Jody Oomen-Early
Texas Woman's University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Jody Oomen-Early.
Journal of American College Health | 2009
Shelley N Armstrong Dr.; Jody Oomen-Early
Objective: The authors compared collegiate athletes and nonathletes to see whether there were significant differences in the perceived levels of social connectedness, self-esteem, and depression and if an interaction among the variables of athlete status, gender, GPA, BMI, and levels of weekly exercise and sleep were associated with depression symptomatology. Participants: Participants were 227 college students. Method: The authors surveyed students using the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale, the Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale, and the Social Connectedness Scale-Revised. Results: Athletes had significantly greater levels of self-esteem and social connectedness, as well as significantly lower levels of depression, than did nonathletes. However, the statistically strongest predictors of depression in this cohort were the variables of gender, self-esteem, social connectedness, and sleep. Conclusion: This study adds to the limited and inconsistent research in the empirical knowledge base regarding depression among collegiate athletes.
Journal of Interpersonal Violence | 2008
Alice G. Yick; Jody Oomen-Early
Until recently, research studies have implied that domestic violence does not affect Asian American and immigrant communities, or even Asians abroad, because ethnicity or culture has not been addressed. In this content analysis, the authors examined trends in publications in leading scholarly journals on violence relating to Asian women and domestic violence. A coding schema was developed, with two raters coding the data with high interrater reliability. Sixty articles were published over the 16 years studied, most atheoretical and focusing on individual levels of analysis. The terms used in discussing domestic violence reflected a feminist perspective. Three quarters of the studies were empirical, with most guided by logical positivism using quantitative designs. Most targeted specific Asian subgroups (almost a third focused on Asian Indians) rather than categorizing Asians as a general ethnic category. The concept of “Asian culture” was most often assessed by discussing Asian family structure. Future research is discussed in light of the findings.
Health Education | 2009
Alice G. Yick; Jody Oomen-Early
Purpose – The purpose of this article is two‐fold. First, it applies the PEN‐3 model to the topic of domestic violence within the Chinese American and Chinese immigrant community. The PEN‐3 model was developed by Collins Airhihenbuwa, and it focuses on placing culture at the forefront of health promotion. It consists of three dimensions: cultural identity, relationships and expectations, and cultural empowerment. The article offers practice recommendations from the PEN‐3 analysis to plan culturally relevant and sensitive domestic violence prevention, education, and services targeted to the Chinese American and Chinese immigrant community.Design/methodology/approach – Using existing literature in the areas of domestic violence and health, mental health, and counseling interventions with Chinese Americans and immigrants, the PEN‐3 model, as an organizing framework, was applied to understand the phenomenon of domestic violence among Chinese Americans and Chinese immigrants in the United States.Findings – How...
American journal of health education | 2008
Sloane C. Burke; Jody Oomen-Early
Abstract Blogs are popular, innovative, online platforms for learning. Blogging allows for synthesis of content and helps sustain student engagement in the health education classroom setting. Objectives: Students will define a blog, execute a blog to apply learned health content, and post and respond to other students’ health-related blogs. Target Audience: Students in high school health courses.
International journal on e-learning | 2008
Tara Gallien; Jody Oomen-Early
The international electronic journal of health education | 2009
Jim Melancon; Jody Oomen-Early; Lydia M. del Rincon
International journal on e-learning | 2009
Jody Oomen-Early; Lynda Murphy
The international electronic journal of health education | 2007
Jody Oomen-Early; Sloane C. Burke
Family violence prevention and health practice | 2009
Sloane C. Burke; Jody Oomen-Early; Robin C. Rager
Archive | 2008
Jody Oomen-Early