Trabajo Social
Permanent URI for this collectionhttp://repositorio.uta.edu.ec/handle/123456789/895
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Item Estrés parental en padres de universitarios de movilidad interna (foráneos)(Universidad Técnica de Ambato, Facultad de Jurisprudencia y Ciencias Sociales, Carrera de Trabajo Social, 2025-02-20) Chuquilla Guaman, Katherin Mishell; Paredes Ruiz, Teresa de JesúsThis research aimed to analyze the level of parental stress in parents of university students studying away from home. A quantitative approach was used, collecting data from 53 parents through a questionnaire developed by Abidin, R.R. (1995). This study explored the level of stress experienced by parents of university students. The results revealed that a significant percentage of these parents reported high levels of stress, mainly attributable to concerns about their children's academic, social, and financial well-being, difficulty maintaining effective communication at a distance, and feelings of isolation. Additionally, significant differences in stress levels were identified based on variables such as the parent's gender and the length of time their child had been studying away from home. These findings highlight the need to develop specific support programs for parents of university students studying abroad, focusing on stress management, improving family communication, and strengthening social networks. The results of this research contribute to a better understanding of the experiences and needs of these parents and offer valuable implications for clinical practice, education, and public policyItem Retorno migratorio y género(Universidad Técnica de Ambato. Facultad de Jurisprudencia y Ciencias Sociales, Carrera de Trabajo Social, 2020-08) Reyes Mayorga, Mayra Alejandra; Haro Lara, Aída PatriciaInvestigating the relationship between migration return and gender was the aim of this research through knowledge of the causes and identification of the gender perspectives of migrants. This was consolidated through the joint investigation. The results were tested and combined through the DEXPLOS sequential exploratory design, which facilitated the cross-over and combination of results. From the quasi-informative predictions resulting from the life stories narrated, two questions were elaborated and applied through the informal qualitative interview unveiled to the sample of 70, 35 men and 35 women from returnee families as father and mother of the family, out of the results, a survey with closed questions was prepared and applied to 40 of the migrants' oldest children in compliance with the quantitative research. For the application of the techniques was determined the sample through the chain or nets, better known as snowball. The causes that led to the return of Ecuadorians who migrated to Venezuela were: economic violence and social violence. It was found that there is no link between migration and gender, despite the fact that, within the migration cycle at the time of employability, Ecuadorian women in Venezuela were hired to carry out domestic activities. When they set up their own businesses, they worked independently, generated income and combined their activity with that of housewife. The power relations were not established within the family context, but were evidenced in the same Venezuelan society within the labor field, the Ecuadorian woman specifically that of Picaihua was considered as labor for domestic activities. "To speak of the return of migrants from a gender perspective is to speak of the influence of power relations between men and women on the composition and characteristics of migratory flows" (Carretero, 2016.)