[jounal] Ozer, E. J. / 2005 / The impact of violence
on the urban adolescents: Longitudinal effects of perceived school connection and family support / Journal of Adolescent Research 20: 167 ~ 192
Not exact matches
Young dads: the effects of a parenting program
on urban African - American
adolescent fathers.
Dr. Carothers has written a number of manuscripts for publication, including research
on the effectiveness of mentoring interventions across multiple contexts, and she has presented research
on stress and coping for
urban children and
adolescents at professional conferences including the Society for Research
on Adolescence and the American Academy of Child and
Adolescent Psychiatry.
Engaging Schools reviews current research
on what shapes
adolescents» school engagement and motivation to learn — including new findings
on students» sense of belonging — and looks at ways these can be used to reform
urban high schools.
On a given day in Tokyo, the diverse array of people using bicycles here in this urban sprawl of 30 million souls includes: the middle - aged salary man riding to work on his fold - up bike in his business suit every day; the trendy adolescent skipping off to do some window shopping; the stay - at - home mother dropping not one, but two kids off at school; the pack of old men determined not to be late for their morning gate - ball contest; and, the serious cyclist kitted out in tight lycra and a fancy water - bottle pouc
On a given day in Tokyo, the diverse array of people using bicycles here in this
urban sprawl of 30 million souls includes: the middle - aged salary man riding to work
on his fold - up bike in his business suit every day; the trendy adolescent skipping off to do some window shopping; the stay - at - home mother dropping not one, but two kids off at school; the pack of old men determined not to be late for their morning gate - ball contest; and, the serious cyclist kitted out in tight lycra and a fancy water - bottle pouc
on his fold - up bike in his business suit every day; the trendy
adolescent skipping off to do some window shopping; the stay - at - home mother dropping not one, but two kids off at school; the pack of old men determined not to be late for their morning gate - ball contest; and, the serious cyclist kitted out in tight lycra and a fancy water - bottle pouch.
«
Adolescents and young adults (15 - 19 years) and adults aged 40 years and older have the highest bicycle death rates.3 Children (5 - 14 years), adolescents, and young adults (15 - 24 years) have the highest rates of nonfatal bicycle - related injuries, accounting for more than one - third of all bicycle - related injuries seen in U.S. emergency departments.3 Males are much more likely to be killed or injured on bicycles than are females.3 Most bicyclist deaths occur in urban areas and at non-intersection locations.4» https://www.cdc.gov/motorvehiclesafety/bicycle/ Pucher J, Buehler R, Merom D, Bauman A. Walking and cycling in the United States, 2001 — 2009: Evidence from the National Household Trav
Adolescents and young adults (15 - 19 years) and adults aged 40 years and older have the highest bicycle death rates.3 Children (5 - 14 years),
adolescents, and young adults (15 - 24 years) have the highest rates of nonfatal bicycle - related injuries, accounting for more than one - third of all bicycle - related injuries seen in U.S. emergency departments.3 Males are much more likely to be killed or injured on bicycles than are females.3 Most bicyclist deaths occur in urban areas and at non-intersection locations.4» https://www.cdc.gov/motorvehiclesafety/bicycle/ Pucher J, Buehler R, Merom D, Bauman A. Walking and cycling in the United States, 2001 — 2009: Evidence from the National Household Trav
adolescents, and young adults (15 - 24 years) have the highest rates of nonfatal bicycle - related injuries, accounting for more than one - third of all bicycle - related injuries seen in U.S. emergency departments.3 Males are much more likely to be killed or injured
on bicycles than are females.3 Most bicyclist deaths occur in
urban areas and at non-intersection locations.4» https://www.cdc.gov/motorvehiclesafety/bicycle/ Pucher J, Buehler R, Merom D, Bauman A. Walking and cycling in the United States, 2001 — 2009: Evidence from the National Household Travel Surveys.
Urban early
adolescent narratives
on sexuality: Accidental and intentional influences of family, peers, and the media.
The Effects of a Community and School Sport - Based Program
on Urban Indigenous
Adolescents» Life Skills and Physical Activity Levels: The SCP Case Study
Dishion and colleagues, including Kate Kavanagh and Dave Andrews, extended their research program
on the
Adolescent Transitions Program from Eugene to the
urban area of Portland, Oregon.
She is the co-author of a chapter
on safety in connection among at - risk
adolescent girls in
Urban Girls Revisited: Building Strengths (NYU Press, 2007).
Ge and colleagues, for instance, found that early maturation is linked to internalizing symptoms among African American
adolescents residing in rural and suburban neighborhoods (Ge et al. 2001, 2003, 2006) and have called for additional research
on African American
adolescents living in
urban environments.
The present study examined the effects of alcohol and substance use at age 11
on trajectories of physical aggression over time (ages 12 — 14) among
urban adolescents from Chicago, IL.
The current study builds
on this research by examining the psychosocial correlates of pubertal timing longitudinally among a diverse, primarily ethnic minority sample of
adolescent girls living in an
urban environment.
Inconsistent evidence of a relationship between neighborhood disadvantage and
adolescent mental health may be, in part, attributable to heterogeneity based
on urban or rural residence.