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Showing 1 to 15 of 186 results Save | Export
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Noah Glaser; Lucas Jensen; Tina Riedy; Maggie Center; Jim Shifflett; Joseph Griffin – Educational Technology Research and Development, 2024
This qualitative research study aims to examine the potential of the commercially available serious game, Spiritfarer. The study focuses on the game's unique approach to serious themes and its ability to facilitate discussions about grief. A grounded theory approach was used to analyze lived experience descriptions from 54 participants. Findings…
Descriptors: Game Based Learning, Grief, Program Effectiveness, Empathy
Patricia L. Carter – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Using narrative inquiry, this study investigated the lived experience of embodied cognition--the integrated emotional and intellectual functions "of" cognition--in transformative learning in the context of a disorienting dilemma. These two fundamental "conscious" experiences of embodied cognition are preceded by three…
Descriptors: Transformative Learning, Psychological Patterns, Cognitive Processes, Emotional Response
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Robin Redmon Wright – Adult Learning, 2024
This evocative autoethnography is an exploration of learning and perseverance during a particularly dark time in my personal and professional life. In a period of just over 3 years, my spouse and I dealt with the need for several surgeries, the COVID-19-Delta pandemic and subsequent isolation, social unrest, an insurrection in the U.S., and the…
Descriptors: Coping, COVID-19, Pandemics, Health
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Antonio Duran; Nancy E. Thacker Darrow – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2024
Featuring the experiences of 14 LGBQ+ college students at U.S. institutions across the country, this paper centers on photographs participants took and reflected on as they described expressions of grief relative to their sexual identity development (SID). Drawn from an interview-based narrative inquiry study focused on how LGBQ+ students detail…
Descriptors: LGBTQ People, College Students, Grief, Photography
David B. Rompilla Jr.; Emily F. Hittner; Jacquelyn E. Stephens; Iris Mauss; Claudia M. Haase – Grantee Submission, 2022
How individuals regulate emotions in the face of loss has important consequences for well-being and health, but we know little about which emotion regulation strategies are most effective for older adults for whom loss is ubiquitous. The present laboratory-based study examined effects of three emotion regulation strategies (i.e., detachment,…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Self Control, Well Being, Older Adults
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Nicolazzo, Z. – About Campus, 2023
In this article, the author discusses how her mother's death uncovers the implications of how people do not deal with grief in higher education, as well as what that means about the work alongside students and each other.
Descriptors: Grief, Judaism, Mothers, Death
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Lee, Sherman A.; Mathis, Amanda A.; Jobe, Mary C. – British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 2021
A growing body of literature has documented the negative outcomes associated with worry. To extend this line of research, we examined why some bereaved college students with the tendency to worry experience intense grief by focusing on psychosomatic symptoms that follow a wave of emotions episode. The results demonstrated that tonic immobility is…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Grief, Psychosomatic Disorders, Emotional Response
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Green, Darlene; Karafa, Kacie; Wilson, Stephanie – Art Therapy: Journal of the American Art Therapy Association, 2021
The Dual-Process Model of grieving suggests that oscillation between negative and positive emotions occurs throughout the grieving process. If either negative or positive emotions are overly emphasized the grieving process could be stymied. To determine how art therapy can support this model, this study evaluated changes in positive and negative…
Descriptors: Art Therapy, Grief, Death, Coping
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Harris, Paul L. – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2023
Given the legacy of John Bowlby, Attachment theory has often portrayed separation from a caregiver as likely to provoke protest, despair, and ultimately detachment in infants and young children. Indeed, the emotional challenge of separation is built into a key measurement tool of Attachment theory, the Strange Situation. However, James Robertson,…
Descriptors: Young Children, Death, Attachment Behavior, Concept Formation
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Natascha Klocker; Charles Gillon; Leah Gibbs; Jennifer Atchison; Gordon Waitt – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2023
Human geographers engage students in learning about a world characterized by environmental and social disarray. It follows that our students are exposed to deeply confronting topics: climate change, global inequality, food insecurity, and racism, to name a few. Prompted by scholarly debate on the effects of painful emotions elicited by public…
Descriptors: Human Geography, Geography Instruction, Grief, Psychological Patterns
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Marco, Patricia; Redolat, Rosa – Art Therapy: Journal of the American Art Therapy Association, 2023
This case study describes an art therapy intervention with a client diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease who was coping with grief. The course of fifteen sessions included three phases: body awareness, grief emotions, and grief acceptance. The positive changes parallel ways that art therapy can benefit older adults by promoting communication,…
Descriptors: Art Therapy, Alzheimers Disease, Grief, Death
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Lytje, Martin; Dyregrov, Atle – Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research, 2022
This study explores how daycare staff perceive children's reactions to the illness and loss of a parent, the support needs of bereaved children, and the staff's role as supporters. Data were generated through conducting focus groups with 23 employees from eight Danish daycare institutions. The study finds that staff focus on assisting children to…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Social Support Groups, Grief, Child Caregivers
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Duncan, David A. – Review of Education, 2020
Supporting, caring for and working with bereaved children is both daunting and challenging, yet not much is known about how schools can help children to cope with death and dying. The main objective of this study was to identify approaches used to support children who are grieving, and to explore implications for teachers. The use of retrospective…
Descriptors: Grief, Coping, Children, Death
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Jones, Kerry; Murphy, Samantha – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2021
This paper addresses the role of 'emotional labour' in conducting sensitive research. As such it begins to unpick the emotional and embodied consequences of working with data which covers sensitive subjects, in this case perinatal death, and considers how such responses are likely to impact on the analysis of data. We draw upon two doctoral…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Research, Grief, Parents
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Fernández-Ávalos, María Inmaculada; Pérez-Marfil, María Nieves; Ferrer-Cascales, Rosario; Cruz-Quintana, Francisco; Fernández-Alcántara, Manuel – Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities, 2021
Background: The diagnosis of intellectual disability in children can produce complex grief-related feelings in their parents. Previous studies have focused on the moment of the diagnosis or the early life of the children, and little research has been conducted on their feelings of grief in adulthood. The objective was to analyse the process of…
Descriptors: Intellectual Disability, Children, Parent Attitudes, Grief
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