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Justine Kavindi; January Basela; Ochola Omoro – Educational Research: Theory and Practice, 2024
This study examined the challenges faced by first-year university students in Tanzania, focusing on the interplay between psychological distress, coping mechanisms, and academic adjustment. A cross-sectional survey was conducted using Kessler's psychological distress scale, the Student Adjustment to College Questionnaire, and the Brief COPE scale…
Descriptors: Stress Variables, Mental Health, Coping, Student Adjustment
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Jacob S. Sawyer; Amanda N. Moore – Journal of American College Health, 2024
Objective: To examine the associations between coping methods and college adjustment among a sample of U.S. undergraduate students during the COVID-19 pandemic. Participants: We used a sample of 117 undergraduate students between the age of 18-25 years old. Approximately 76% of the sample identified as women and 58% identified as White. Methods:…
Descriptors: Coping, Student Adjustment, Undergraduate Students, COVID-19
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Burns, Emma C.; Collie, Rebecca J.; Van Bergen, Penny; Martin, Andrew J. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2022
Positive psychosocial adjustment is considered critical to adaptive student development and academic growth. Theories of positive youth development argue that psychosocial adjustment is a form of thriving and can be understood via multiple academic indicators, including achievement. To better understand the factors that support students'…
Descriptors: Emotional Adjustment, Social Adjustment, Academic Achievement, Coping
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Galambos, Nancy L.; Howard, Andrea L.; Maggs, Jennifer L. – Journal of Research on Adolescence, 2011
Covariations of self-reported sleep quantity (duration) and quality (disturbances) with affective, stressful, academic, and social experiences across the first year of university in 187 Canadian students (M age=18.4) were examined with multilevel models. Female students reported sleeping fewer hours on average than did male students. In months…
Descriptors: Coping, Sleep, Stress Variables, Foreign Countries
Raye, Christopher M. – ProQuest LLC, 2010
The end of high school marks the time when the most number of individuals will end their participation playing sports at a competitive level. For those pursuing higher education, it has been viewed as a stressful experience for many freshmen. Former high school athletes that enter college as "students" and not…
Descriptors: High School Students, Athletes, Competition, College Freshmen
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Lee, Inkyung; Koro-Ljungberg, Mirka – Journal of Research in International Education, 2007
The purpose of this phenomenological interview study was to describe how visiting Korean students experience social adjustment and acculturation when attending US middle schools. As a result of phenomenological analysis, the essences of Korean students' social adjustment included: (1) descriptions of power struggles; (2) misconceptions of cultural…
Descriptors: Middle Schools, Acculturation, Social Adjustment, Cultural Differences
Peck, Robert F.; Hughes, Robert – 1979
Psychologists and educators have become interested in the development of a child's social and emotional abilities as well as cognitive outcomes. To determine the important coping patterns that predict success in school, a sample of 10- and 14-year old children (N=3600) from the U.S.A., Brazil, Italy, and Mexico completed a multi-lingual battery of…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Adolescents, Children, Coping
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Cullinan, Douglas; And Others – Behavioral Disorders, 1987
The study assessed 237 seriously emotionally disturbed (SED) students and 577 nondisabled students (ages 6-18) on measures of depression, hyperactivity, social status, intelligence, school placement, and aspects of educational achievement. SED students showed greater depression than the nondisabled sample. Patterns of intercorrelations were…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Adjustment (to Environment), Coping, Depression (Psychology)
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Csapo, Marg – Behavioral Disorders, 1991
This evaluation of 16 children (ages 7-12) with achondroplasia from Transkei, Hungary, and Nigeria found that, compared to controls, subjects had more behavior problems and less self-esteem. Subjects were socially withdrawn, internalized emotional problems, had lower academic performance, found less adaptive solutions to frustration, and faced…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Behavior Problems, Body Height, Body Image
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Kochenderfer, Becky J.; Ladd, Gary W. – Journal of School Psychology, 1996
Four types of peer victimizations (physical, direct verbal, indirect verbal, and general) were assessed using a sample of 200 kindergartners. Peer victimization was reported by a large percentage of children, with female and males being equally at risk. Victimized children were compared to nonvictimized children on several social and academic…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Adjustment (to Environment), Children, Coping
Bower, B. – Science News, 1986
Reports on two studies related to the effect of early stress on the social and academic development of boys and girls. Suggested that the social resiliency of boys was relatively consistent from age 3 to 18, while girls had no such pattern. Academic performance of boys was lower than girls. (TW)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Coping, Early Experience, Family Environment
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Knight, Sharon M. – Journal of Health Education, 1993
Reports on a study of 15 doctoral students who were alcoholics' daughters. It examined family origin and elementary-secondary schooling, plus data from the Children of Alcoholics Screening Test. Findings indicated that children survived by hiding their parents' problem, masquerading as normal, and actively working to avoid being discovered. (SM)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Alcoholism, Coping, Elementary School Students