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Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad de Murcia

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  1. Home
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Browsing by Subject "Supervisión"

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    Percepciones parentales sobre la capacidad de los niños para nadar: un estudio con edades entre 6 y 10 años
    (Universidad de Murcia: servicio de publicaciones, 2025) Costa, Mário J.; Santos, Catarina C; Soares, Susana; Garrido, Nuno D.; Saraiva, Helena; Costa, Aldo M; Sin departamento asociado
    Parental perceptions of aquatic competence can serve as a potential indicator of how aware and involved adults are in supervising children in aquatic environments. This study aimed to compare parental perception with children's actual aquatic competence in a sample of 6-to 10-year-olds. Eighty-one children (8.52 ± 1.11 years old) enrolled in swimming lessons were evaluated on structured aquatic tasks, while their parents completed a questionnaire about their children's skills. Most children (61.7%) were able to stay afloat without foot support. Among those, 97.9% could maintain their head above water and breathe for 30 seconds, 93.6% swam 10 meters, and only 42.3% completed 25 meters using a formal swimming technique. No significant differences were found between parental perception and actual performance. The strongest effect size was observed in basic flotation ability (V = 0.800). These findings highlight the importance of regular participation in swimming lessons, accompanied by ongoing parental awareness of children’s aquatic skill development
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    Supervisión y competencias de las prácticas en Trabajo Social
    (Aranzadi, 2023) Pastor Seller, Enrique; Cuenca Silvestre, Mercedes; Parra Ramajo, Belén; Trabajo Social y Servicios Sociales; Facultades de la UMU::Facultad de Trabajo Social
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    The Impact of Corporate Social Responsibility on Regulatory Comment Letters: evidence from Iran
    (Universidad de Murcia, Servicio de Publicaciones, 2022) Hesarzadeh, Reza
    Securities commissions regularly review corporate reports, and if the review reveals a possible deficiency— such as a potential accounting error— or requires further clarifications, they send the company a comment letter (CL), including a request for providing written responses and relative additional information. Current study aims to examine whether and how corporate social responsibility (CSR) affects CLs. This empirical study is based on a sample of 437 Iranian firm year observations from 2011 to 2017. Results show that firms with more CSR are less likely to receive CL, that more CSR does not influence the association of managerial misbehavior and CLs, and that the negative association between CSR and CLs is stronger among firms facing higher environmental information asymmetry and firms having higher corporate governance quality. Collectively, this paper contributes to the literature by providing new evidence on the beneficial effect of CSR in the context of CLs.

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