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| nanoloop 2.2 |
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first dinky sesh with nanoloop 2.2...
had to do it on the DS cause im waiting for
the GBASP headphone adapter...
get it at:
http://www.nanoloop.de/ Tags : nanoloop 2.2 |
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Affichage : 28873
Durée : 262 s |
| Intro to trixbox 2.2 |
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Kerry Garrison, the senior product manager of
trixbox gives a quick tour of the
installation and setup of trixbox 2.2. For
more information on trixbox, please visit
http://www.trixbox.org Tags : asterisk trixbox pbx voip |
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Affichage : 17726
Durée : 588 s |
| Spanking 2.2 |
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The first one:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vZ0Ru_tLcFs
2.1:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DJcQjn89ASU
The American Academy of Pediatrics' official
policy is:
"The more children are spanked, the more
anger they report as adults, the more likely
they are to spank their own children, the
more likely they are to approve of hitting a
spouse, and the more marital conflict they
experience as adults[17] Spanking has been
associated with higher rates of physical
aggression, more substance abuse, and
increased risk of crime and violence when
used with older children and adolescents."
Childhood Spanking and Increased Antisocial
Behavior
About 90 percent of parents use some form of
corporal punishment on toddlers, and about 50
percent continue to use it during the early
teen years, despite a growing body of
evidence that it does not positively affect a
child's behavior and may actually result in
increased aggressive or delinquent behaviors.
Straus and colleagues examined the
relationship between corporal punishment and
antisocial behavior in children.
A sample of 807 mothers with children between
the ages of six and nine years was drawn from
an original cohort of women who were part of
the National Longitudinal Survey of
Youth-Child Supplement conducted at Ohio
State University. The mothers completed an
antisocial behavior (ASB) scale that
described their child's behavior over the
preceding three months. Descriptive items in
the ASB scale included the following: "cheats
or tells lies," "bullies or is cruel or mean
to others," "does not feel sorry after
misbehaving," "breaks things deliberately,"
"is disobedient at school" and "has trouble
getting along with teachers." The items were
scored as "often true," "sometimes true" and
"not true."
Categories ranging from no spanking in the
past week to spanking 15 or more times in the
past week were used to assess the frequency
of spanking. For the purpose of statistical
analysis, the numbers were broken into four
categories of how many times the child was
spanked in one week: zero (451 children), one
time (160), two times (114) and three or more
times (82). Using the ASB scale, data were
collected at baseline and again two years
later. The study was controlled for several
independent variables, including sex, race,
socioeconomic status, cognitive stimulation
and parental emotional support.
Spanking was significantly related to the ASB
score at baseline and two years later. In the
zero-frequency spanking group, the ASB score
actually declined four points from baseline.
In contrast, the ASB score increased 14
points in the group of children whose mothers
reported spanking them three or more times at
baseline. The consistent finding was that the
more frequent the spanking at the beginning
of the study, the greater the ASB scores two
years later. The trend toward increased ASB
scores was stronger in boys than in girls and
also in American children of European descent
compared with minority children. The tendency
also persisted regardless of the extent to
which parents provided cognitive stimulation
and emotional support to their children.
The authors conclude that corporal punishment
or spanking is a statistically significant
predictor of subsequent antisocial behavior,
even in children who may be spanked only once
a week. They believe their data show a "dose
response" to corporal punishment, starting
with young children. The more frequently
spanking is used, the longer its negative
effects last and the greater the likelihood
that it will induce behavior problems. They
further suggest that reducing or completely
eliminating corporal punishment would be
beneficial to society, since antisocial
behavior is associated with violence and more
serious crimes committed by teenagers and
adults.
JEFFREY T. KIRCHNER, D.O.
Straus MA, et al. Spanking by parents and
subsequent antisocial behavior of children.
Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 1997;151:761-7.
There is no unnatural... it is a stupid thing
to say, stupid concept. All things are IN
nature.
We are evolving out of the need to be strong
physical animals. That is a good thing.
You must be the same people that say if a
husband is unhappy with his wife, hits her
without leaving a mark, it is not abuse... it
is not really hitting her, it is just a
"smack".
Same thing, she's not listening, right? Tags : Spanking Corporal Punishment |
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Affichage : 29021
Durée : 405 s |
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