"Middle range theorist" Essays and Research Papers

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    Theorists Child development theories are an organized set of principles designed to explain and predict something. Below are some major child development theorists and their theories. Jean Piaget – (1896-1980) was originally a biologist before going on to study the development of children’s understanding. He studied children by observing them talking and listening to them whilst he set them tasks to carry out. He came up with the ‘Maturation Theory’ which means that a child simply grows up and

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    JOHN FREDERICK CHARLES FULLER 1. Gen. Major Gen John Frederick Charles Fuller (1878 –1966) was a British‚ mil historian and strategist‚ notable as an early theorist of modern armd warfare. He was commissioned in a Light Inf Bn and participated in South African Boers War and World War I. In 1916‚ he was apptd as a staff offr in the newly raised HQ Tk Corps. He planned the first successful tk attk at Cambrai in 1917 and the tk ops for the autumn offn of 1918. 2. Biography. Fuller was born in 1878

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    Using the Internet‚ locate TWO life facts or research facts not stated in the textbook about  EACH the following theorists: Jean-Jacques Rousseau‚ John Locke‚ John B. Watson‚ G. Stanley Hall‚   Arnold Gessell‚ Sigmund Freud‚ Erik Erikson‚ Jean Piaget‚ Urie Bronfenbrenner‚ and Lev Vygotsky. Jean-Jacques Rousseau 1. “Rousseau’s conversion to Catholicism had rendered him ineligible for his hereditary status as Citizen of Geneva” 2. “Rousseau’s writings on language and languages are contained in

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    critical and challenging obstacles should be the staff retention. Moreover‚ as nursing workforce ages and new graduates are placed in various and complex roles‚ they must develop transition coping skills to survive crude attitude. Therefore‚ Meleis’ middle -range transition theory was defined as a " passage from one fairly stable state to another fairly stable one‚ which is a process triggered by change" (Nagarandey‚ p.1 ) to explain the transition process in a clinical setting. Consequently‚ one may experience

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    Theorists Piaget Jean Piaget was a Swiss biologist‚ philosopher‚ and psychologist best known for his work in the area of developmental psychology. Piaget’s focus was on the intellectual or cognitive development of children and on the way in which their mind’s processed and progressed in knowledge. Piaget’s central thesis was that children develop self-centric theories about their environment‚ and about objects or persons in that environment‚ and they grow that children base these theories on their

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    Albert Bandura Albert J. Reiss Albert K. Cohen Andre Michel Guerry Austin T. Turk Charles Horton Cooley Charles R. Tittle Clifford R. Shaw David Metza Delbert Elliott Edmund Husserl Edwin Lemert Edwin Sutherland Emile Durkheim Ernest Burgess F. Ivan Nye Georg Rusche George B. Vold George Herbert Mead Gordon Trasier Gresham Sykes Hans Eysenck Henry McKay Howard Becker Howard Kapkin Ian Taylor‚ Paul Walton‚ Jock Young John Braithwaite Karl Marx Lambert Adolphe Lawrence

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    Application of Grand Theory to Nursing Practice In today’s world there are many nursing theories and theorists that not only define the nursing profession‚ but also are used as the basis to guide a nurse in his or her current practice. Meleis defines nursing theory “as a conceptualization of some aspect of nursing reality communicated for the purpose of describing phenomena‚ explaining relationships between phenomena‚ predicting consequences or prescribing nursing care. Nursing theories

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    Talcott Parsons Functionalism sees social structure or the organization of society as more important than the individual wherein‚ individuals are born into society and become the prodeuct of all the social influences around them. Moreover‚ functionalism sees society as a system where there is a set of interconnected parts which together form a whole. There is a relationship between all the parts and agents of socialization and together they all contribute to the maintenance of society as a whole

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    Middle Range Theory Continues to Guide Nursing Practice Lisa M. Sanford Maryville University Middle Range Theory Continues to Guide Nursing Practice Nursing theory has three distinct categories to describe the level of abstraction: Grand‚ Middle-Range‚ and Situation-Specific (Meleis‚ 2012‚ p. 33). Hugh McKenna (1997) defined these three categories‚ stating: Grand theory is highly abstract and is broad in scope. Middle-range theory is more focused and is normally the end product of a research

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    predicting‚ and /or prescribing." | | | The goal of nursing is “to put the patient in the best condition for nature to act upon him”. - Nightingale | Introduction * Born - 12 May 1820 * Founder of mordern nursing. * The first nursing theorist. * Also known as "The Lady with the Lamp"  * She explained her environmental theory in her famous book Notes on Nursing: What it is‚ What it is not . * She was the first to propose nursing required specific education and training. * Her

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