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Showing 1 to 15 of 24 results Save | Export
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Mary Girgis; Josephine Paparo; Lynette Roberts; Ian Kneebone – Journal of Mental Health Research in Intellectual Disabilities, 2024
Background: Children and adolescents with intellectual disabilities commonly experience emotion regulation difficulties. To better understand emotion regulation in this population, the views of their teachers were considered. Methods: Twenty-nine teachers participated in two focus groups. This study utilized qualitative methods to determine if the…
Descriptors: Students with Disabilities, Intellectual Disability, Emotional Response, Self Control
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Karen Aldrup; Bastian Carstensen; Uta Klusmann – Educational Psychologist, 2024
Theoretical perspectives emphasize the relevance of teachers managing their emotions for positive teacher-student interactions and student outcomes (i.e., teaching effectiveness). Four largely distinct lines of research inspired by (1) Gross' process model of emotion regulation, the concepts of (2) coping, (3) emotional labor, and (4) emotional…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Self Control, Teacher Response, Teacher Student Relationship
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Sandie Wong – Australasian Journal of Early Childhood, 2024
This paper is a case study of clinical supervision to support early childhood leaders in times of a natural disaster. The case is of five Directors working in long day care services in regional New South Wales, and their Manager, following catastrophic flooding in the region. Data were gathered through individual interviews and thematic analysis…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Early Childhood Education, Administrators, Instructional Leadership
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De Clercq, Mikaël; Watt, Helen M. G.; Richardson, Paul W. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2022
Drawing on an existing typology, this study used latent transition profile analysis (LTPA) to examine changes in the striving and wellbeing profiles among teachers from their early until midcareer. Five profiles were identified (Sparing, Good Health, Ambitious, Burnout, and Wornout) among a longitudinal sample of 414 Australian secondary and…
Descriptors: Well Being, Secondary School Teachers, Elementary School Teachers, Teacher Characteristics
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Perry-Hazan, Lotem; Finefter-Rosenbluh, Ilana; Muzikovskaya, Elizabeth – Oxford Review of Education, 2021
This study explored the perceptions of 25 secular teachers employed in American, Australian, and Israeli Jewish religious schools regarding disparities between their secular identity and their school's religious habitus. It also examined the ways these teachers cope with such disparities. Findings suggest that teachers' challenges were anchored in…
Descriptors: Judaism, Religious Schools, Teacher Attitudes, Teacher Characteristics
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Cruickshank, Vaughan; Kerby, Martin; Baguley, Margaret – Australian Journal of Teacher Education, 2021
Male teachers are a minority in both primary teacher training courses and in primary schools around the world. Education research has identified numerous gender-related challenges faced by male primary teachers during their initial teacher training and later when teaching in schools. Despite noting that many males leave teacher training because of…
Descriptors: Males, Gender Differences, Barriers, Preservice Teachers
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Kiernan, Neisha; Frydenberg, Erica; Deans, Jan; Liang, Rachel – Educational and Developmental Psychologist, 2017
The present study explored the component structure of coping in preschoolers as measured by the Children's Coping Scale-Revised (CCS-R) through principal component analysis (PCA). The study also examined the relationship between different coping patterns and mental health (as measured by the Strengths and Diffculties Questionnaire; SDQ) in…
Descriptors: Correlation, Coping, Mental Health, Parent Child Relationship
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O'Callaghan, Clare C.; McDermott, Fiona; Hudson, Peter; Zalcberg, John R. – Death Studies, 2013
This study examines music's relevance, including preloss music therapy, for 8 informal caregivers of people who died from cancer. The design was informed by constructivist grounded theory and included semistructured interviews. Bereaved caregivers were supported or occasionally challenged as their musical lives enabled a connection with the…
Descriptors: Grief, Coping, Caregivers, Semi Structured Interviews
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Zimmer-Gembeck, Melanie J.; Skinner, Ellen A.; Morris, Helen; Thomas, Rae – Journal of Early Adolescence, 2013
The same stressor can evoke different emotions across individuals, and emotions can prompt certain coping responses. Responding to four videotaped interpersonal stressors, adolescents ("N" = 230, the average values of "X"[subscript age] = 10 years) reported their sadness, fear "and" anger, and 12 coping strategies.…
Descriptors: Stress Variables, Coping, Adolescents, Psychological Patterns
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Safe, Anneleise; Joosten, Annette; Molineux, Matthew – Journal of Intellectual & Developmental Disability, 2012
Background: Mothers of children with autism experience poorer health and wellbeing compared to mothers of children with other disabilities or typically-developing children. This qualitative phenomenological study aimed to explore the daily life experiences of mothers of children with autism, and the strategies they use to manage their roles, their…
Descriptors: Autism, Phenomenology, Mothers, Child Rearing
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Hemphill, Sheryl A.; Tollit, Michelle; Herrenkohl, Todd I. – Journal of School Violence, 2014
School-based bullying perpetration and victimization is common worldwide and has profound impacts on student behavior and mental health. However, few studies have examined young adult outcomes of bullying perpetration or victimization. Research on factors that protect students who have bullied or been bullied is also lacking. This study examined…
Descriptors: Bullying, Victims, Behavior Problems, Late Adolescents
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Cole, David R. – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2012
This article examines qualitative data from a two family case study in New South Wales. Both families are from South America and have recently moved to Australia. This study demonstrates that an understanding of the ways that the families are becoming literate in Australia necessitates moving beyond linguistic analyses of the changes that are…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Literacy, Immigration, English (Second Language)
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Zambrano, Sofia C.; Barton, Christopher A. – Death Studies, 2011
A grounded theory study was undertaken to understand how general practitioners (GPs) experience the death of their patients. Eleven GPs participated in semi-structured interviews. The participants explained their experience of a patient's death using the "death journey" metaphor. This journey, the Journey with the Dying, could be…
Descriptors: Grounded Theory, Figurative Language, Coping, Interviews
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Breen, Lauren J.; O'Connor, Moira – Death Studies, 2010
Theoretical arguments and empirical evidence demonstrate the limited utility of a narrow construction of "normal" grief. Sudden and violent death, the young age of the deceased, and perceptions of death preventability are associated with grief reactions that extend beyond an expected grief response. Interviews were conducted with 21…
Descriptors: Grief, Coping, Counseling Techniques, Accidents
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Strelan, Peter; Wojtysiak, Nicole – Counseling and Values, 2009
This study provides a preliminary empirical test suggesting a coping framework that describes the behavioral, cognitive, and emotion-focused activities related to the process that may lead to forgiveness. Among 170 participants, the study explored the coping strategies people use when they respond to an interpersonal hurt and also the general use…
Descriptors: Coping, Interpersonal Relationship, Psychological Patterns, Cognitive Processes
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