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Luis F. Cisneros – HOW, 2024
Learning a foreign language incorporates cognitive, communicative, emotional, and social aspects. Some of these aspects have to do with the structure of the language being studied; some others deal with social and psychological issues that influence the environment where the learning process takes place. This reflection paper addresses various…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, English (Second Language), Learning Processes, Psychological Patterns
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Christou, Theodore M.; Wearing, Judy – in education, 2015
Two curriculum scholars of contrasting epistemological backgrounds engage in a complicated curriculum conversation on the subject of fear and learning. One author's position is that learning is not only fraught with fear but also requires fear to be transformational. Furthermore, education is intimately connected to fear and unrest. The other…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Curriculum, Fear, Transformative Learning
Perkins-Gough, Deborah – Educational Leadership, 2015
As the mother of two sons who went through adolescence and a practicing neurologist, Frances E. Jensen offers a valuable perspective on teenage behavior. Dr. Jensen explored the neurological research--including insights gained from recent advances in functional magnetic resonance imaging--and found that the adolescent brain is both more powerful…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Behavior, Mental Disorders, Anxiety
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Vaidyanathan, Uma; Patrick, Christopher J.; Cuthbert, Bruce N. – Psychological Bulletin, 2009
Integrative hierarchical models have sought to account for the extensive comorbidity between various internalizing disorders in terms of broad individual difference factors these disorders share. However, such models have been developed largely on the basis of self-report and diagnostic symptom data. Toward the goal of linking such models to…
Descriptors: Psychopathology, Individual Differences, Fear, Anxiety
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Liddle, Becky J. – Counselor Education and Supervision, 1986
Discusses supervisee resistance as a defensive response to perceived threat. Coping strategies which interfere with the learning process are seen as resistance. Enumerates various forms of resistant behavior; explores possible sources of threat that may arouse these behaviors, and proposes a step-by-step model for dealing with resistance in…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Coping, Counselor Training, Counselors
Brodkin, Adele M. – Early Childhood Today, 2005
This article relates the story of a young girl's difficulties in accepting her parents' separation, and offers suggestions for both teachers and parents on how to help a child cope with his or her feelings and anxiety in this situation. Resources for further study are also offered.
Descriptors: Young Children, Teacher Responsibility, Parent Responsibility, Coping
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Robillard, Amy E. – College English, 2007
This is an article about the complex relationship between anger and plagiarism in composition studies. Here, the author brings into dialogue two strands of inquiry that have shaped recent disciplinary conversations in composition studies but that have yet to publicly influence each other. Because emotions and authorship have both been perceived…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Writing Teachers, Plagiarism, Writing Instruction
Hamilton, Jennifer – Exceptional Parent, 1980
The mother of a moderately retarded 11-year-old boy describes her reactions to having her son's teeth straightened. The author realized that the anxiety she felt about the orthodontic procedure was not so much concern for her son as her own fear of dental work. (PHR)
Descriptors: Anxiety, Coping, Dental Health, Emotional Response
Johnson, Suzanne Bennett – 1982
As behavioral approaches for the treatment of clinically significant fears became more accepted, the same techniques began to be applied to normal youngsters' reactions to highly stressful situations in an attempt to prevent the development of excessive fears in children. Although there is widespread acceptance of preventative approaches to help…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Children, Coping, Dentists
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Anderson, James L.; Simonitch, Brian – Child Welfare, 1981
Briefly evaluates the Independent Living Subsidy Program (ILSP) designed to enable adolescents to make an effective transition from foster care, institutional living, or other forms of substitute care to full and productive self-sufficiency. Focuses specifically on the four stages of reactive depression (anxiety, fear and loneliness, elation, and…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Adolescents, Anxiety, Depression (Psychology)
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Highland, Anne C. – Child Welfare, 1981
Summarizes theoretical perspectives and research findings concerning the effects of anxiety upon personal development, mentioning the link between fear and anxiety. The differences between state and trait anxiety, and the limits of measurement with these two types of anxiety are noted. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Anxiety, Cognitive Style, Coping, Emotional Response
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Werth, James L., Jr. – Death Studies, 2005
The author, a psychologist who has been specializing in end-of-life issues for over a decade, uses the death of his fiancee (Becky), following the withdrawal of a ventilator and the refusal to place her back on the machine, to discuss research and analysis of end-of-life care in the United States. After briefly discussing his own background,…
Descriptors: Grief, Death, Self Determination, Decision Making
Church, Ellen Booth – Early Childhood Today, 2004
The shift at the beginning of the year from the summer at home to the fall at school can be both an exciting and an anxious time for young children. Often, there is a fine line between the two emotions, with one considered positive and other negative. Awareness of how to manage these feelings in a teacher's group is essential to creating the right…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Classroom Techniques, Student Behavior, Young Children
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Alley, Robert D. – Action in Teacher Education, 1980
A description is given of some of the conditions surrounding schooling and education today which result in more stress for teachers and others directly involved with education. Working definitions of key terms pertaining to stress and teacher burnout are presented along with a general breakdown of some sources of stress. (JD)
Descriptors: Administrators, Affective Behavior, Anxiety, Elementary Secondary Education
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Furman, Robert A. – Young Children, 1995
Suggests that, although stresses in the classroom are unavoidable, they may offer optimal opportunities for effective early childhood education. Such education requires work with the child's feelings and cooperative work with the child's parents. Offers different ideas that can be used by teachers to help young children and their parents to cope…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Behavior Patterns, Defense Mechanisms, Early Childhood Education
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