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  1. May 22, 2018 · This is in line with the way urban adults view those in the suburbs: 52% say people in the suburbs generally share their values, 47% say they don’t. Like those in urban areas, rural residents are also divided on whether the values of suburbanites are generally similar to (53%) or different from (46%) theirs.

  2. May 22, 2018 · Most Americans say people who live in the same type of community as they do generally share their values, but they are less convinced that those in other types of communities do. For example, a majority of rural residents (58%) say the values of most people in urban areas are very or somewhat different from theirs. Among urban dwellers, 53% see ...

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    • Experiential Activities
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    1. List and describe some common challenges associated with rural communities (i.e., Grant County, New Mexico) and how rehabilitation counselors can work with persons with disabilities to overcome...
    2. The chapter discusses residents and social infrastructure as two of the greatest assets to a rural community. What other factors increase a rural community’s strengths? What contributes to its w...
    3. As a rehabilitation counselor, what recommendations would you have for consumers toward building natural supports to overcome difficulties commonly faced (i.e., transportation)?
    1. Take a tour of your town or community. Assess transportation, architectural accessibility, safety, ease of getting around, and availability of necessary services (e.g., grocery, laundry, goods a...
    2. Interview the person you know who has lived in your community for the longest period of time. What can they tell you about community strengths? What do they see as the greatest challenges for re...
    1. Which of the following defines the term resilience?
    2. Which of the following best describes coping?
    3. Which of the following describes one of the greatest strengths of rural communities?
    4. Urbanormativity refers to which of the following?
    • Allison R. Fleming, Noel A. Ysasi, Debra A. Harley, Malachy L. Bishop
    • 2018
  3. Feb 1, 2021 · Among other reasons, this may be explained by the fact that in rural areas community ties are stronger (Hummon, 1992), there is a greater norm of reciprocity (McKnight et al., 2017), and there is a wide range of activities related to the natural environment (Hinds and Sparks, 2008); in addition, there is less urbanization and there is the threat of large scale migration from rural areas, with ...

    • Daniel Belanche, Luis V. Casaló, María Ángeles Rubio
    • 2021
  4. Feb 18, 2021 · As discussed, the correlation between urban and rural communities and Democratic and Republican election outcomes has been increasing (Scala and Johnson 2017), and Republicans overwhelmingly say that their values align with those in rural areas while Democrats say that theirs align with people in urban areas (Parker et al. 2018a, b, c). This points to the possibility that partisans will engage ...

    • Jeffrey Lyons, Stephen M. Utych
    • 2021
  5. ture. The points I make below about rural culture do not apply uniformly to the people who live in a rural area, and it is just as important not to stereotype rural people as it is to avoid stereotyping people from ethnically or racially based cultures. Second, there are degrees of rurality, and I prefer to think of rurality as a continuum.

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  7. May 12, 2020 · In the case of rural communities, stereotypes that portray rural people as uncultured, backward, naïve, less intelligent, uneducated, easy to manipulate, etc., and by contrast those that represent rural places as bastions of goodness, community, and old-fashioned American values are two central dominant cultural narratives that discredit and discount rural needs and diversity.

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