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Showing 1 to 15 of 25 results Save | Export
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Lisa Kamsickas; Jacquelyn E. Stephens; Kathryn Jackson; Nia Heard-Garris; Vickie Chang; Konstanze Schoeps; Cori J. Bussolari; Dzung X. Vo; Judith T. Moskowitz; Larissa G. Duncan – Discover Education, 2024
Introduction: This study tested the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of Coping and Emotional Development for Adolescents to Reduce Stress (CEDARS) a positive psychological intervention (PPI), tailored for adolescents and administered in a classroom setting, in boosting CEDARS skill use and emotional well-being. Method: Adolescents (N = 102,…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Coping, Emotional Development, Stress Management
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Green, Darlene; Karafa, Kacie; Wilson, Stephanie – Art Therapy: Journal of the American Art Therapy Association, 2021
The Dual-Process Model of grieving suggests that oscillation between negative and positive emotions occurs throughout the grieving process. If either negative or positive emotions are overly emphasized the grieving process could be stymied. To determine how art therapy can support this model, this study evaluated changes in positive and negative…
Descriptors: Art Therapy, Grief, Death, Coping
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Korol, Liliia; Bevelander, Pieter – Child & Youth Care Forum, 2021
Background: The existing literature suggests that positive parenting might serve as a protective factor against immigrant adolescents' engagement in externalizing difficulties when they are exposed to negative experiences of ethnic derogation. To date, little is known, however, about whether different dimensions of positive parenting may moderate…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Child Rearing, Parenting Styles, Immigrants
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Iratzoqui, Amaia – Youth & Society, 2020
Criminological literature has examined the potential for gendered pathways of offending, while also recognizing the gendered risk for victimization. General strain theory explicitly recognizes this gendered risk as strains that structure differences in these experiences for males and females. The current article tests the longitudinal risk for…
Descriptors: Gender Differences, At Risk Persons, Child Abuse, Family Violence
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Comelli, Felipe Augusto de Mesquita; da Costa, Michel; Tavares, Elisabeth dos Santos – International Review of Research in Open and Distributed Learning, 2021
The COVID-19 pandemic has impacted society in different areas. In education, several reports show the deleterious effects of the disease on the physical and mental health of students, family members, and teachers around the world. Also, in Brazil, affect studies indicate the prevalence of anxiety, stress, and depression among students. The present…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, COVID-19, Pandemics, School Closing
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Halstead, Elizabeth J.; Griffith, Gemma M.; Hastings, Richard P. – International Journal of Developmental Disabilities, 2018
Objectives: Behavioral and emotional problems exhibited by children with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) have been identified as significant stressors for family members in both cross-sectional and longitudinal research. However, there is variability in the extent to which family members are affected by behavioral and emotional…
Descriptors: Social Support Groups, Coping, Positive Attitudes, Well Being
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Peets, Katlin; Hodges, Ernest V. E.; Salmivalli, Christina – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2013
Children and adolescents encounter different hurtful experiences in school settings. How these events are processed (e.g., whether they think that the transgressor was hostile) is likely to depend on the relationship with the transgressor. In this study, we examined how adolescents (58 girls and 35 boys, mean age = 14.03 years, SD = 0.60) dealt…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Psychological Patterns, Adolescents, Aggression
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Lawson, Katie M.; Davis, Kelly D.; McHale, Susan M.; Almeida, David M.; Kelly, Erin L.; King, Rosalind B. – Developmental Psychology, 2016
Using a group-randomized field experimental design, this study tested whether a workplace intervention--designed to reduce work-family conflict--buffered against potential age-related decreases in the affective well-being of employees' children. Daily diary data were collected from 9- to 17-year-old children of parents working in an information…
Descriptors: Well Being, Intervention, Family Work Relationship, Affective Behavior
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Assor, Avi; Tal, Karen – Journal of Adolescence, 2012
We examined the idea that adolescents' perceptions of their mothers as using parental conditional positive regard (PCPR) to promote academic achievement are associated with maladaptive self feelings and coping. A study of 153 adolescents supported the hypothesis that PCPR predicts self-aggrandizement following success and self devaluation and…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Parent Child Relationship, Adolescents, Coping
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Coyle, Laura D.; Vera, Elizabeth M. – Journal of Youth Studies, 2013
The purpose of this study was to determine whether uncontrollable stress related to levels of subjective well-being (SWB) in a group of ethnically diverse urban adolescents. Additionally, the researchers examined what types of coping skills were utilized in the face of high levels of uncontrollable stress. Finally, a moderation model was proposed,…
Descriptors: Well Being, Urban Areas, Adolescents, Stress Variables
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Balk, David E. – Prevention Researcher, 2011
In order to provide the best support possible to grieving youth it is important to understand how bereavement impacts adolescent development and how adolescent development impacts bereavement. In this article, prominent youth bereavement author, David Balk, explores these two key components focusing on cognitive, behavioral, and affective…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Grief, Adolescents, Cognitive Processes
Ratti, Theresa Helen McLuskey – ProQuest LLC, 2011
Parents die during the lives of their children. If the child is an adolescent, that death will impact the student's education immediately or in subsequent years. Findings show the death of a mother does impact the daughter's education. It is imperative educators are willing to work with the student at the time the death occurs as well as in the…
Descriptors: Caring, Social Support Groups, Grief, Mothers
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Bustos, Theona; Jaaniste, Tiina; Salmon, Karen; Champion, G. David – Behavior Modification, 2008
This study was designed to investigate whether a brief intervention encouraging parental coping-promoting talk within the treatment room would have beneficial effects on infant pain responses to an immunization injection. Infant-parent dyads were recruited from a 6-month immunization clinic and randomized to an intervention group (n = 25) or…
Descriptors: Control Groups, Intervention, Infants, Adolescents
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Hersh, Matthew A.; Hussong, Andrea M. – Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 2009
The current study examined the moderating influence of observed parental emotion socialization (PES) on self-medication in adolescents. Strengths of the study include the use of a newly developed observational coding system further extending the study of PES to adolescence, the use of an experience sampling method to assess the daily covariation…
Descriptors: Socialization, Correlation, Affective Behavior, Negative Attitudes
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Vaughn, Allison A.; Roesch, Scott C.; Aldridge, Arianna A. – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2009
Stress-related growth is defined as the perception or experience of deriving benefits from encountering stressful circumstances and, thus, has been identified as a protective factor against stress. The current study revised and subsequently validated scores on an existing measure of stress-related growth in a sample of racial/ethnic minority…
Descriptors: Validity, Adolescents, Coping, Individual Differences
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