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Dower, Ruth Churchill – LEARNing Landscapes, 2022
Movement can be a powerful force for sensory connection and expression in young children who sometimes don't speak. Their kinaesthetic curiosity naturally experiments with--and forms spontaneous relationships through--touching, sensing, and moving-with the world around them. This article wonders what might happen if children's connective movements…
Descriptors: Dance, Young Children, Speech Impairments, Kinesthetic Methods
de Wit, Wouter; van Oorsouw, Wietske M. W. J.; Embregts, Petri J. C. M. – Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities, 2022
Background: Sexual health remains at risk for people with an intellectual disability. Attitudes towards sexuality, its support and education have an important role in promoting sexual health. The current review aims to provide an overview of the current research on supportive and restrictive attitudes towards sexuality and its support of people…
Descriptors: Sexuality, Intellectual Disability, Health Promotion, Sex Education
Yildiz, Banu – Educational and Developmental Psychologist, 2023
Objectives: Self-concealment is an important issue that hinders progress in the psychological help process. Considering its negative consequences in the field of mental health, it is important to address its relationship with risk factors and protective factors. Therefore, the present study examined whether self-differentiation was related to…
Descriptors: College Students, Self Disclosure (Individuals), Self Expression, Intimacy
Brown, Angela – Advances in Language and Literary Studies, 2015
Love and loss is facing the truth behind the facts that bears deep in our hearts. A child is not born a racist. Racism is something taught through words and actions. The fight against hate begins by demonstrating love and acts of kindness. The difference between love and hate is within the context of the idea of inherent expression conducted…
Descriptors: Intimacy, Poetry, Self Expression, Death
Horan, Sean M.; Booth-Butterfield, Melanie – Human Communication Research, 2011
This investigation explored the risks of affectionate expressions in romantic relationships by examining the physiological and emotional implications of recalled expressed deceptive affectionate messages to romantic partners. Ninety-nine participants were assigned to one of three conditions: deceptive affection, honest affection, or plans with a…
Descriptors: Dating (Social), Interpersonal Relationship, Intimacy, Risk
Sharp, Shane – Social Psychology Quarterly, 2010
Many individuals use prayer to manage negative emotions, but scholars know little about how prayer accomplishes this task. Using in-depth interview data from victims of intimate partner violence, I argue that prayer is an imaginary social support interaction that provides individuals with resources they use to perform individual emotion management…
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Religious Factors, Negative Attitudes, Psychological Patterns
Peer reviewedJordan, Jerry M.; Roloff, Michael E. – Human Communication Research, 1990
Examines the effectiveness of indirect requests in attaining assistance from intimate and nonintimate others. Finds that directness of requests increases request force and interacts with relational intimacy to influence verbal compliance. Finds that directness is more effective at eliciting verbal compliance at higher levels of intimacy. (KEH)
Descriptors: Assertiveness, Communication Research, Compliance (Psychology), Help Seeking
Peer reviewedHowe, Nina; Aquan-Assee, Jasmin; Bukowski, William M.; Rinaldi, Christina M.; Lehoux, Pascale M. – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly, 2000
Studied sibling-directed self-disclosure of 40 preadolescents through interviews, a questionnaire, and subjects' daily diaries. Found that warmth in sibling relationship was most strongly associated with sibling disclosure, but not with rivalry, conflict, or power. Daily sibling disclosures were more strongly associated with reports of unhappy…
Descriptors: Early Adolescents, Interpersonal Communication, Interpersonal Relationship, Intimacy
Peer reviewedDolgin, Kim Gale; Berndt, Nicci – Journal of Adolescence, 1997
Examines 144 adolescents' perceptions of parents' (N=209) disclosure of their own lives. Results indicate that college-aged adolescents believe that their mothers disclose more to them than their fathers, especially about their problems. Mothers were also perceived to disclose for different, more emotional reasons than fathers and were thought to…
Descriptors: Adolescents, College Students, Higher Education, Interpersonal Communication
Kuo, Sai-hua – 1994
This study investigated verbal play, including teasing and self-mocking in a naturally occurring conversation, among four Chinese female friends. The study illustrates how these speakers engage in teasing activities and then discusses the implications and significance of verbal play. Examples are taken from a casual, playful conversation…
Descriptors: Chinese, Females, Foreign Countries, Interaction Process Analysis
Peer reviewedParker, Rhonda G.; Parrott, Roxanne – International Journal of Aging & Human Development, 1995
Functions served by self-disclosure may vary depending upon the adults' gender and stage in the life span. Studies such issues in regard to the elderly, middle-aged, and young adults' use of four functions of self-disclosure: self-expression, self-clarification, social control, and social validation. Findings support the claim that greater…
Descriptors: Intergenerational Programs, Interpersonal Communication, Intimacy, Middle Aged Adults
Klein, Thomas – About Campus, 2006
How do and should students develop--emotionally, socially, intellectually, morally, and spiritually--on a college campus and, more particularly, as members of a residential learning community? What advantages does a learning community offer over the more fragmented and specialized cafeteria of courses in place on most campuses? What new structures…
Descriptors: Campuses, College Faculty, Colleges, Residential Institutions
Niebrzydowski, Leon – 1996
This study investigated the connection between self-disclosure and stages in development of interpersonal relationships. It hypothesized that self-disclosure in relationships is of a dynamic character which works in two directions: towards the interaction partner, and in the opposite direction. The study proposed three stages in the development of…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Adolescents, Attachment Behavior, Behavior Development
Peer reviewedShaffer, David R.; And Others – Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 1996
Male and female research participants (n=254) self-disclosed to a male or female confederate with whom they anticipated or did not anticipate further interaction. Women disclosed more intimately, with increasing emotion, and displayed more topical responsiveness with female than with male targets. Only the highly masculine men reliably disclosed…
Descriptors: College Students, Females, Interaction, Interpersonal Relationship

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