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The self-concept of children disfigured by burns and the effect of role-play on their self-concept

Bibliography: pages 200-211.

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Main Author: Frost, Paul Frederick
Other Authors: Foster, Don
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Psychology 2016
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access_status_str Open Access
author Frost, Paul Frederick
author2 Foster, Don
author_browse Foster, Don
Frost, Paul Frederick
author_facet Foster, Don
Frost, Paul Frederick
author_sort Frost, Paul Frederick
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description Bibliography: pages 200-211.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:39:22.215Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2016
publishDateRange 2016
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publisher Department of Psychology
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/16979 The self-concept of children disfigured by burns and the effect of role-play on their self-concept Frost, Paul Frederick Foster, Don Psychology Bibliography: pages 200-211. This study aimed at investigating the role of physical-distinctiveness as a pertinent feature of self-concept, using the special case of children disfigured by burns. Within this group of children, the study also aimed to explore, by means of a comparative study, the possibility of improving the self-concept of burned children, through the use of selected components of the D.U.S.O. Guidance Programme. Lastly, the study aimed at gaining a clear picture of the burned child in terms of both social and psychological features. Twenty-seven subjects, in three matched groups (burn treatment group, burn control group and non-burn control group) took part in the study. The burn treatment group participated in the D.U.S.O. Programme which took place over a period of five consecutive days with five daily sessions of 90 minutes each. The burn control group took part in sessions similar to those of the burn treatment group, except that they participated in play and not the D.U.S.O. Programme. The non-burn control group was introduced as a baseline measure and did not take part in any sessions. It was hypothesized that the burn groups of children would show a significant increase in overall self-concept as a result of enrichment offered by the daily sessions. It was similarly hypothesized that, due to enrichment provided by the D.U.S.O. Programme, the burn treatment group would, when compared to the burn control group, show a significant increase in overall self-concept. It was further hypothesized that the burn treatment group would, when compared to the control groups, show a significant increase in social-self, parental-self, physical-self and school-self self-concept subscales while showing a significant decrease in aggression and body-image disturbance scores on the Draw-a-Person test, due to the greater understanding and acceptance of the self promoted by the D.U.S.O. Programme. Data obtained through the use of Laubscher's (1978) Self-Concept Questionnaire for Primary School Children (Afrikaans) and Machover's Draw-a-Person test failed to support the hypotheses. A broad trend for the burn treatment group to increase on social- and physical-self subscales of self-concept was, however, found. Quantitative data were combined and these, together with data from an Adaptation Questionnaire, based on the American Association on Mental Deficiency's "Adaptive Behaviour Scale" (1975), formed the basis for building-up a profile of the psychosocial adjustment of the burned child. Results were discussed with reference to the literature. The study's limitations were examined and future areas of research were suggested. 2016-02-12T07:14:02Z 2016-02-12T07:14:02Z 1983 Master Thesis Masters MSocSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/16979 eng application/pdf Department of Psychology Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Psychology
Frost, Paul Frederick
The self-concept of children disfigured by burns and the effect of role-play on their self-concept
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The self-concept of children disfigured by burns and the effect of role-play on their self-concept
title_full The self-concept of children disfigured by burns and the effect of role-play on their self-concept
title_fullStr The self-concept of children disfigured by burns and the effect of role-play on their self-concept
title_full_unstemmed The self-concept of children disfigured by burns and the effect of role-play on their self-concept
title_short The self-concept of children disfigured by burns and the effect of role-play on their self-concept
title_sort self concept of children disfigured by burns and the effect of role play on their self concept
topic Psychology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/16979
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