ASU Electronic Theses and Dissertations
This collection includes most of the ASU Theses and Dissertations from 2011 to present. ASU Theses and Dissertations are available in downloadable PDF format; however, a small percentage of items are under embargo. Information about the dissertations/theses includes degree information, committee members, an abstract, supporting data or media.
In addition to the electronic theses found in the ASU Digital Repository, ASU Theses and Dissertations can be found in the ASU Library Catalog.
Dissertations and Theses granted by Arizona State University are archived and made available through a joint effort of the ASU Graduate College and the ASU Libraries. For more information or questions about this collection contact or visit the Digital Repository ETD Library Guide or contact the ASU Graduate College at gradformat@asu.edu.
- 71 Arizona State University
- 9 Krysik, Judy
- 8 Anthony, Elizabeth
- 7 Segal, Elizabeth
- 5 Gerdes, Karen
- 4 Ayon, Cecilia
- 4 Bonifas, Robin
- more
- 4 Ferguson-Colvin, Kristin
- 4 Klimek, Barbara
- 4 LeCroy, Craig W
- 4 Marsiglia, Flavio F
- 4 Mendoza, Natasha
- 4 Roe-Sepowitz, Dominique
- 4 Shafer, Michael S
- 3 Androff, David
- 3 Holschuh, Jane
- 3 Jackson, Kelly F
- 3 Marsiglia, Flavio
- 3 Shafer, Michael
- 3 Sun, Fei
- 3 Williams, Lela R
- 2 Anthony, Elizabeth K
- 2 Ayón, Cecilia
- 2 Becerra, David
- 2 Brown, Mary Ellen
- 2 Cesar, Gabriel T Gilberto
- 2 Holley, Lynn C
- 2 Jackson, Kelly
- 2 Kiehne, Elizabeth
- 2 Kulis, Stephen
- 2 Lietz, Cynthia A.
- 2 Messing, Jill T
- 2 Risley-Curtiss, Christina
- 2 Sangalang, Cindy
- 2 Segal, Elizabeth A.
- 2 Stalker, Katie
- 2 Williams, Lela
- 2 Wolfersteig, Wendy
- 1 Adams, Heidi L.
- 1 Adams, James
- 1 Adelman, Madelaine
- 1 Alatorre, Francisco J
- 1 Anderson, Steven
- 1 Androff, David K
- 1 Androff, David K.
- 1 Arcoleo, Kimberly
- 1 Ashford, Jose
- 1 Ashford, Jose B
- 1 Ashford, José B
- 1 Ayers, Stephanie
- 1 Bacallao, Martica
- 1 Bagwell, Meredith
- 1 Baker, Tahnee Marie
- 1 Baldwin-White, Adrienne
- 1 Basnal, Srividya
- 1 Bean, Kristen Faye
- 1 Belgrave, Melita
- 1 Bender, Diane
- 1 Beyers, Michelle
- 1 Booth, Jaime M.
- 1 Boscovic, Dragan
- 1 Bowditch, Rachel
- 1 Brayboy, Bryan Mck. J.
- 1 Brown, Mary-Ellen
- 1 Buzinde, Christine
- 1 Cacciatore, Joanne
- 1 Callahan, Sharon
- 1 Campbell, Calli Michele
- 1 Chan, Candance K
- 1 Cimino, Andrea Nichole
- 1 Cohen, William
- 1 Cronin, Travis Wade
- 1 Crudup, Chandra
- 1 Decker, Scott
- 1 Downing, Leighanne
- 1 Durfee, Alesha
- 1 Elias-Lambert, Nada
- 1 Ellison, Karin
- 1 Ellsworth, Marcus Quinn
- 1 Epner, Daniel E
- 1 Etzler, Sydney Paige
- 1 Evans, Bronwynne C
- 1 Farr, Patrick Matthew
- 1 Fradella, Henry F
- 1 Gallagher, John Michael
- 1 Gao, Xiang
- 1 Geasland, Richard
- 1 Geiger, Jennifer Mullins
- 1 Gerdes, Karen E
- 1 Gerdes, Karen E.
- 1 Giard, Jacques R
- 1 Gillmore, Mary
- 1 Gillmore, Mary R
- 1 Glidden-Tracey, Cynthia
- 1 Gough, Heather
- 1 Guevarra Jr., Rudy
- 1 Gustavson, Kristen
- 1 Harner, Vern
- 1 Haseley, Hilary
- 1 Hayes, Megan
- 71 Public
- Social work
- 8 Social research
- 6 Psychology
- 5 Criminology
- 5 Public health
- 5 Sociology
- 3 Child Welfare
- more
- 3 LGBTQ
- 3 Social Work
- 3 Women's studies
- 3 social work
- 2 Aging
- 2 American Indian
- 2 Arizona
- 2 Behavioral sciences
- 2 Design
- 2 Ethnic studies
- 2 Intimate Partner Violence
- 2 LGBTQ studies
- 2 Latino
- 2 Law
- 2 Mental Health
- 2 Mental health
- 2 Older adults
- 2 Public administration
- 2 Public policy
- 2 Refugees
- 2 adolescence
- 2 child welfare
- 2 home visitation
- 2 male
- 2 trauma
- 1 ASD
- 1 Academic Success
- 1 Adolescents
- 1 Adoptive Parent
- 1 African American
- 1 African American Youth
- 1 African American children
- 1 African Americans
- 1 African Centered
- 1 American Indians
- 1 Anti-immigrant policymaking
- 1 Armenia
- 1 Autism
- 1 Autistic Spectrum Disorder
- 1 Azerbaijan
- 1 Bantu Philosophy
- 1 Biology
- 1 Black Female/White Male
- 1 Black Youth
- 1 Blockchain
- 1 CFA
- 1 Caregiver
- 1 Cat Café
- 1 Charity
- 1 Child Mental Health
- 1 Child Protective Services
- 1 Child welfare
- 1 Civil Commitment
- 1 Clinical social work
- 1 College Graduates
- 1 Colonization
- 1 Communication
- 1 Community
- 1 Community Based Theater
- 1 Computer science
- 1 Coping
- 1 Criminalization
- 1 Criminological Theory
- 1 Culturally Tailored Interventions
- 1 Curriculum development
- 1 Development
- 1 Developmental psychology
- 1 Devising Theater for Youth
- 1 Dialectic
- 1 Disability
- 1 Disproportionality
- 1 Domestic Violence
- 1 Dusky
- 1 Ecology
- 1 Education
- 1 Electrical engineering
- 1 Email
- 1 Environment
- 1 Environmental Justice
- 1 Environmental Social Work
- 1 Environmental education
- 1 Environmental justice
- 1 Ethnocentrism
- 1 Families
- 1 Finance
- 1 Financial Capability
- 1 Formal organization
- 1 Foster Alumni
- 1 Foster Care
- 1 Foster Parent
- 1 Furniture Design
- 1 GLBT studies
- 1 Gender Roles
- Language in Trauma: A Pilot Study of Pause Frequency as a Predictor of Cognitive Change Due to Post Traumatic Stress Disorder
- Subvert City: The Interventions of an Anarchist in Occupy Phoenix, 2011-2012
- Exploring the Impact of Augmented Reality on Collaborative Decision-Making in Small Teams
- Towards a National Cinema: An Analysis of Caliwood Films by Luis Ospina and Carlos Mayolo and Their Fundamental Contribution to Colombian Film
- 国家集中采购试点政策对制药企业和制药产业的影响评估
There are federal mandates attached to funding for behavioral health programs that require the use of evidence-based treatments (EBTs) to treat mental health disorders in order to improve clinical outcomes. However, these EBTs have not been constructed with American Indian/Alaskan Native (AI/AN) populations. There are over 340 EBTs, and only two outcome controlled studies have demonstrated effectiveness with AI/AN populations to treat mental health disorders. AI/AN communities often have to select an EBT that is not reflective of their culture, language, and traditions. Although EBTs are frequently used in AI/AN communities, little is known about the adaptation process of these …
- Contributors
- Poola, Charlene, Segal, Elizabeth A., Mitchell, Felicia M., et al.
- Created Date
- 2020
Microlending aims at providing low-barrier loans to small to medium scaled family run businesses that are financially disincluded historically. These borrowers might be in third world countries where traditional financing is not accessible. Lenders can be individual investors or institutions making risky investments or willing to help people who cannot access traditional banks or do not have the credibility to get loans from traditional sources. Microlending involves a charitable cause as well where lenders are not really concerned about what and how they are paid. This thesis aims at building a platform that will support both commercial microlending as well …
- Contributors
- Siddharth, Sourabh, Boscovic, Dragan, Basnal, Srividya, et al.
- Created Date
- 2020
Empathy is a critical component of high-quality healthcare. When present in the clinical encounter, empathy is important to physicians (empathy is correlated with reductions in physician anxiety and burnout) and to patients (empathy is correlated with better medical decision making, enhanced trust, and improved treatment adherence). Unfortunately, there is an empathy gap in healthcare–physicians often miss opportunities to demonstrate empathy to their patients. This leaves patients feeling unheard, less likely to bring up details important to their care, and less likely to follow treatment guidelines from physicians, thus disrupting the physician-patient relationship. Luckily, communicating with empathy is a skill that …
- Contributors
- Meyer, Laura Grace, Shafer, Michael S, Epner, Daniel E, et al.
- Created Date
- 2020
This research aims to investigate the social environment in a brand-new type of café, pet café, and to maximum the benefit of this type of cafe. While pet cafés, especially cat cafés, are becoming increasingly common in the United States (U.S.), Asian countries have been in this kind of business since 1998. The most common and popular is the cat café. Even though the owners of cat cafés in the U.S. have learned and imitated the cat café in Asia, the cultural differences and the restrictions resulted in differences in format and design. Interior and furniture design was investigated to …
- Contributors
- Zhang, Shumeng, Bender, Diane, McDermott, Lauren, et al.
- Created Date
- 2019
Approximately 89 million Americans will be age 65 and older by 2050 in the United States. This older adult population is especially vulnerable to loneliness as a result of numerous age-related risk factors including loss of social support and declining health. In addition to these common risk factors, refugee older adults may face increased loneliness as a consequence of war-related trauma, loss, and marginalized cultural values in their host country. Despite their heightened vulnerabilities to loneliness, the experiences of refugee older adults remain understudied. This is the first study aimed at understanding the loneliness experiences of community-dwelling Hmong older adults, …
- Contributors
- Vang, Cindy, Jackson, Kelly F, Lee, Serge, et al.
- Created Date
- 2019
On a given night in 2018, over half a million people were experiencing homelessness in the United States, and of those, about 36,000 were youth under the age of 25. Music is an indispensable part of young people’s identities and cultures, and understanding the ways in which homeless youth define their own musical preferences and use of music can help music therapists intervene effectively in youth homelessness as part of an interdisciplinary care team. The purpose of this project was twofold: 1) to conduct a descriptive research project pertaining to homeless young adults’ use of music and 2) to develop …
- Contributors
- Sample, Katherine Elizabeth, Belgrave, Melita, Glidden-Tracey, Cynthia, et al.
- Created Date
- 2019
This dissertation details a study of wide-bandgap molecular beam epitaxy (MBE)-grown single-crystal MgxCd1-xTe. The motivation for this study is to open a pathway to reduced $/W solar power generation through the development of a high-efficiency 1.7-eV II-VI top cell current-matched to low-cost 1.1-eV silicon. This paper reports the demonstration of monocrystalline 1.7-eV MgxCd1-xTe/MgyCd1-yTe (y>x) double heterostructures (DHs) with a record carrier lifetime of 560 nanoseconds, along with a 1.7-eV MgxCd1-xTe/MgyCd1-yTe (y>x) single-junction solar cell with a record active-area efficiency of 15.2% and a record open-circuit voltage (VOC) of 1.176 V. A study of indium-doped n-type 1.7-eV MgxCd1-xTe with a carrier …
- Contributors
- Campbell, Calli Michele, Zhang, Yong-Hang, Chan, Candance K, et al.
- Created Date
- 2019
Nearly 11 million immigrants in the United States, three-quarters of which are Latino, lack legal authorization to live and work in the country; nonetheless, the majority of these individuals have resided in the U.S. for a decade or more and have profound social, emotional, cultural, and economic ties to the country (Passel & Cohn, 2018). Despite being deeply embedded in their communities, the dominant policy response involves increased immigration enforcement and advancing a hostile socio-political context (Gulasekaram & Ramakishnan, 2015). This policy approach comes at a great cost to immigrant and Latino communities throughout the U.S. and is largely ineffective. …
- Contributors
- Kiehne, Elizabeth, Becerra, David, Stalker, Katie C., et al.
- Created Date
- 2019
Collective self-esteem is defined as the aspect of identity that relates to how one evaluates the value or worth of the social group to which they belong (Luttanen and Croker, 1992). For African American youth, little research has been conducted to understand how they assess the value or worth they place on their ethnic social grouping as opposed to their racial identity (Hecht, Jackson, & Ribeau, 2003). Moreover, African American scholars for decades have theorized about the importance of applying African centered frameworks to ground community solutions for these youth. Drawing from both the African centered and collective self-esteem literature, …
- Contributors
- Lateef, Husain, Anthony, Elizabeth K, Hodge, David R, et al.
- Created Date
- 2019
A child’s death evokes intense and long-lasting grief in parents. However, few interventions exist to address the needs of this population. This mixed methods project used secondary data to evaluate the impact of a four-day, grief-focused mindfulness-based retreat on bereaved parents. A quasi-experimental design with two nonequivalent groups (intervention group n = 25, comparison group n = 41) and three observations (pretest and two posttests) was used. Mixed-model repeated-measures analyses of variance were used to assess change over time for the intervention group and relative to a no-intervention comparison group. Outcome measures were depressive and anxious responses, measured by the …
- Contributors
- Thieleman, Kara, Cacciatore, Joanne, Segal, Elizabeth, et al.
- Created Date
- 2019
Opioid use in the United States is skyrocketing. Overdose deaths have increased 433% in the last decade and will continue climbing. In addition to the mortality caused by illicit opioid misuse, morbidity rates have also risen. People Who Inject Drugs (PWID) demonstrate higher rates of Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV), Hepatitis C Virus (HCV), Endocarditis, Persistent Abscesses, Staphylococcus Aureus (S. aureus, Staph) and other skin infections. This thesis serves as (1) a systematic review of the differences in health conditions experienced by PWID and (2) an examination of the trends in skin and soft tissue infection from a small sample in …
- Contributors
- Cohen, William, Mendoza, Natasha, Wolfersteig, Wendy, et al.
- Created Date
- 2019
In response to the need to accurately define group home types, this dissertation focused on providing a clear and distinct definition of the types of group home care, an articulated understanding of the role of group home staff, and an awareness of the impact individuals working in group homes have on the lives of the youth they serve and their influence on the group home environment. Using the qualitative research method Grounded Theory, ten in-depth interviews were conducted with staff who both currently work in group homes, and staff who have left the group home environment. The research question was …
- Contributors
- Haseley, Hilary, Segal, Elizabeth, Anthony, Elizabeth, et al.
- Created Date
- 2018
Child abuse and neglect is a devastating yet preventable social problem. Currently, early childhood home visitation services are the primary approach to preventing maltreatment and improving child well-being in the United States. However, existing literature suggests that improvement is needed regarding how home visitation professionals identify and respond to risk factors for child abuse and neglect. Although there is substantial multidisciplinary literature that investigates the utility of standardized measures to determine future risk for maltreatment, there has been minimal inquiry into the validity of early childhood home visitation assessment instruments to accurately identify and classify children and their families by …
- Contributors
- Kelly, Cara, LeCroy, Craig, Anthony, Elizabeth, et al.
- Created Date
- 2018
In the United States, approximately 400,000 youth are in out-of-home care in the custody of child protection systems (CPS). They are incarcerated, but not as punishment for a crime. States place youth in CPS custody for many different reasons, centered around legal determinations of families’ failure to provide adequate care. Such youth are forcibly separated from their biological (“bio”) families and required to live in shelters, group homes, and foster households at the threat of arrest. Through the socio-legal concept of parens patriae, the government assumes responsibility for their safety and development. In other words, the state assumes the role …
- Contributors
- Cesar, Gabriel T Gilberto, Decker, Scott, Wallace, Danielle, et al.
- Created Date
- 2018
Previous studies about well-being have examined either gratitude’s or social connectedness’ relationship to subjective well-being. The aim of this randomized control trial was to examine the efficacy of a gratitude-based writing micro-intervention in enhancing felt social connectedness and well-being between young adults and their parents. The trial tested the impact of engaging in gratitude-based writing about family members or enhanced caretakers on measures of social connectedness and well-being between grown children and their parents. Data from a pool of social work students in the Southwest (N=148) were used. Results revealed within-subject effects and between subject effects for psychological well-being from …
- Contributors
- Kaplan, Tamar, LeCroy, Craig W, Williams, Lela R, et al.
- Created Date
- 2018
The Yavapai-Apache Nation represents one American Indian tribe whose experiences of historical trauma and alternative responses to historical trauma is not fully understood. This study sought to explore the presence of historical trauma among individuals who did not directly experience events of historical trauma, and ways those individuals have dealt with the possible impact of historical trauma. The foundation of this research reflected that pathological outcomes may not be universal responses to historical trauma for a sample of Yavapai-Apache Nation college graduates, as evidenced by their academic success, positive life outcomes, and resilience. The study utilized Indigenous methodologies and conversational …
- Contributors
- Baker, Tahnee Marie, Segal, Elizabeth, Vicenti Carpio, Myla, et al.
- Created Date
- 2018
Multiple studies have found that writing with self-compassion about a difficult event helps promote mental health and improve affect in college students and non-clinical populations (Johnson & O'Brien, 2013; Leary et al, 2007; Shapira & Mongrain, 2010). This study investigated whether a self-compassion writing intervention would lead to increases in self-compassion and proactive coping and reductions in depression and physical symptoms in a sample of individuals with different types of mental illness. This study also looked more broadly at the feasibility of conducting an online randomized trial on individuals with mental illness, including psychotic disorders, on Amazon MTurk. Individuals with …
- Contributors
- Urken, Debra, LeCroy, Craig W, Holschuh, Jane, et al.
- Created Date
- 2018
One in five college women report being sexually assaulted (National Sexual Violence Resource Center, 2015) with college being the time when men are more likely to commit a sexual assault (Burgess, 2007). Victimization detracts from their college experience, leading to poor academic performance or less institutional commitment. College women who are victims of sexual assault are also at a higher risk of participating in risky sexual behavior. To reduce the prevalence of sexual assault at universities, it is important to develop effective prevention programs that can target and change attitudes and beliefs that contribute to the continued perpetuation of sexual …
- Contributors
- Baldwin-White, Adrienne, Messing, Jill, Williams, Lela R, et al.
- Created Date
- 2018
The United States resettles more refugees each year than any country, yet little is known about the influence that the Refugee Resettlement Program has on our communities. Program evaluation in the United States is primarily concerned with outcomes and efficiency; while there has been an absence of collecting data to measure the impact that social programs have on communities. This study explores the impact of refugee resettlement on a metropolitan area by surveying professionals with experience working or volunteering with refugee populations. These professionals rate the extent to which they believe refugee resettlement influences social, economic, and environmental variables in …
- Contributors
- Mody, Elizabeth Hatch, Klimek, Barbara, Morales, Joanne, et al.
- Created Date
- 2018
School failure among children and adolescents has long been a serious issue in Myanmar. The recent statistics indicate that a large number of adolescents do not complete high school. As a consequence, they lose prosperous work opportunities and ability to earn an adequate income. These outcomes highlight a need to study the factors that hamper academic success of adolescents in Myanmar. Academic success is a complex concept and needs a multidimensional perspective to gain an accurate understanding of factors associated with it. Therefore, this study used an ecological risk/protective model and identified risk and protective factors that contribute to academic …
- Contributors
- Lynn, Zayar, Krysik, Judy Lynn, Klimek, Barbara G, et al.
- Created Date
- 2018