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Showing all 12 results Save | Export
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Nicolazzo, Z. – About Campus, 2023
In this article, the author discusses how her mother's death uncovers the implications of how people do not deal with grief in higher education, as well as what that means about the work alongside students and each other.
Descriptors: Grief, Judaism, Mothers, Death
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Stewart, Kelly; Thomas, Val – British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 2020
Suicide bereavement is a newly developing field of research in the UK, yet over 6,600 people take their own lives here every year. This heuristic inquiry aims to explore the lived experiences of trainee psychotherapists bereaved by maternal suicide. It examines the lived experiences of the researcher and two participants, with data collected…
Descriptors: Suicide, Grief, Mothers, Foreign Countries
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Magintao, Norlaila P.; Guimba, Wardah D.; Tamano, Roseniya G.; Sequete, Fernando R., Jr.; Nalla, Adelyn S.; Mojica, Cherrilyn N. – Education Quarterly Reviews, 2021
Death of one's child is an unfathomable painful situation that a mother may feel. While literature reports different coping strategies across cultures, there has no research yet that explored the grieving process that Meranao mothers go through when they lost a child. Hence, this study explored the grieving process of the bereaved Meranao mothers…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Death, Children, Mothers
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Wayment, Heidi A.; Brookshire, Kristina A. – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2018
We examined whether grief and general distress reactions characterized mothers' reactions to their child's ASD diagnosis, and whether these two types of reactions had unique predictors. Hierarchical regression analyses were conducted on data collected from 362 mothers recruited from the Interactive Autism Network (IAN). The mothers were…
Descriptors: Mother Attitudes, Grief, Emotional Disturbances, Autism
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Farley, Lisa – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2014
This paper examines debates about the meaning and value of depression in relationship to efforts to teach about, and learn from, historical loss. It is argued that depression is not solely an individual illness or biological aberration, but a trace and effect of facing the many and profound losses--of culture, language and life--that constitute…
Descriptors: Depression (Psychology), History Instruction, Social Attitudes, Parent Child Relationship
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Pfefferbaum, Betty; Tucker, Phebe; Jeon-Slaughter, Haekyung; Allen, James R.; Hammond, Donna R.; Whittlesey, Suzanne W.; Vinekar, Shreekumar S.; Feng, Yan – Death Studies, 2013
Trauma is thought to interfere with normal grief by superimposing symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder. This exploratory pilot study examined the association between traumatic grief and objectively measured physiological reactivity to a trauma interview in 13 children who lost relatives in the Oklahoma City bombing as well as a potential link…
Descriptors: Trauma, Terrorism, Coping, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Parrish, Rosalie N. – ProQuest LLC, 2010
This qualitative study proposed to answer the following two questions: Do mothers of children who have multiple disabilities experience feelings that are consistent with chronic sorrow?, and What are mothers' perceptions of the chronic sorrow phenomenon? Seven biological mothers of children who have multiple disabilities were interviewed on two…
Descriptors: Multiple Disabilities, Grief, Mothers, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
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Marlowe, Dan; Hodgson, Jennifer; Lamson, Angela – Qualitative Report, 2010
A 20 year retrospective qualitative case study was conducted to investigate the relational impact of choriocarcinoma (a type of gestational cancer) on a couple of child-bearing age. A unique feature to the study was that the primary investigator was the couple's biological son, initiating the first known auto-case study design. Using holistic…
Descriptors: Grief, Cancer, Content Analysis, Learning Theories
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Pearce, Caroline – Journal of Research Practice, 2010
There has been much work highlighting the benefits of autoethnographic research yet little acknowledgement of the demands researching your own life makes on the emotional and mental wellbeing of the researcher. This paper explores the consequences that can arise as a result of autoethnographic research by detailing the crises involved in…
Descriptors: Researchers, Ethnography, Autobiographies, Females
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Riley, Linda P.; LaMontagne, Lynda L.; Hepworth, Joseph T.; Murphy, Barbara A. – Death Studies, 2007
Conceptualizing parental grief as a psychosocial transition, this cross-sectional study of bereaved mothers (N = 35) examined the relationship of dispositional factors, grief reactions, and personal growth. More optimistic mothers reported less intense grief reactions and less distress indicative of complicated grief. Additionally, mothers who…
Descriptors: Mothers, Coping, Grief, Death
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Anderson, Miriam J.; Marwit, Samuel J.; Vandenberg, Brian; Chibnall, John T. – Death Studies, 2005
The authors examined the associations of 3 types of psychological coping (task-based, emotion-based, avoidance), 2 types of religious coping (positive, negative), and their interactions with grief of 57 mothers bereaved by the sudden death of a child. Results indicated that mothers who use emotion-based coping report significantly higher levels of…
Descriptors: Psychology, Mothers, Grief, Coping
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Opirhory, Gloria; Peters, George A. – Personnel and Guidance Journal, 1982
Presents a model that identifies the adjustment process following the birth of a less-than-perfect newborn. Outlines specific counseling intervention strategies that guide the counselor and family through the process towards acceptance. Emphasizes that early counseling leads to more complete adjustment and acceptance, with positive implications…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Counseling Services, Counseling Techniques, Disabilities