Vlasta Vizek Vidović
University of Zagreb
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Featured researches published by Vlasta Vizek Vidović.
Anthrozoos | 1999
Vlasta Vizek Vidović; Vesna Vlahović Štetić; Denis Bratko
The current study was designed to compare the socio-emotional characteristics of school children pet owners and children without pets and to examine whether the type of pet is a variable which can differentiate the socio-emotional development of their owners. The subjects, 425 girls and 401 boys, were students of fourth (n=265), sixth (n=295) and eighth (n=266) grade of elementary schools from the metropolitan area of Zagreb, Croatia. Socio-emotional variables assessed in the study were: child attachment to pet, child prosocial orientation, empathy, loneliness, perception of family climate and social anxiety. The data showed that 54.4% of children in the sample were pet owners (26.2% of children in the study had a dog, 9.2% had a cat, and 19.0% had some other pet). In order to answer the main research question, several analyses of variance (gender by grade by pet ownership) were computed for each criterion of socio-emotional development. Significant main effects were obtained for empathy, prosocial orientation and pet attachment, with dog owners being more empathic and prosocially oriented than non-owners, and dog owners and cat owners being more attached to their pets than owners of other kinds of pets. Additional analyses of variance were computed in order to examine the role of attachment in the socio-emotional functioning of the children. Subjects were divided in three sub-groups: non-owners, lower then average attached owners, and higher than average attached owners. Children who scored higher than average on the attachment to pets scale showed significantly higher scores on the empathy and prosocial orientation scales than non-owners and children who scored lower than average on the attachment to pets scale. It was also found that children with higher levels of attachment to pets rated their family climate significantly better than children who had lower attachment to pets.
High Ability Studies | 1999
Vesna Vlahović-Štetić; Vlasta Vizek Vidović; Lidija Arambašić
The aim of this study was to examine whether motivational‐emotional variables such as intrinsic orientation toward schoolwork, Mathematics anxiety, academic self‐esteem, attribution of success and failure in Mathematics and situational interest in Mathematics could differentiate different groups of mathematically gifted pupils. The research was based, theoretically, on an interactional model of giftedness. The sample consisted of 147 selected primary school pupils (9‐10 years of age) who were assigned to the following groups for comparison: mathematically gifted achievers (n = 31), mathematically gifted under‐achievers (n = 31) and mathematically non‐gifted pupils (n = 85). The results of a discriminant analysis show that the gifted pupils differ from the non‐gifted ones in attaining higher levels of intrinsic orientation toward Mathematics, lower Mathematics anxiety, lower attribution of success to external factors and effort, as well as in lower attribution of failure to external factors and abilities. ...
Archive | 2006
Tea Pavin; Vlasta Vizek Vidović; Renata Miljević-Riđički
Archive | 2005
Vlasta Vizek Vidović; Vesna Vlahović-Štetić; Tea Pavin; Majda Rijavec; Renata Miljević-Riđički; Antonija Žižak
Odgojne znanosti | 2010
Tea Pahić; Renata Miljević-Riđički; Vlasta Vizek Vidović
Archive | 2007
Vlasta Vizek Vidović; Tea Pavin
Archive | 2011
Vlasta Vizek Vidović; Antonija Žižak
Suvremena Psihologija | 2008
Mirna Jakšić; Vlasta Vizek Vidović
Archive | 2003
Renata Miljević-Riđički; Dubravka Miljković; Dunja Pavličević-Franić; Majda Rijavec; Vlasta Vizek Vidović; Vesna Vlahović-Štetić; Predrag Zarevski
Archive | 2014
Vlasta Vizek Vidović; Antonija Žižak; Biljana Vranković