This will send a message to potential dates that you are a negative person and that you don't have
a history of healthy relationships.
Not exact matches
These findings support Facing
History's role as a leader in social emotional learning, the process
of acquiring the knowledge, attitudes, and skills to understand and manage emotions, achieve positive goals, feel and show empathy, maintain
healthy relationships, and make responsible decisions.
This conference offers educators to learn suicide prevention skills; understanding
of and appreciation for the
history and culture
of the Eastern Shoshone and Northern Arapaho tribes; cultural sensitivity for educators and other adults who impact Native American students; emotional and social needs
of Native American students; empowering youth to develop leadership skills and choose
healthy lifestyles; and promoting understanding, building
relationships and generating ideas for engaging families and the community in education
of the whole child.
Yet Nickson turns these loaded, time - honored motifs into compelling, wholly contemporary images that toggle between unabashed romanticism and a modern celebration
of the expressive power
of super-saturated color
relationships and abstract structure, with a
healthy admixture
of awareness
of the
history of western art.»
TEACHING / PRESENTATION
HISTORY Graduate Assistant — Texas Woman's University 2010 to Present Theories
of the Family, Family Public Policy, Family Sexuality, Family Change and Diversity Guest Lecturer — Mountainview College Spring 2010 Guest Lecturer, Black Family Course Instructor — Axia College (Online) Fall / Winter 2007 Psychology Instructor — North Central Texas College Fall 2007 Graduate / Research Assistant — Texas Southern University Spring 2005 Presentations: 2010 Ohio Early Care and Education Conference, Columbus, OH April 2010 Pretend Play & African American Families: Learning While Bonding (requested workshop) Educational First Steps Annual Conference, Dallas, TX Feb. 2010 Learning While Bonding (requested workshop) National Black Child Development Institute, Atlanta, GA April 2009 Strengthening Black Families Through Play (workshop) Collin College Educators Symposium, Plano, TX April 2009 Share My World: Play and African American Children (workshop) Texas Woman's University Student Research Symposium, Denton, TX April 2009 The Impact
of Adolescence on African American Parent - Daughter Relations (poster presentation) Collegium for African American Research, Bremen, Germany (paper presentation) March 2009 The 20th Century Social Scientist and the African in America: Implications for 21st Century Research Pearls and Ivy Annual
Healthy Relationship Forum, Plano, TX (workshop) April 2009 Beyond, Me, Myself, and I: Impact
of Early Adolescence on Females» Interpersonal Relationships Pearls and Ivy Annual
Healthy Relationship Forum, Plano, TX Jan. 2008 Maintaining
Healthy Relationships and Recognizing Unhealthy Relationships (workshop) The Health Group, Houston, TX Feb. 2005 Recognizing Depression in Yourself and Others (workshop)
Dr. Gottman's research on the Oral
History Interview has revealed that «masters»
of relationships — those who describe their connection as happy,
healthy, rich, and meaningful — report strong feelings
of connection sustained through the course
of their
relationship.
Domestic violence among the low income couples who would be targeted for the
healthy marriage initiative is very rare.In fact, only 2 percent experience domestic violence.Critics
of the
healthy marriage initiative often cite statistics showing that a high percent
of middle - aged welfare mothers have suffered domestic violence at some point in the past.These figures are irrelevant for two reasons.First, the
healthy marriage initiative will focus on younger women around the time
of a child's birth, not older mothers with a long
history of welfare dependence.The domestic violence rates are very different for these two groups.Second, the fact a woman has experienced domestic violence in the past does not mean she is experiencing violence in a current
relationship, or that most prior
relationships have involved violence.
The main paternal PPD predictors are the personal
history of depression, the quality and functioning
of marital
relationship and above all the partner depression.12 It is known that when a mother is severely depressed, the risk
of paternal depression redoubles.15 On the other hand, Grussu and Quatraro have suggested that fathers could increase the risk
of maternal depression, 16 if they are depressed or absents; and they could represent a protective factor for maternal depression, if they are
healthy and supportive.