of condoms, the difficulty for some staff assigned to training to be convinced of the position on the prevention modality youth sexuality, fear of girls being exposed to condoms by their parents, adult disbelief about the possibility that young people really take precautions in times of both emotion and anguish to accept the existence of youth sexuality.

5.3. factors predisposing to injury.

structuring factors impeding the achievement behaviors are the challenges consumerism, ephemeral offered to the teen sector and greater accessibility of participation in evación cultures of transgression, while opportunities for bonuses and options for constructive social relevance are restricted. Gresham

(1986) points out that teens who have not learned to deal with situations resulting from the tensions of its development and environmental conditions, have been frequently involved in chaotic homes and models devoid of capacity for containment and handling.

If the construction of identity is given to feelings of self worth and efforts to achieve social integration are accompanied by positive recognition and an internal locus of control, increasing the risk protection required in the exploration activities. If, however, identity is constructed so confusing, incomplete, partial, with feelings of personal devaluation and exclusion social vulnerability will be greater and the propensity for risky behaviors to meet the withdrawal at any cost, the more likely.

6. intervention strategies against the risk in the juvenile phase.

not intend to present in this section a comprehensive study of the problems and opportunities involving the development of policies to address youth risk behaviors, but provide some modest reflections that constitute milestones in the complexity of the challenge. The analysis conducted thus far to conclude that most of the causes of mortality and morbidity in the juvenile phase are preventable. To prevent damage and risk behaviors is necessary to adopt appropriate strategies combiene neutralizing risk factors, limits on out of control behaviors, strengthening protective factors and identify not only individual negative aspects, but also personal traits that allow success social integration, positive self-image.

social programs aimed at youth show a strong concern for reducing vulnerability and the damage they are exposed to large numbers of young American. This has been frequently mentioned and look for programs targeting youth at high risk. One difficulty This is the definition and operationalization of the target groups and areas to be identified to assess their vulnerability.

6.1. Instruments juvenile risk assessment.

The assessment of behaviors and risk factors for the justification of intervention and prevention strategies, ways have been opened in operationalizing the problem with the development of instruments to assess the presence of risk behaviors in male and female adolescents. Among these we can point to Hofmann (1990) who has a targeted approach to the detection of psychological and interpersonal aspects. The author develops a psychosocial inventory for performance assessment of health risk that consists of six main sections: home, school, peers, romantic relationships, substance use, antisocial behavior. Consider the performance deterioration as a sign of potential problems and identifies as a key element in the assessment of risk behaviors to health, poor cognitive level and the lack of youth involvement in the learning of the decision-making.

The National Survey on Youth Risk Behavior conducted in the United States in 1992 built a series of interesting indicators that included both high-risk behaviors, factors related to risk and protective factors each properly operationalized for assessment (Department of Health and Human Services, 1994).

This kind of approach needs to be refocused according to the characteristics of both Latin American lifestyles and in relation to the presence of contingents of young people living in exclusion, impoverishment of options for cognitive development, creativity, recognition production and lack of adequate social integration options are recognized as valuable.

Weinstein (1992) provides the construction of a Psychosocial Risk Index in Young that incorporates ten dimensions of vulnerability of recognized value as predictors of psychosocial harm during youth or impact in adulthood. Consider the following dimensions subjected to a weighting of experts: socioeconomic status, family origin, couples, addictions, sexuality, relationship to formal education related to employment, relationship with the legal system and criminal, psychological characteristics, support networks . The dimensions of the highest weighting in the index are the family of origin and relationship to formal education.

6.2. Actions risk reduction and increased protection .

is essential to refer to the role of protective factors in risky youth behavior. As we have said, a major focus is on the opportunities for skills development and social inclusion. Roldán (1994) highlights three fundamental ecological environments in the development of children and adolescents: the womb, the family and school.

Regarding the latter stressed that not all born with equal opportunities to respond to the formal education system. Argentina develops an action research program which aims to detect risk and protective factors for adolescent health in schools and developed a successful training experience for teachers and school authorities and health workers. Specifies the need for early detection of people at risk of being eliminated from the educational system for learning difficulties and discipline and necessary to achieve reduction in the number of students at risk for truancy, poor performance, penalties, exclusion from the system by authorities. Documents

World Health Organization (1989) recognize the importance of school, the role it can play in primary prevention and primary and highlight the need to promote healthy lifestyles among youth. Usually the opposite is analyzed, that is, whether adolescents meet the criteria for success of the educational system. In this case, the possibility of promoting health approach is quite excluded.

6.3. priority target groups.

While no breakdown of the target groups for their exposure to risk or presence of damage, as this requires in each detection area planning and priority strategies, we refer briefly to some groups that have been identified as relevant coincidentally.

Most of the analysis of risk behaviors can be concluded that among the priority target group for prevention of risk behaviors are the teenage dropouts and potential dropouts.

is a factor risk that is associated with many behaviors that lead to injury. Identify, characterize the conditions of their vulnerability to provide action tools to educational institutions through its faculty, seek solutions to promote successful retention of students is important area to develop. Although students can not avoid the drop can be crucial guide them after identifying their resources to developing their life plan and guidance to enable them to constructively redirect the course of their difficulties. Another important area of \u200b\u200bfocus is adolescent sexuality concern is with teen pregnancy are more visible young people and emerge the need to include this segment of the population in the agenda of health planning. However, in reproductive health care is necessary to include more emphatically masculine values \u200b\u200band the role that fits the male (Population Council, 1990). On the other hand, the concern about pregnancy seems to predominate, which when looking antoconceptivos not necessarily considered the prevention of sexually transmitted diseases. This area also involves many other aspects of interpersonal type and sometimes even social pathology: early prostitution, sexual abuse, etc.

rural-urban migration and membership in an extremely poor socioeconomic requiring adolescents to develop coping strategies to satisfy their basic needs: food, housing, and so on., increasing exposure to risk factors. Young people for whom the streets are important needs satisfaction are devoid of many protective factors.

high risk groups are those sectors whose behavior is out of control for belonging to strata with little access to the options and be subject to particularly intense disruptive stimulation for various reasons (economic, political, military, marginality, distorting impact of modernization, lack of employment and education), and pose an urgent challenge to find possible instances give appropriate continence and driving opportunities in their care.

The youth offenders, violent, addicted are important target groups. The experiences based primarily on social control have not proved sufficient to lead to the reduction of these behaviors and subsequent damage, and at times have come to be risk factors. Prevention programs should be All in addition to the level of arrest and detention (when necessary), the more accurate identification teenage problem, the supply of comprehensive models that allow repair missing elements through voluntary admission to these programs, which in turn are articulated with social inclusion pathways that facilitate the independence and productivity. This requires the involvement of developers able to motivate and inform young people in risk areas.

regard to accidents, fundamental cause of juvenile mortality, it should discuss the creation of new approaches to strengthen existing measures. Interestingly, driver's license, is somehow one of the few rites of passage into adulthood that our society offers (the others are achieved by young people entering secondary schooling and the right to vote), which could help to develop preventive programs linked to this.

6.4. Youth involvement in prevention strategies.

One aspect that gains increasing recognition methodology is the need to involve young people themselves to proposals and program implementation. Weinstein (1992:82) recommends that "social programs aimed at psychosocial risk youth should explore communication strategies to consider ways and sources of information that this age group and has social." Emphasizes that the information circulating in the local level, Nearby motivating these young leaders for their information and opinion can influence them. Indeed these strategies have been implemented successfully in several Latin American countries and constitute a form of work promoting the situation of young people at risk for progressing and strengthening comprehensive.

The focus of care involves taking into account the presence of risk factors present in early adolescence. On the other side in the last stage of adolescence -17 to 20 years, the concerns and appear to increase self-care capabilities.

There is increased awareness of risks at both the sexual in the field of drug and psychosocial aspects of development are more clearly perceived. These youth can be trained to promote health in its various aspects and act as multiplier agents because of their strong interaction with peer groups.

7. Final Remarks.

is possible to identify sectors with greater exposure to risk, with various health assessments, with varying development of resources that allow us to provide, promote and enhance the quality of life. Biological and sociocultural differences defined that, besides the health problems shared by men and women, there are manifestations of the prevailing mortality or are unique to either sex, which is present more or less, and even features different in ethnicity, socioeconomic status, rural or urban areas and special very important and critical in the juvenile phase.
preventive interventions for risk behavior and risk factors consider both internal and external security and increased vulnerability to early age (teens: 10 to 15 years) and better self-care ability and leadership in health promotion and social integration in the proper period youth (15 to 24 years).

Youth participation in the design and implementation of strategies is fundamental, the articulation with adults who are trained and convinced of the appropriateness of actions. The existence of capacitated networks, promoters of street groups prioritize circuits embedded in high-risk, rites of passage that value publicly joining adult responsibilities are important support in the development of actions.

Finally, it is important to conclude with Perry and Jessor (1985), when they point out that the promotion of health from risky behavior is not simply a matter of personal responsibility. The immediate context of the lives, the modeling of personality and social roles are related to economic, social and political. Changes in social approaches in the structure of educational opportunities, employment, recreation and personal development are essential for a comprehensive approach to health promotion, all of which can not occur without input from those interested in investigating and acting permanently commitment to overcome the risk aspects of the juvenile phase at all possible levels.

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Cookie Bouquet Orange County

Participation, Education and Development. Definition of Resilience

Decentralization, Participation and Education: Reflections on their relationship in the implementation of strategic education management models [1]. Francisco J.

M. Hair

Introduction.

The paper presents an overview of the role of decentralization in the new management of the state. Considers its definition, the contextual elements that have facilitated its restoration in the area of \u200b\u200bgovernance and the requirements of local and territorial entity that requires citizen participation. In association with the above, is offered as reference operational implementation of the decentralization process their application in the field of education [2] and their realization in the application of a specific and highly significant tool for the management of curricular reform that articulates the niches of local participation, called Institutional Educational Project (PEI). Finally, we made some comments aimed at establishing the effect of education decentralization, materialized by PEI instruments on the promotion of local participation and, consequently, reducing the marginalization and poverty.

The obligation of decentralization and the need for participation.

no doubt as to the central position has made the decentralization strategy in the programs of modernization and strengthening of the effectiveness of state management [3]. This position is not only due to a sort of buzzword in public administration but is a strong grounding in the world of economic phenomena, and especially in information and technology. In connection therewith, Gonzales (1996) points out that transnational corporations have proven to be facing a need to decentralize, decentralize and relocate, as this can manage more effectively large organizations also need to be highly flexible about changing demands of their products. This condition is highly likely due to the rise of data processing systems and analysis of information and communication systems, a quality that McLuhan has given the background to suggest the real existence of a "global village" and Capra for talk about "holographic society [4].

In the world of civil society, on the other hand, has noted a generalized process of identification or reference loss for large organizations (national) and a tendency to form action spaces closest authorities and with greater degree of autonomy. "The great social movements or expressions of organic and national coverage compared lose weight on a variety of smaller organizations. A part of the reorganization of civil society is expressed in actions, proceedings or movements of territorial local "(pp18). After the fall of the "metanarratives" as Lyotard's terms, the exercise of citizenship has gained the status of quota management, where the confrontation of the problems of social integration are seen as problems of supply and consumption, and by both consumers [5]. References are shifted from the realm of the plane measured at the practical or strategic. Established

above, the state has been forced to adapt to this new phenomenon of pressures on decisional spaces in the various sub-national levels. Therefore a review and revision of its current configuration is an urgent task. "The national space, in terms of support and reference to state action, gives importance to regional and local scales, as well as international, as the only way the state maintains a real and efficient interaction with the social processes on which it seeks to influence "(PP19). If we add to this the crisis that led to the welfare model the progressive increase of coverage and public spending on health, education, housing, subsidies and others [6] that states guided by this model implemented in 60/70, corollary is the fact that society can no longer count on the state or at least, make it a lesser extent than in the past to ensure, in this new context, some basic conditions of access and consumption of services.

This new scenario determines a space demand in the promotion and strengthening of a new role and long horizon for the population, which indicates its essential involvement in the resolution of the deficit and social aspirations. She must become a resource itself, through the updating of all the potential it has - as the organizational capacity and to establish cooperative ties - which should be combined with access to skills and instrumental knowledge. "In this context the popular sectors are no longer characterized as a liability, given their poverty or marginalization. Highlights, however, the values \u200b\u200bof initiative, creativity, and solidarity of their practices. Become producers of practices and strategies with long-term implications for society "(PP28). As well, the space / residence is valued as a facilitator collective experiences of survival and development, defining a new line of action to improve conditions and quality of life, is at the local and direct action for survival and as a possible factor of development.

From the perspective of facing the new direction of the state's management believes that the political and social action of the future must incorporate, as a resource or component, the capacity for action and the knowledge contained by society (Gonzales , 1996). A modern and effective state administration should consider the obligation to develop a strong capacity to involve the society in the management of the problems afflicting it. In other words, the effectiveness of a new model of governance depends on joint participation and decision spaces, especially for those groups that have limited access and consumption of public goods and private consumption [7].

precautionary In response to the demands of the aforementioned context is that the state has projected a series of transformations on shapes and locations of choice. For this policy has failed to promote processes of two types: Decentralization and Deconcentration. According to

Martner (1993) decentralization processes involve the application of political will in which the central body disclaims all or the monopoly of the different forms of power that has [8]. For its part, decentralized processes extend peripheral administration both functional and territorial. In other words, "the decentralization of public functions is defined as the transfer of powers conferred by law to a lower court to rule on certain matters or certain territory, maintaining the hierarchical subordination to a higher criteria that may give general policy but not secure the resolution of matters entrusted to the bottom ... the concept of decentralization [meanwhile] refers to the transfer of powers from the administrative body central to legal entities distinct from that, ie, having legal personality and its own assets and are not legally subordinate, but under its supervision. " (Pp 14-15).

Both types of processes are being materialized in the implementation of policies, plans and programs from among those aimed at improving education are highly strategic. In fact, it has come to raise the quality and effectiveness of future state political action will be strongly mediated by the ability of integration into the global economy in at least the fields of technological innovation [9] Qualification of Human Resources [10] and the ability to access a growing market and progressive unification, all highly dependent conditions strength in the domain of education and research a country can develop.

As noted Martner, conventional factors of production become less important with increasing the weight of technological progress. Citing Turrow realize that in the past "... comparative advantage was a function of the possession of natural resources ... each industry had its natural location. Consider what is generally believed to be the seven basic industries of the future decades - microelectronics, biotechnology, telecommunications, robots and machine tools, and computers plus software. All are industries that rely on brain power. All can be installed anywhere in the world. Where they are installed will depend on those likely to take advantage of brain power "(PP19).

Seek more effective public policy requires final reorientations in content relating to areas of research and development, education and, more generally, investment in human skills. That is why within the sectors in which decentralization policies are implemented by the Chilean state, the most strategic importance is that of education.

Some considerations on decentralization in education.

The model that guides the educational reform is based on principles underlying the experience of late-developing economies (Asian countries), in which knowledge and technology form the core of its growth, in the English reform model, specifically in constructivist understanding of learning processes and ECLA's proposal of "Education and Knowledge at the heart of Productive Transformation with Equity." All of these perspectives

understand the reform in the field of education as a process of transformation of patterns of social relations, value systems and systems of representation of the world, needed to generate productive changes that allow a joint adaptive economy and society at national and subnational global context.

To achieve these changes is necessary to make changes to infrastructure, equipment and, primarily, curriculum models. In the field of education there is almost unanimous agreement among educational psychologists regarding the impact of teaching practice such as that traditionally used in formal education, characterized by abstract status (no quota) and decontextualized (a local) [11]. Rote learning and not significant, stunted social skills and self-esteem, decreased initiative, creativity and purpose, are some of the features that are conducive to a pedagogy based on the principle of authority of the teacher, the rationalist [12] learning and understanding objectivist [13] of knowledge. Only the passing of such practices, deaf to the requirement of locality is important the new global order [14], generate the "jump" quality that allows the advancement of knowledge, technology development and value added in production and increasing the competitiveness of the national economy into the global economic scenario [15]. This is

that have implemented decentralization processes in the field of education, underpinned by a strategy that addresses from the compulsory curriculum of the local and the participation of the community. This is to release the action and innovation capabilities of local actors, offsetting the aftermath of the educational model called "traditional" and thus increase the productive capacity added nationally.

The strategy has resulted in the structuring of a curriculum based on Fundamental Objectives (OF), lateral and vertical, and minimum content (CM) [16]. In operational terms, means that the law, given the rigorous attention to OP and CM allows "... each educational institution [to] decide whether to prepare and propose their plans and programs of study or put into practice those to be developed by the Ministry Education, and shall in both cases, structure their curriculum in order to give due effect to these objectives and content "(Official Journal, February 3, 1996, p.4). In other words, each establishment or group of them will have to decide whether to implement plans and programs that define the Ministry Education, if they adapt to the needs and characteristics of their educational projects, or develop plans and programs of study themselves, depending on the specific requirements of your school community and the fulfillment of the OP and CM. This is to materialize the spirit underlying the system used for the establishment of the OP and CM, as to provide sufficient flexibility to allow their application through plans and programs that express the interests of educational communities, and have procedures allow its application to situations of emergency that may arise in the field of education.

In the new framework, the definition plans and programs of study means to implement an interactive curriculum involving both state establishments. This procedure is consistent with developing educational policies, aimed at solving the problems of quality of learning and equal opportunities, with the creative participation of the agents of education (MOE, 1998).

In the process of realization of effective use of spaces for participation that decentralization of education (via LOCE) promotes, has acquired a symbolic, but effective single system image, the educational management tool called Project Institutional Education (IEP). This is the instrument that collects and any proposal likely to materialize in terms of curriculum and from which is expected to achieve greater autonomy in educational decision making and flexibility in their administration. It is also expected from him the ability to increase the participation of the educational community and improve relations between the educational institution with its surroundings, keeping the horizon commitment to learning outcomes in students (MINEDUC, 1998). This PEI

organize and structure the local curriculum proposals, adding to it the design and operational planning for the implementation of the curriculum eventually generated. In this sense, has the charm of a strategic management model that guides the educational community in their development towards achieving the goals and objectives shared by her. Should specify clearly and precisely the objectives and lines of action that can achieve the goals established for the educational organization (MINUDUC, 1998). "This is the Institutional Educational Project that gives coherence to the various activities and projects of the school, the same can be articulated with PADEM [17] and also appears to apply to external financing, or Draft Full School Day" ( PP6).

The project is expressed in the definition of issues on two levels:
- Guiding Principles of the identity of the educational community and strategic objectives.
- Operational Plan which embodies commitments, set goals, deadlines, lines of action, evaluation forms, etc..
consider as guiding principles in the process of its construction as follows:
- be highly participatory. Creative engagement of teachers, plus the participation of students, parents and guardians and other stakeholders in the community or community institutions is a key determinant of success of the educational project.
- Being reflective and evaluative. In the search for permanent improvements, innovations and creations is required evaluate, refocus and reflect on the commitment to the values \u200b\u200band principles that guide the project.
Strengths and weaknesses of procedure [18].

Under the direction of decentralization processes in the modernization of public administration - that is, first, to democratize the state by encouraging the participation not only in actions but also in the decisions of the local and the other , streamline the management of problem solving and meeting the needs of the population approaching centralized services - is highly consistent with the procedure of structuring the participation social in the definition of PEIs with the requirement of local participation and management located. Both the principles of Participation and Reflection and Assessment, supported by the triangulation of opinions, worldviews, needs and expectations, presumably for the procedure for the formulation and administration of PEIs an inherent property to induce participation.

Notwithstanding the foregoing, and considering the possibility of extending widely the samples of consistency between the proposed use of IEPs as a tool for educational management and the underlying purpose of facilitating social integration and overcoming poverty by facilitating access to participation, it is interesting to distinguish fundamental elements that matter fractures, apparently non-existent. It has been pointed

management system that supports the implementation of educational reform in terms of vectors with decentralization, ie the technical and programmatic coordination and implementation decentralized operating - administrative decentralized. This definition is expressed in the basic techniques in terms of teaching practices, curricular goals and model made by the ministry of education [19], and decentralized implementation [20] (local) of the central guidelines, operationalized activities of each school community, unrelated to each other in the context of the community.

rationality that combines the application of criteria for decentralization and devolution to the operating of the curriculum reform via PEI, described as so far there is suspicious, nevertheless, and from a change in management, are evident obstructions important to the effective articulation of local curricula, participatory process catalysts. This finding is realized when the investment is proposed logic functions assigned in a decentralized and devolved. In this sense, the coordination function technical and modeling of educational development undertaken by the ministry and administrative function undertaken by operationalizing municipal education should be reversed, so that the role of technical definition of educational development models constitutes a local responsibility and the role of operational management, and administrative actions to assist educational change, a central responsibility.

Specifically, we propose, as a first guideline for strengthening participation in the formulation of IEPs, assigned to the decentralized entities of the ministry the task of setting parameters of quality and efficiency management and administration of corporate systems of education, on the basis of which special resource allocations determined, a rigorous system for evaluating the social returns from such investments. It will be the central level and its derivatives in charge of ensuring the efficient management and offer a "product" quality education [21].

As a second orientation, shown assigned to the local authority to define the technical requirements for the implementation of management models identified by the ministry, that is, place the responsibility for the choice of methodologies, the aims and objectives educational program in each community [22].

At issue is consistent in the context of the purposes of deconcentrated and decentralized policies, even if it seems contradictory to the way these policies are implemented. For the former, it marks the achievement of administrative efficiency by linking the central government to local needs through decentralized agents, an approach that clearly falls within the management and administration of educational development processes, the second marks the achievement equity in participation and opportunity to decide, issue in the educational field has to do with how is structured the social dynamics at school while promoting the development of knowledge or, in other words, with technical matters.

In the above context, the central level does not correspond to the definition of the conditions that promote equity in education, since this is a technical exercise, since the methodological approach taken by the reform is effective only in the plane of the local [23]. Also, when you point to devolution policies the pursuit of efficiency in the management of the state, every entity is assigned to the mission of optimizing decentralized management, on the basis of ensuring knowledge of the needs and offer appropriate solutions (effective), an issue that has nothing to do with local conditions but with rights of all citizens of the country.

Operationally, the central level should match the funding allocation of educational units authorized to operate, which would feed multiple special allocation funds by ranking institutional performance, institutional or personal sub, built on the basis of management criteria .

All schools approved to run would benefit from core funding, but increasing its competitiveness and its quality depends efficiency in the presentation of initiatives and periodic evaluations of management. The administration of these procedures correspond to the central level - decentralized.

technical aspects are the responsibility of each school, however these aspects which condition the magnitude of the special financing that assign the central level, beyond the basic funding. This special funding should be "streamlined goal", ie should not be defined from the same technical level, but must be decided on the basis of management criteria [24]. In other words, the allocation extra resources will be determined only by the state of management indicators, being a full local authority to define the curriculum models, plans and educational programs.

The previous proposal points to a basic condition that context matters a factor that undermines the likelihood of inducing effective participation and curricular location by the PEI. If the above is added the fact that the strategic approach that supports the methodology of the PEIs requires modern criteria of management and executive powers, highly adaptive and innovative in those who coordinate, another obstacle appears, at least strategic. In fact, in the field of management public, a tradition that does not operate on the basis of performance and performance [25] causes a marked resistance to change and that teachers in this context is not required, becoming, even a threat and a source of stress. This management style - along with an organizational culture characterized Chile, according to Rodriguez [26], by personal relationships, paternalistic and individualistic competitive peer, in which the responsibilities are spread and became rigid hierarchies, creating ample space for development informal relationships - sets a significant obstacle to thinking about the feasibility of curriculum reform in terms of operational involvement PEI via local ..

In short, the problem feasibility of local participation / refroma curricular / PEI is derived, first, application out of touch with changes in space, time and implementing educational criteria associated with centralized and decentralized exercise of the powers involved in implementation of the reform involves changes [27], and secondly, a decentralized governance inefficient, does not operate on the basis of clear criteria and procedures for the implementation of policies designed to shares allocated to each level and element the local government apparatus [28].

The consequences of maintenance of the situation, meanwhile, are sorted into three areas. In the first, socio-cultural - in the absence of sufficient degrees of participation and perpetuate the traditional curriculum model (not local), as previously noted above, proves to be ineffective for the development of the initiative, creativity, autonomy, responsibility, partnership, etc.. in individuals and groups - is located reproducing hierarchical social relations, rigid, authoritarian, conflicting, resistant to change and development.

In the second, of an intellectual nature, there is the generation of students uncritical, passive cognitively player / repeater information, unable to generate knowledge, lack of initiative and purpose; features outlined a pattern of significant academic failure associated with poor school performance and adjustment problems resulting from the perpetuation of traditional teaching system [29].

In the third, of an organizational nature of the conflict is on the unit link educational / community. In this sense, the poor implementation of opportunities for participation perpetuates the traditional isolation of the education unit about the community in two ways: 1) Reduced level of adaptation and contextualization of the curriculum, reducing also the degree of relevance of these, which is caused to appreciate the acquired knowledge of little use by students, their families and even their community [30]. 2) Lack of linkage and collaboration with the community in the work training of children and youth, a situation that has led to a growing demand for school accountability on issues that are beyond the scope purely educational. The result, progressive reloading work for teachers.

The last aspect to be noted, together with the experiences of school failure caused by the consequences of a traditional curriculum - some of them contained in the two areas before described - make up a scenario in which teachers are under a heavy load of stress and frustration. This effect enhances the ability of innovative initiatives obtaculizadora has governance model. In this sense, the mode of operation described generates consequences that are responsible for recycling, a relationship which is evident when one observes that the profile of students in traditional education system does not correspond with that of students able to meet the contingencies of globalization an active, not passive.


[1] Paper presented at the course "Structure and Local Development Management, Master of Social Sciences University Academy of Christian Humanism.
[2] This area was chosen because it represents the axis of which ECLAC has termed "Productive Transformation with Equity" and also one of the most developed economies posinductriales.
[3] A local example, in the city of Temuco are two masters with a specialization in Local Development (Universidad de la Frontera and the University Academy of Christian Humanism), a diploma in Public Management (PERCADE and Central University), which aims to socialize in the use of the methodologies involved in the proposed modernization of the state apparatus, and a diploma in Local Development (Universidad Bolivariana) to strengthen municipal management and promotion of third sector organizations. All these programs have focused on training both public sector workers themselves, as private agents and civilians who are organized around state management, noting both the orientation training and the demand for technical expertise in human resources public sector with a clear emphasis on the development of criteria and practices of decentralization.
[4] With this confirms the possibility of immediate communication and therefore to operate anywhere in the world from another regardless of physical distance. The holographic Capra referred to by establishing the virtual domain, you are buying the level of economic relations and communication. These two elements reinforce, from the level of social philosophy, reading the revitalization of local representatives, identifying them as the trading platform in the ongoing globalization process.
[5] In this respect, the work of García Canclini builds the representation of "hybrid culture" from analyzing the processes of economic integration from the perspective of consumption.
[6] The state became the figure of a slow, heavy machinery, a number exceeded and inefficient central bureaucrats, with serious deficiencies in the management of public services. We associate the idea of \u200b\u200bcomprehensive planning, without relevance to more concrete and specific realities, of excessive homogenization of centrally-designed policies, lack of initiative in the low and intermediate levels of the state apparatus, both of which have relative degrees decentralization and those who are attached to central services unit.
[7] This "paradigm" participation is the means of social integration and overcoming poverty in that they permit equitable access to the consumption of a range of goods and services provided by the state, which, in addition to compensate basic needs, to enable future autonomous participation in the global market offers.
[8] and delegating regulatory power, power management, power control, power information.
[9] "In today's world of little use to invent a new product if the inventor is not the cheapest producer of that product"
[10] She should not only focus on the population of scientists and technicians, but must also widespread in the factory, office, support services, distribution and repair services. "Otherwise they would not be possible to incorporate the use of new information technologies (Technology computer design and manufacturing, statistical quality control, inventory management just in time) in the whole process of production of goods and services ... "(Martner, 1993, PP16-17)
[11] These features are associated State management style like "welfare state" where the centralization of planning decisions and regulations defining the political and technical decisions
[12] The learning takes place in a rational, no practice is necessary. This "dogma" has attempted in the past strongly against an applied learning approach, closer to what is a process development of technology and know-how.
[13] The reality is objective, "universal" common and equal to all people. Not recognized the possibility of "multiversal." This other "dogma" reduces tolerance and appreciation for diversity, weakening the bonds of support and collaboration as the potential synergistic effects of human groups and communities in highly heterogeneous resources available, as are the national communities.
[14] "Think globally, act locally" T. Levitt, Harvard Business School (in Martner, 1993).
[15] For this is a significant reference document " challenges facing the Chilean Education for XXI century ", better known as the Bruner report, conducted in 1994 by the technical advisory committee of the national dialogue on the modernization of the Chilean education, appointed by the president of the republic.
[16] Constitutional Organic Law of Education.
[17] Annual Plan Municipal Educational Development.
[18] contains the actions and criteria associated with the implementation of IEPs as a strategy of decentralization.
[19] Note the definition of the constructivist model as its theoretical - methodological and operationalization of fundamental objectives and minimum content posed reform.
[20] recalls the municipal level which manages the premises on which ministerial criteria are imposed.
[21] It should be noted that the quality of education rather than their content or technical or methodological guidelines used, is a constitutional right and therefore has the range to be an element of central government and, therefore, decentralized.
[22] Even when prescribing the development of educational projects at the local level, to define only the fundamental objectives and minimum content of the curriculum by the central level, the implementation framework, its administrative elements and management as well as in its technical parameters, it imposes significant restrictions on the development of relevant and effective educational initiatives within the context of integrated development of local areas to the global world.
[23] The equity in the educational context is directly related to the degree of balance in the distribution of knowledge in a community. From the conceptual perspective of reform, knowledge entities which correspond to from active processing of information and its assimilation into previous cognitive schemata. Active processing considered the treatment practical utility of information within the context of a needs and resources existential real, to which this information and its processing are instrumental. Assimilation refers to the significance of information that occurs when it enters into contact with the background of previous cognitive schemata.
These considerations make clear that both knowledge sharing and distribution of knowledge is performed under local. In view of this is pertinent to note that any technical treatment of equity in the educational field, even if it constitutes a "national public good" should be resolved locally as knowledge and participation are built into that space.
[24] Some criteria developed from total quality models are: top management leadership, customer satisfaction, Proceedings of the organization and the people, information management for quality, management of production processes, environmental preservation and social contribution, Planning and systematization, Results.
[25] Osborne, D. AND T. Gaebler (1994), in "The reinvensión of Government", Ed, underscore the need to modify the core features of traditional states, namely its heavy, centralized bureaucracy, and determined that while success in specific moments in history economic, are now strong obstacles for countries to adapt to changing a society experiencing increasing globalization. From the South American political world, as stated by Osborne and Gaebler, clearly plotted in the criticism of former Chilean deputy Allamand Andrés (1997), who in "Political Parties and Strategic Management", ILPES, argues that "in any country in Latin America the powers of state bodies are overlapping, responsibilities are complex, the powers are in conflict, the "gaps" (areas for which no one answers) abound. A redefinition of the tasks of the state is the opportunity for [a] rationalization ... [which] should at least end the absurd margin of discretion with which not infrequently are "armed" public officials, working with a regime characterized by "tenure" ... and move towards professionalism in the administration of the state "(p. 69). In the same direction as Allamand, Senator Danilo Astori, Uruguay (1997), also in "Political Parties and Strategic Management", ILPES, poses for the state's need to "... changes in its organizational structure and procedures developed on that basis to perform their duties daily driving "(p. 168). He continues: "The modernization of working methods and procedures is an important ingredient in this transformation process, aided by the enormous technological progress in the Administration, Computer Science and Systems Engineering. The incorporation of this progress has been faster in the private sector is accelerating the pace of this integration in the field of Public Administration, taking the additional advantage that it is proven methods and procedures "(p. 169 .)
[26] Dario Rodriguez (1991). Organizational Management. Elements for its study. Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile. P146.
[27] indicate the intentions of educational reform from the ministry in Santiago, on a national basis, which are implemented in each locality, in accordance ministerial discretion over the (central) which criteria relevant to the locality in which the reform operates .
[28] At the municipal level, responsible for operational management of the reform, management type indicated that priorities do not materialize ministerial produced a discontinuity between the devolved and decentralized actions.
[29] Hair, F. and Moon, P (1995): Teaching Methodology Traditional v / s Participatory Teaching Methodology. Comparison its effects on the Esteem, Moral Development and Learning Materials. Thesis for the title of psychologist to the degree of Bachelor of Psychology. School of Psychology, University of Temuco. It is recognized that the reproduction of rigid hierarchical social relations and produce in students self-assessment and reduces uncertainty.
[30] The continuous reinforcement of learning does not, on the contrary, it is absolutely superfluous to those who participate in these processes, which is a center of conflict between educational and community unity.

Friday, December 8, 2006

Clear Retainers Are Uncomfortable



the concept of resilience. María Angélica
Kotliarenco Ph.D.
Irma Caceres Marcelo Fontecilla


The term resilience has its origins in the Latin language [1], the term means RESILIENCE come back, a jump, stand out, bounce [2].

The term was adapted to the social sciences to characterize those who, despite being born and living in high risk, healthy and successful psychological development (Rutter, 1993).

Here are some of the definitions from the field, several authors have developed around this concept:

- Ability to rise from adversity, adapt, recover and reach a meaningful life and productive. (ICCB, 1994)

- History of successful adaptations to the individual who has been exposed to biological risk factors or stressful life events, also implies the expectation of continuing with a low susceptibility to future stressors (Luthar and Zingles, 1991, Masten and Garmezy, 1985, Werner and Smith, 1982, Werner and Smith, 1992).

- Clash cash to events and circumstances of severe life stressors and cumulative (Lösel, Blieneser and Köferl in Brambing et al., 1989).

- universal human capacity to cope with life's adversities, overcome or even be transformed by them. Resilience is part of the evolutionary process and should be promoted from childhood (Grotberg, 1995).

- Resilience distinguishes two components: the resistance to destruction, that is, the ability to protect its own integrity under pressure, on the other hand, beyond endurance, the ability to build a vital conduit positive despite circumstances difficult (Vanistendael, 1994). According to him, the concept also includes the ability of an individual or social system to address adequately the challenges of a socially acceptable way.

- Resilience has been characterized as a set of social and intrapsychic processes that allow life to have a "healthy" living in half "insane." These processes take place over time, giving lucky combinations of attributes of the child and their family environment, social and cultural. Thus, resilience can not be thought of as an attribute with which children are born, and that children acquire during their development, but it would be an interactive process (Rutter, 1992) between them and their environment.

- Resilience refers to a combination of factors that allow a child to a man, face and overcome the trials and tribulations of life (Smith, 1995).

- generic concept that refers to a wide range of risk factors and outcomes of competition. You can be the result of a conjunction between environmental factors, such as temperament and a kind of cognitive ability that children have when they are very small (Osborn, 1993).

- Milgram and Palti (1993) define resilient children as those experiencing either [cope well] though environmental stressors to which they are subjected in their most formative years of his life.

Concepts related to the resilience


Distinction between the concepts of resilience and invulnerability

During the 70's became popular the concept of the child "invulnerable", which referred to some children who seemed constitutionally so strong that not bowed to the pressures of stress and adversity. However, this concept was confusing and, as stated by Rutter (1985), mistaken for at least three reasons: resistance to stress is relative, not absolute, as it is not stable over time and varies according to the stage of development of children and the quality of the stimulus. The roots of resistance from both the environment and of the Constitution, the degree of resistance is not stable, but varies over time and according to circumstances. For these reasons, at present the preferred concept of resilience.

While in the early publications relating to resilience, they tended to use this concept as equivalent to that of invulnerability, a later age were established clear distinctions between them, leaving the concept of invulnerability rather in the field of psychopathology. Essential

is also on this plane, know the meaning of the term vulnerability, as it is a basic characteristic for the gestation of resilient behavior, this concept will be discussed later.

The concept of competence

According to Luthar (1993), it is common that studies are focused on resilience the ability of social competence, under the assumption that it reflects underlying good coping skills. However, recent studies show people that although they behave competently in situations of high risk, can both be vulnerable to physical or mental problems (Werner & Smith, 1982, 1992, Luthar, 1993). Examples of this are the studies of Radke-Yarrow and Sherman (1990) that account for a group of children who present with high vulnerability to stress, showed a positive confrontation.

According to Sameroff and Seifer (1990), conceptual models that are the basis of competition trying, unlike those based in the disease, explain the nature and causes of successful developments [Developmental Successful outcomes]. These authors note that the conceptual models used tend to be behavioral in nature [behavioral], while that hardly emphasize the underlying biological processes. The approach these authors note, is gaining increasing interest, particularly in research that examines the processes that are the basis for development, for example, in areas in which we work around the problem-solving ability (Masten et al., 1978 in Sameroff and Seifer, 1990).

appearance just mentioned is of particular interest, shows that both studies are based on the model of competition are well articulated, as they analyze what are the characteristics that identify the reciprocal influences that occur between individual and social systems, which are those that promote proper development in children and girls.

Using this analytical model can identify multiple relevant domains of functioning in each of the children [Within individual children]. This multiplicity of domains is it possible to explain the individual differences that are seen in the patterns of competition. They have been able to capture types of interactions that occur between parents and children, as well as the context in which they manifest.

A different approach to find an explanation for the competition, is to try to find specific factors that would account for the successful development of people which predicted poor outcomes as a result of being subjected to high-risk situations. Authors and Garmezy (1990), have used the approach just described, and based on it have studied the issues of resistance to stress, invulnerability and resilience.

The concept of robustness [hardiness]

The concept of robustness, which according Levav (1995) could be considered akin to resilience, has been defined as a personality trait that some people act as reinforcing the resistance to stress. Robustness has been defined as a combination of personal traits that are adaptive nature, and include the sense of commitment, challenge and opportunity, and that would manifest themselves in difficult times. It also includes the feeling that some people from being able to exercise control over their own circumstances. Kobasa (1979, in Roth, 1989) describes evidence for people who have shown few signs of illness, despite having been subjected to situations that cause stress. Indicates that they have greater numbers of behaviors committed, enhanced internal control and challenge, when compared with their peers who often become stressed and sick, as a result, more repeatedly.

Other authors in this same area, indicate that the measurements were carried out to assess the robustness of the capacity of people, it has focused on the absence of symptoms of psychological maladjustment, rather than to analyze personality traits positive (Houston, 1987). The latter author notes that the robustness may not have a direct impact on health, but it may be rather indirect practices primarily affecting life, the latter being that in turn affect health in a positive direction.

in the same direction, Kobasa et al. (1982, in Roth et al., 1989) argue that the strength capacity of people has an important influence on the subjective interpretation they give to the events of his life.

Finally, Contrada (1989) argues that individual differences observed in the ability to react to stimuli or stressors are significant, they are a demonstration of the influences exerted by both constitutional factors such as environmental and interaction between these factors.


[1] Dictionary Latín-Español/Español-Latín basic. Barcelona, \u200b\u200b1982.
[2] The Hispanic Encyclopedia defines resilience as the "resistance of a body to the ultimate blow. The fragility of a body decreases with increasing resilience. "Resilience in English and French used in the field of civil engineering only to describe the ability of a material to recover its original shape after being subjected to a deforming pressure. The English definition of the term resilience is the tendency to revert to an original or having resilience [to rebound / recoil / to spring back]. In North America is defined as property that has a mechanical part to bend under a load and return to its original position when it no longer works (Salvat Encyclopedia of Science and Technology, 1964).

(CENTRE FOR STUDIES AND CARE OF CHILDREN AND WOMEN - CEANI M. Text Chapter 2 STATE OF THE ART IN RESILIENCE - preliminary paper. Work requested by the Pan American Health Organization, Washington DC, July, 1996.)

Install Disk Rosetta Stone Rsd

information to understand the results of evaluations of Intellectual Potential

INTERPRETATION OF SCORES ON THE WISC-R

Translated by Martin Hermosilla


INFORMATION
Capacity:

· Understanding verbal long-term · Memory Size
· knowledge

factors to base:
· natural Feats
· Wealth childhood environment • Degree of schooling

· cultural predilections
· Interests

Possible implications Highscores:
• Good level of information
· Possession of knowledge associated with educational and cultural environment * Good memory

· Environment
· Alerts culturally rich and interest in the environment
· intellectual ambition intellectual
· Curiosity
• Need to know

Possible implications of low scores:
• Little breadth of information
· Forgetfulness
· Hostility toward school tasks similar to those
• Counseling to underachievement
· Trend to easily discouraged

instructional recommendations:
· Ask the child to read newspapers, discuss with him the news and memory exercises
· Perform other activities that enrich, including information about science, animals and their functioning in society

SIMILARITIES

Capacity:
· Understanding verbal
· Training
verbal concepts • Ability to concrete and abstract reasoning
associative thinking • Ability • Ability to separate
essential details of nonessential
· Memory

to the base factors:
• A minimum of cultural opportunities
· Pattern of reading interests and Possible Implications

Highscores:

• Good conceptual thinking • Ability to see relationships • Ability
to use logical and abstract thinking • Ability discriminates
fundamental relations of the superficial
• Ability to select and verbalize appropriate relationship between two objects or concepts
Flexibility of thought processes.

Possible implications of low scores:
· Mal
conceptual thinking • Difficulty in capturing relations
• Difficulty to select and verbalize the appropriate relationships between two objects or concepts
· very concrete way of thinking
· rigidity of thought processes
· Negativism

instructional recommendations:
· To emphasize recognize differences and similarities in shapes, textures and everyday objects.
· Make exercises involving language development, synonyms and antonyms, classifications and generalizations

ARITHMETIC

Capacity:
fifth book of distractibility

· Understanding verbal numerical reasoning • Ability
· Calculation mental
· Application of basic arithmetic processes

• Concentration • Attention
· Memory

factors to base:
· Opportunities to acquire the basic arithmetic processes. Possible implications

Highscores:
· Facility in mental arithmetic
• Ability to apply reasoning skills wing
mathematical problem solving skills • Ability to apply arithmetic in situations of social problem solving and concentration * Good personal

• Capacity to focus attention
• Ability to apply complex thinking patterns (especially in recent items.)
• Student oriented teacher

Low Scores Possible implications: Ability
inadequate mental arithmetic
• Low concentration
· Distractibility
· Anxiety for similar jobs at school
• Low educational achievement (perhaps associated with rebellion against authority or cultural environment)
· Anxiety (eg, concern for personal problems)

Instructional Recommendations: Develop

arithmetic skills Develop concentration skills
· Use concrete objects to introduce concepts
Fifth Army in skills • Present basic child
interesting problems and "real" to be resolved
VOCABULARY


Capacity:
· Understanding verbal

• Development of language learning • Ability to Fund information
·
· Wealth of ideas
· Memory
· Training

concepts to the base factors: • Education
cultural
· Opportunities Possible implications

Props Altos: * Good understanding verbal

· Good verbal skills and language development
• Good cultural and family environment • Good
schooling Ability to conceptualize

· intellectual ambition
Possible implications
low scores: verbal comprehension
• Low
· poor verbal skills and language development
· Comforts limited cultural or family to verbalize
· Difficulties
· Origin abroad
· Culture that does not encourage verbalization

instructional recommendations:
Develop a working vocabulary
• To promote the child to discuss experiences, ask questions and make a dictionary
· Make enrich verbal exercises, such as Scrabble, Boggle, analogies, and other games words.

COMPRENSIÓN

Capacidad :
· Comprensión verbal . Juicio social
· Sentido común
· Uso de conocimiento y juicio práctico en situaciones sociales
· Conocimiento de los estándares de conductas convencionales
· Capacidad de evaluar la experiencia pasada
· Juicio ético y moral

Factores a la base :
· Extensión de las oportunidades culturales
· Capacidad de evaluar y usar la experiencia pasada
· Desarrollo de la conciencia o sentido moral

Posibles implicaciones de Puntajes Altos :
· Buen juicio social y sentido común
· Reconoce las exigencias sociales cuando se necesite practical and common sense view
• Knowledge of the rules of conventional behavior
• Ability to organize knowledge

· social maturity • Ability to verbalize well
• Wide experience

Possible implications of low scores: social
· Poor
trial · failure to assume personal responsibility eg high dependency, immaturity, limited engagement with others.
· Thought extremely concrete
• Difficulty in expressing ideas verbally
· Individuals seeking creative solutions

rare instructional recommendations:
• To help the child understand the customs social, teaching children how others react, how the government, banks, etc.
• Discuss the actions of others to help children become aware of social relations and what is expected of them.
· Conduct role playing situations, such as a fire alert, call the police or get help with household problems. DIGIT



Capacity:
fifth book of distractibility
· Memory short term mechanical
· Memory
· Memory immediate hearing

• Concentration • Attention Sequence hearing
·

factors to base:
• Ability to passively receive stimuli

Possible implications Highscores:
* Good memory * Good mechanical ability
immediate recall
• Ability to deal well in testing situations
• Ability to respond to auditory stimuli

Possible implications Scores Netherlands:
· Anxiety
· Distractibility
· Neglect

learning · Deficit Difficulty in hearing
sequence
instructional recommendations:
· emphasize listening skills, undertake stream, read a short story and ask the child to remember details
• Give short, simple instructions and repeat them when necessary
· Making memory exercises and memory games

COMPLETION OF TABLES

Capacity:
· Organization
perceptual detail • Ability to distinguish essential from nonessential
• Identification of objects family (visual recognition)
• Concentration in visually perceived material
· Reasons
· Organization
· Perception visual visual (close)
· Memory visual.

factors to base:
· Experience
· Alerts
the environment
Possible implications Scores Altos:
• Good perception and attention
* Good
alert to details • Ability to quickly establish a "learning set"
• Ability to differentiate between essential and nonessential details

Possible implications of low scores:
· Anxiety that affects concentration and attention
· Concern by irrelevant details
· Negativism (nothing missing)

instructional recommendations:
· Insist on visual learning techniques with emphasis on the parts that make up the whole perceptual
· Perform activities that focus on and object recognition attention to detail (maps and artwork)
Improve techniques to identify missing elements in drawings

MANAGEMENT OF TABLES

Capacity:
· Organization perceptual
• Capacity planning
· Interpretation of social situations • Ability
nonverbal reasoning
• Attention to detail
· Alerts
· visual sequence
common sensibles

factors to base:
• A minimum of cultural opportunities

Possible implications Highscores:
• Capacity planning • Ability
anticipate significantly the results to be expected from various behaviors
· Alerts to detail
• Process of sequential thinking
• Ability to synthesize all parties understood

Possible implications of low scores: Difficulty in organizing
visual sequential
• Difficulty to anticipate events and its consequences
• Low attention
· Anxiety
· Failure to use and capture key instructional

Recommendations:
· Focus on cause and effect, logical sequence presentations and part relationships - everything.
· Make exercise completion of stories
• Discuss alternative behaviors and alternative endings to stories and facts

CUBES

Capacity:
· Organization
· Coordination visuomotor perceptual
· Display spatial concentration
• Ability to abstract
• Analysis and synthesis

factors to base:
· rate of motor activity Color
· Vision Possible implications

Highscores:
• Good spatial visual-motor integration
* Good ability to conceptualize
• Good spatial orientation with speed, precision and persistence
• Ability to analyze and synthesize
· Speed \u200b\u200band precision in capturing a problem
* Good hand - eye coordination
* Good verbal reasoning ability
• Good method of trial work - error

Possible implications of low scores:
· Poor visual-motor integration space visoperceptivos
· Problems
· Poor spatial orientation

instructional recommendations:
· Make visuospatial tasks, puzzles, build legos and other perceptual tasks involving arm and disarm and work with geometric shapes. Focusing on relationships
· part - whole and work with models
assemblages


Capacity:
· Perceptual Organization
· Coordination visuomotor
• Ability to synthesize specific parts in all meaningful
· Relations

space to the base factors:
· rate of motor activity
· Familiarity with figures
• Ability to persist in a task
· hand experience with relationships - all
• Work towards an unknown goal

Possible implications of the High Scores:
* Good hand-eye coordination
• Ability to visualize a whole from its parts
• Ability to perceive a whole, with critical understanding relations of the individual parts
· Successful trial and error
• Experience in putting together puzzles
· Persistence

Possible implications of low scores:
· Difficulties visuomotor
· Problems visoperceptivos
• Low planning capacity
Difficulty in perceiving a whole
· Minimum experience with tasks Construction
· Little interest in tasks of collecting
• Low persistence
instructional
Recommendations: Develop
perceptual and psychomotor skills through guided practice in assembling parts to form family configurations
• To promote activities by trial and error
• Strengthen the persistence
• Work with puzzles and activities that focus on the recognition of missing parts
· Perform activities cutting, gluing and building.
· Focusing on the interpretation of all minimal keys from

SYMBOLS

Capacity:
fifth book of distractibility
· Coordination
· Fast visuomotor mental operation
• Speed \u200b\u200bpsychomotor
· Memory short term visual
• Remember
· Care Skills Partnership Skills
·

symbol to the base factors:
· rate of motor activity

Possible implications Highscores :
· Buena coordinación visomotora
· Buena concentración
· Persistencia
· Capacidad de aprender nuevo material asociativamente y reproducirlo con velocidad y precisión.
· Buena motivación o deseo de logro

Posibles implicaciones de Puntajes Bajos :
· Dificultades en la coordinación visomotora
· Distractibilidad
· Problemas o defectos visuales
· Mal control del lápiz
· Desinterés en una tarea similar a las escolares
· Excesiva preocupación por el detalle a fin de reproducir los símbolos exactamente

Recomendaciones instruccionales :
· Realizar ejercicios de visual-motor learning such as asking a child to develop a code by matching geometric shapes and numbers to learn Morse code and work on drawing activities.

LABERINTOS

Capacity:
· Organization perceptual
• Capacity planning
·
• Control visual-motor anticipation
· Coordination eye - hand
• Attention and concentration

factors to base:
· Organization visuomotor

Possible implications Highscores:
perceptual organization • Good planning
· Efficiency
• Speed \u200b\u200band accuracy
· Ability to follow instructions

Possible implications of low scores:
· Poor visual-motor organization
• Low efficiency in planning
Difficulty in postponing action

instructional recommendations:
· Focusing on planning skills, directionality, visual discrimination and other paper and pencil activities that emphasize the planning and anticipation.
• To help the child to evaluate answers before giving them.

The compilation which is this document has been made by the educator and psychologist Carmen Gloria Muñoz, Consultant Educational Consultants Axxion.