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Joshua D. Bishop; Karen M. VanDeusen; Dee A. Sherwood; Cheryl Williams-Hecksel – Journal of Teaching in Social Work, 2024
Among graduate social work students, experiences of childhood adversity and trauma, along with secondary exposure to others' trauma, can result in negative effects. Unaddressed, this may lead to secondary traumatic stress, burnout, or difficulty sustaining effective practice. Self-care strategies that adequately promote well-being and resilience…
Descriptors: Early Experience, Trauma, Stress Variables, Graduate Students
Gamze Ülker Tümlü; Ergün Kara – British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 2024
In this study, we examined the mediating role of self-compassion in the relationship between insight and altruism and flourishing among mental health professional candidates. We adopted a cross-sectional atemporal design to examine how mental health professional candidates' insight and altruism affect their flourishing via self-compassion. The…
Descriptors: Mental Health Workers, Counselor Training, Daily Living Skills, Altruism
Stephanie Flood; Shanye Phillips; Kristyn Goodwin; Rachel McConnell; Lindsay Matthews; Scott Graves – Contemporary School Psychology, 2024
Self-care is a form of intentional focus on mental and physical wellness that is necessary for the optimal functioning of psychologists. The discussion of this topic has received an increased interest in the field of school psychology as self-care is one way to combat a well-documented concern in the field, burnout. While that is the case, there…
Descriptors: School Psychology, Daily Living Skills, Mental Health, Well Being
LaShae R. Grottis – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Leaders in higher education experience high and unrealistic demands for their skills, time, and energy, causing stress, competing priorities, burnout, compromised health, and attrition. However, unlike other racial and gender groups, Black women higher education administrators experienced these challenges more intensely. As a result of chronic…
Descriptors: Well Being, Leadership, African Americans, Females
Justine O'Hara-Gregan – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2024
Early childhood teaching is complex, caring, relational work. In enacting an ethic of care, early childhood teachers often focus on extending care to others, and overlook including themselves in a circle of care. This can negatively impact on teacher well-being and ultimately lead to teacher burnout. This paper draws on a project that explored…
Descriptors: Caring, Metacognition, Early Childhood Education, Altruism
Kevin A. Gee – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2024
Prior evidence shows that early childhood education (ECE) can serve as a protective factor that boosts maltreated children's school readiness outcomes. Yet, less is known about ECE's relationship to other developmental domains critical to their wellbeing including their adaptive behaviors and cognitive development. Focusing on a broader range of…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Child Behavior, National Surveys, Children
Audrey J. Riley-Whitson – ProQuest LLC, 2024
This narrative study explored the experiences of teachers of color working with at-risk youth in marginalized communities during and after the pandemic. Before the pandemic, teachers faced many challenges, such as low pay, being stressed, overworked with a lack of resources, being overlooked, and not appreciated for their hard work. The Critical…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, COVID-19, Pandemics, Public Schools
Travis R. Scheadler; Dawn Anderson Butcher; Samantha Bates – Journal of Youth Development, 2024
Sport-based positive youth development programs focus on life skill development and transfer. However, few long-term follow-up studies examine life skill transfer and application of skills from the perspective of sport-based positive youth development participants who are now young adults. To explore long-term skill development, transfer, and…
Descriptors: Athletics, Youth Programs, Skill Development, Daily Living Skills
Tiffani Robertson – ProQuest LLC, 2024
This research study explored the strategies six Black women academic deans used to sustain themselves at historically white institutions (HWIs). The theoretical framework used to understand the women's experiences included Critical Race Feminism (CRF) and Crenshaw's intersectionality (1989). The purpose of this study was to understand these…
Descriptors: Females, Deans, Women Administrators, African Americans
Judy A Pickard; Kendall Allsop; Frank P Deane – Journal of Psychologists and Counsellors in Schools, 2024
Prior research suggests mindfulness-based interventions effectively reduce stress in trainee psychologists, enhance wellbeing and cultivate clinical skills and competencies. This study explored how trainee school psychologists perceived the effects of a mindfulness-based intervention on their development as psychologists. Forty trainee school…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Workshops, COVID-19, Pandemics
Ken W. Volk; Kristin E. Mehr; John A. Mills – Journal of College Student Mental Health, 2024
Compassion and self-compassion have significant benefits for well-being and mental health. Recent literature has demonstrated that some individuals experience fear when receiving compassion from oneself or others. Fear of compassion from oneself, from others, and for others are separate but related constructs that have been strongly linked to…
Descriptors: Fear, Altruism, Personality Traits, Correlation
Pat Bullen; Rachel A. Williamson-Dean; Gavin T. L. Brown – New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 2024
Schools are important in nurturing social skills and behaviours. Research consistently demonstrates that movement into/out of school (transience/mobility) disrupts positive social skill development, especially for students who frequently move. The impact of attending a highly transient school on "non-mobile" students is not as…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Students, Control Groups, Well Being
Kosha Mehta – Journal of Learning Development in Higher Education, 2024
News and media reports indicate that the perceived value of university education is declining amongst students -- one of the indicators being an increase in apprenticeships. As educators, we need to identify the reasons for this and ask ourselves whether we provide holistic education to students. Based on this rationale, this forward-looking and…
Descriptors: Fundamental Concepts, Sustainability, Diversity, Resilience (Psychology)
Thuli G. Mthembu; Tibuyile L. Dube; Tijana Milojevic; Beverly P. Ndaramu; Philasande Nyangaza; Siyamtanda O. Qolo; Candice Steenkamp – Transformation in Higher Education, 2024
Students including health sciences at universities that appear to subscribe to neoliberal logic are at risk for social injustices and inequalities, anxiety, depression, academic demands and unethical activities. There has been little discussion about students' self-care and well-being in and beyond the neoliberal universities. This article…
Descriptors: Daily Living Skills, Well Being, Health Sciences, Social Justice
Thomas Quarmby; Rachel Sandford; Shirley Gray; Oliver Hooper – European Physical Education Review, 2024
Working with trauma-affected youth in physical education (PE) can be a challenging and, at times, stressful and emotionally demanding process. Whilst little is known about how student trauma affects in-service teachers, even less is known about how it might impact pre-service PE teachers. The aims of this paper are therefore to (1) explore…
Descriptors: Trauma, Preservice Teachers, Physical Education Teachers, Teaching Experience
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