Академический Документы
Профессиональный Документы
Культура Документы
Bernadette College of
Valenzuela
6121 Gen. T De Leon Valenzuela City
Of Valenzuela City
A THESIS
PRESENTED TO THE FACULTY OF
ST. BERNADETTE COLLEGE OF VALENZUELA
Loreto, Gilbert
Sacoso, Denielle,
A.Y. 2019-2020
St. Bernadette College of
Valenzuela
6121 Gen. T De Leon Valenzuela City
Chapter I
Introduction
The scientific study of child maltreatment and its consequences is in its infancy.
Until recently, research on the consequences of physical and sexual child abuse
and neglect has been based primarily on retrospective studies of adolescents or
adults that are subject to clinical bias and inaccurate recall (Aber and Cicchetti,
1984). Research on the consequences of abuse is also challenged by the hidden
nature of much abuse and because these experiences may not come to anyone's
attention until years after they occur. Maltreatment often occurs in the presence
of multiple problems within a family or social environment, including poverty,
violence, substance abuse, and unemployment. Distinguishing consequences
that are associated directly with the experience of child maltreatment itself rather
than other social disorders is a daunting task for the research investigator.
Nor do we yet know the importance of the particular timing, intensity, and context
of abuse on the outcome. Factors such as the age and developmental status of
the child may influence the outcomes of maltreatment experiences. Effects that
appear at only one life stage, whether immediately following the maltreatment or
later, are often different from those that persist throughout life. What may appear
to be adaptive or functional at one point in development (avoiding an abusive
parent or desensitizing oneself against feelings) may later compromise the
person's ability to draw on and respond to personal relationships in an adaptive
and flexible way. Given the wide variations reported in the research literature,
certain intrinsic strengths and vulnerabilities within a child and the child's
environment may affect the extent to which abuse will have adverse
consequences. Disordered patterns of adaptation may lie dormant, only to
appear during times of stress or in conjunction with particular circumstances
(Sroufe and Rutter, 1984).
one popular report found boys to have more externalizing and girls to have more
internalizing symptoms (Friedrich et al., 1988). The lack of attention to gender
differences may result from the small number of male victims of sexual abuse in
most studies and lower rates of reporting of childhood sexual abuse in males.
The purpose of this study is to inform you, the one who will read this and we
conducted this research to voice out what millennial feels and what they want to
say.
St. Bernadette College of
Valenzuela
6121 Gen. T De Leon Valenzuela City
Presented by:
Loreto, Gilbert
Mislos, Roceljhay
Sacoso, Danielle
St. Bernadette College of
Valenzuela
6121 Gen. T De Leon Valenzuela City
CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION.
When one hears the words “LGBT” and “Homosexuality” it often conjures up a
mental picture of people fighting for their rights, which were unjustly taken away
or even the social emergence of gay culture in the world in the1980s and the
discovery of AIDS. However, many people do not know that the history of LGBT
people stretches as far back in humanity’s history, and continues in this day and
age. Nevertheless, the LGBT community today faces much discrimination and
adversity. Many think the problem lies within society itself, and often enough that
may be the case. Society holds preconceptions and prejudice of the LGBT
community, though not always due to actual hatred of the LGBT community, but
rather through lack of knowledge and poor media portrayal.
St. Bernadette College of
Valenzuela
6121 Gen. T De Leon Valenzuela City
Media portrayal of the LGBT community is varying. It may be very positive and a
“good” portrayal or negative and instead focuses on the stereotypical aspects of
the LGBT community. One definition of a good LGBT television portrayal is one
that depicts an LGBT character without over glaringly obviousness of their sexual
orientation, or without adding many LGBT stereotypes that are all too often
added.
and goals.” The LGBT Community is the joining of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and
transgender people and their supporters, with the purpose of celebrating
LGBT organizations and support groups make up a major portion of what the
LGBT community can offer its members. According to Catherine Latterell, the
author of Remix, Assumption 1 is that communities provide stability. It is evident
that LGBT community undoubtedly supports this statement. Organizations like
the Trevor Project and GLAAD work to “amplify the voice of the LGBT community
by empowering real people to share their stories.” (GLAAD) According to the
Trevor Project, lesbian, gay, and bisexual youth are 4 times more likely, and
questioning youth are 3 times more likely, to attempt suicide as their straight
peers. It is estimated by the Suicide Prevention Resource Center that between
30 and 40% of LGBT youth have attempted suicide.
According to the 2002 Young Adult Fertility and Sexuality Survey, 11 percent of
sexually active Filipinos between the ages of 15 and 24 have had sex with
St. Bernadette College of
Valenzuela
6121 Gen. T De Leon Valenzuela City
someone of the same sex. According to Filipino poet and critic Lilia Quindoza
Santiago, Filipino culture may have a more flexible concept of gender;
kasarian(Tagalog for "gender") is defined in less binary terms than the English
word;[3]kasarian means "kind, species, or genus".
The LGBT community actively getting involved in media can be traced back to
the 1970s (). Back then, a group of lesbian writers and activists initiated a gay
liberation movement that represented both lesbians and gay men. However,
other lesbian activists felt that the movement needed to be focused more on
lesbians because they felt that gay men had their own agenda. So the lesbian
community decided to create their own identity by immersing themselves in their
own culture. This culture included good, creative writing, art and music
Reading this study may be their open mind to learn and guide them as well and
respect, and this study will be their mouth to say that they are suffering
discrimination and it has a big impact on them.
St. Bernadette College of
Valenzuela
6121 Gen. T De Leon Valenzuela City
The purpose of this study is to inform you, the one who will read this and we
conducted this research to voice out what LGBT feels and what they want to say.