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Teddy Magaña Patigian – ProQuest LLC, 2024
LGBTQ+ youth make up a significant portion of the United States student population (Conron, 2020). A sense of belonging for middle school students is an essential indicator for academic achievement and positive motivational and health outcomes (Kosciw et al., 2020; Steiner et al., 2019), yet LGBTQ+ students experience less belonging than their…
Descriptors: Middle School Students, LGBTQ People, School Counselors, Counselor Attitudes
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Daniela V. Chávez; Bernadette Paula Luengo Kanacri; Christian Berger; Takuya Yanagida; Christina Salmivalli; Claire F. Garandeau – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly: Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2024
The well-known associations of peer status (acceptance and rejection) with prosocial and aggressive behaviors have mostly relied on peer status measures assessed at a single time point. This study adopted a person-oriented approach to examine longitudinal links between stable peer status profiles assessed at two time points and prosocial and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Peer Relationship, Peer Acceptance, Prosocial Behavior
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Nicolas Bressoud; Andrea Christiane Samson; Philippe Gay; Gabija Garbaliauskaite - Plagnol; Catherine Audrin; Elena Lucciarini; Rebecca Shankland – Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs, 2025
This study evaluates the Individual Strengths, Collective Power! program in fostering students' use of strengths vocabulary and improving classroom relationships in an inclusive education setting in Switzerland, where students with and without special educational needs and disabilities (SEND) attend school together. The study involved 179…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary School Students, Middle School Students, Inclusion
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Patrícia Gamboa; Sofia Freire; Aurízia Anica; Maria João Mogarro; Maria Fátima Moreira; Francisco Vaz da Silva – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2024
One argument for the inclusion of children with special education needs (SEN) is that they will benefit from the interactions and relationships with their typically developing peers. However, students with SEN tend to be more rejected than their non-SEN peers. Considering the negative consequences of peer rejection on socioemotional development…
Descriptors: Inclusion, Students with Disabilities, Regular and Special Education Relationship, Peer Acceptance