Saskia Kunnen
University of Groningen
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Publication
Featured researches published by Saskia Kunnen.
Journal of Adolescent Research | 2010
Anna Lichtwarck-Aschoff; Saskia Kunnen; Paul van Geert
This article reports on a 1-year diary study of conflicts between seventeen 15-year-old girls and their mothers assessing (a) within-conflict sequences according to the emotional processes related to a girl’s level of self-assertion and perceived control and (b) the relationship between these within-conflict sequences and the level of autonomy. Based on principles of the self-regulation theory and emotion-appraisal literature, three within-conflict scenarios were hypothesized. The withdrawal and pursuit scenario came out as occurring significantly above chance level. Investigating the girls’ individual conflict episodes revealed a positive association between the level of autonomy and the percentage of the pursuit scenario. Results are discussed in terms of the link between day-to-day conflict interactions and the long-term development of autonomy.
European Journal of Special Needs Education | 2009
Marieke C. Visser; Elly Singer; Paul van Geert; Saskia Kunnen
The ambiguous results of existing intervention programmes show the need for new ways in research on aggression among children. The present study focuses on the children’s own perspective on their aggressive behaviour. Based on a constructivist approach, the inner logic of narratives about peer conflicts of 64 children in Dutch special education was analysed. Contrary to the much used dichotomy of reactive and proactive aggression, we found a more differentiated picture. Children use aggression: to get understanding for their situation; to escape from the conflict situation; because of inner conflicts; to get revenge; and for the fun of bullying. The study makes clear that, from the perspective of the children, aggressive behaviour is closely related to the peer culture at school. Moreover, some children need individual treatment and support, because of specific concerns related to self‐regulation that make them behave aggressively.
European Journal of Developmental Psychology | 2015
Ellen Reitz; Daphne van de Bongardt; Laura Baams; Suzan M. Doornwaard; Wieke G. Dalenberg; Judith Semon Dubas; Marcel A. G. van Aken; Geertjan Overbeek; Tom ter Bogt; Regina van der Eijnden; Ine Vanwesenbeeck; Saskia Kunnen; Greetje Timmerman; Paul van Geert; Maja Deković
This study gives an overview of Project STARS (Studies on Trajectories of Adolescent Relationships and Sexuality), a four-wave longitudinal study of 1297 Dutch adolescents. First, the sample, measures and four sub-projects are described. Second, hierarchical regression analyses were conducted to examine how key variables from the individual domain (impulsivity), parent domain (parent–adolescent relationship quality), peer domain (involvement with peers) and media domain (time spent on social networking sites), and their interactions predict changes in the experience with sexual behaviour of adolescents across time. Results showed that higher levels of impulsivity, lower quality of relation with parents, more frequent involvement with peers and more time spent on social networking sites at baseline predicted increases in sexual experience of adolescents over a subsequent 1.5-year time period. No interaction effects among the domains were found. The findings highlight the significance of a multi-domain approach to the study of adolescent sexual development.
Journal of Transformative Education | 2018
Gloria Nogueiras; Alejandro Iborra; Saskia Kunnen
This case study investigates the transformative learning process and outcomes of a female master’s student in a semester-long counseling skills training course based on experiential learning. The data included the student’s longitudinal accounts (11 questionnaires on the emotions experienced in every session and three blog posts) and retrospective accounts (a final reflective written activity and an interview) of her experience in the course. Through a thematic holistic analysis, we identified (1) five phases in the student’s learning process, which illustrated her evolving meaning-making of the challenging demands and related changes in her emotional experience and (2) two learning outcomes, including the student’s insights into the meaning of learning and her increasing self-awareness. The findings are discussed with an emphasis on the value of tracking learners’ emotional experience to understand their transformative changes, the contribution of experiential approaches to trigger such changes, and the potential of a process-oriented approach to investigate transformation.
Developmental Review | 2008
Anna Lichtwarck-Aschoff; Paul van Geert; Harke A. Bosma; Saskia Kunnen
Developmental Psychology | 2009
Anna Lichtwarck-Aschoff; Saskia Kunnen; Paul van Geert
L’Orientation scolaire et professionnelle | 2006
Saskia Kunnen; Harke A. Bosma
International Journal of Behavioral Development | 1993
Saskia Kunnen
Archive | 2009
Ilse Smits; Bart Soenens; Koen Luyckx; Michael D. Berzonsky; Luc Goossens; Saskia Kunnen; Harke A. Bosma
The Oxford handbook of identity development | 2014
Saskia Kunnen; Marijke Metz