psychological maturity - traduction vers néerlandais
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psychological maturity - traduction vers néerlandais

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Maturity model (disambiguation); Maturity Model

psychological maturity      
psychologische rijpheid
maturity date         
DATE ON WHICH THE FINAL PAYMENT IS DUE ON A LOAN OR OTHER FINANCIAL INSTRUMENT
Maturity date; Tenor (finance); Maturities; Termination date; Fixed maturity
vervaltijd
psychological test         
  • A [[Song Dynasty]] painting of candidates participating in the [[imperial examination]], a rudimentary form of psychological testing.
  • Physiognomy was used to assess personality traits based on an individual's outer appearance.
INSTRUMENT DESIGNED TO MEASURE UNOBSERVED PSYCHOLOGICAL CONSTRUCTS, ALSO KNOWN AS LATENT VARIABLES
Psychological test; Psychological Testing; Projective psychological test; Psychological tests; Psychological rating scale; Psychological rating-scale; Self-rating scale; Psychological self-rating scale; Self rating scale; Psychological self rating scale; Mental testing
psychologische test

Définition

mental cruelty
n. a term, rapidly going out of fashion and out of the statutes, which has been used to justify granting a divorce when the state laws required that some wrong had to be found in the defending spouse. In absence of actual physical cruelty (or unwillingness to discuss it) the person wanting the divorce could testify to a list of indignities ("he swore at me, he came home late, he humiliated me in front of friends, he was hateful to my mother, he read girlie magazines," or similar tales told about the wife) which would be verified by a relative or a friend to satisfy the judge that the petitioning spouse would suffer mental harm if the marriage continued and proved that there were grounds for a divorce. As "no-fault" divorce has gained favor, such charades have faded into legal history. See also: cruelty divorce

Wikipédia

Maturity model

A maturity model is a framework for measuring an organization's maturity, with maturity being defined as a measurement of the ability of an organization for continuous improvement in a particular discipline (as defined in O-ISM3). The higher the maturity, the higher will be the chances that incidents or errors will lead to improvements either in the quality or in the use of the resources of the discipline as implemented by the organization.

Most maturity models assess qualitatively people/culture, processes/structures, and objects/technology.

Two approaches for implementing maturity models exist. With a top-down approach, such as proposed by Becker et al., a fixed number of maturity stages or levels is specified first and further corroborated with characteristics (typically in form of specific assessment items) that support the initial assumptions about how maturity evolves. When using a bottom-up approach, such as suggested by Lahrmann et al., distinct characteristics or assessment items are determined first and clustered in a second step into maturity levels to induce a more general view of the different steps of maturity evolution. Topics that are covered in maturity models include:

Exemples du corpus de texte pour psychological maturity
1. There is no social, physical and psychological maturity at such an age," she added.
2. Surgery – which costs around 10,000 – would be an option for children who had reached an age of "psychological maturity", thought to be between 14 and 16 years.
3. Dr Charlton, whose theory features in the journal, Medical Hypotheses, said: ‘Formal education requires a child–like stance of receptivity to new learning, and cognitive flexibility. ‘So long as a person is in formal education, or is open to the possibility of returning for more formal education, their minds are in a significant sense unfinished. ‘As the average number of years spent in formal education progressively increases, we may expect to accumulate ever–more chronologically middle–aged and elderly people who remain youthfully–minded.‘ Dr Charlton argues that our ancestors in hunter–gatherer societies reached psychological maturity in their late teens or early twenties and marked the occasion with ceremonies.