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Steve Lemerand; Antonio Duran – Journal of Student Affairs Research and Practice, 2024
Scholarship on how fraternities inform members' sexual identity development is mixed, showcasing the harmful ways these groups affect queer members as well as highlighting the potential they have to be affirming. This narrative inquiry study sought to contribute to this literature by spotlighting the stories of 8 members who identified as…
Descriptors: Fraternities, College Students, Sexual Identity, LGBTQ People
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Laura Graham Holmes; Ziming Xuan; Emily Quinn; Reid Caplan; Amelia Sanchez; Peter Wharmby; Calliope Holingue; Sharon Levy; Emily F. Rothman – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2024
We explored factors predicting repeated or hazardous alcohol use among autistic and non-autistic U.S. youth ages 16 to 20 years. Autistic (n = 94) and non-autistic (n = 92) youth completed an online survey. By design, half of each group reported past-year alcohol use. We compared drinking patterns for autistic and non-autistic youth, and within…
Descriptors: Autism Spectrum Disorders, Alcohol Abuse, Drinking, Peer Relationship
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Unal, Naciye Ece; Sak, Ugur – High Ability Studies, 2023
The purpose of this qualitative research was to explore how gifted girls perceived and coped with loneliness and the relationship between loneliness and giftedness from their perspectives. Participants were four middle-school gifted girls. A loneliness scale was used to select gifted students with a high level of loneliness experience. In-depth…
Descriptors: Middle School Students, Females, Academically Gifted, Psychological Patterns
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Dawes, Molly; Sterrett, Brittany I.; Norwalk, Kate E.; Farmer, Thomas W.; Hamm, Jill V. – Social Psychology of Education: An International Journal, 2021
Teachers are often at the forefront of efforts to help students struggling socially at school and their support may be particularly critical during the early adolescent developmental period after youth transition to middle school when social concerns become increasingly salient to students. Given their daily interactions with students, teachers…
Descriptors: Middle School Teachers, Middle School Students, Teacher Attitudes, Social Influences
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Godor, Brian P.; Uysal, Recep; van der Poel, Anne; Jansen, Pauline – Gifted and Talented International, 2020
The social environment, which plays a critical role, is an important factor for self-development during adolescence. On the other hand, gifted adolescents may be relatively at risk in social relationships. Therefore, the first objective of the current research is to examine the relationship between social anxiety and emotional eating in normative…
Descriptors: Correlation, Anxiety Disorders, Eating Disorders, Emotional Response
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Pinquart, Martin; Behle, Anika – International Journal of Disability, Development and Education, 2021
The objective of the study was to analyse whether young people with physical disabilities have lower global self-esteem and less positive domain-specific self-concepts than peers without physical disabilities, as well as which processes protect their self-esteem. Data were collected from 179 German adolescents with physical disabilities and 296…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Physical Disabilities, Self Esteem, Self Concept
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Röder, Mandy; Müller, Anna Rebecca – International Journal of Educational Psychology, 2020
Changing from elementary to secondary school is a life event that every child has to pass. Previous research has shown that some children feel more threatened by the transition than others. In the present study children's expectations concerning the impending transition to secondary school were analyzed and it was investigated how individual…
Descriptors: Developmental Tasks, Student Adjustment, Elementary School Students, Student Attitudes
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Krafchek, Jennifer; Kronborg, Leonie – Gifted and Talented International, 2020
This qualitative study examined the social coping behaviors and strategies used by fourteen academically high-achieving females before the onset of disordered eating in high school. Ineffective social coping strategies could contribute to a feeling of helplessness, which is a risk factor for eating disorders. All participants were interviewed…
Descriptors: Coping, Females, Eating Disorders, Social Behavior
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Wilkinson, Samantha – Higher Education Research and Development, 2019
This paper offers an autoethnographic account of my first academic year as a Human Geography lecturer at a 'new' public university in the North West of England. This research is timely and much needed, since teaching at universities in England has recently come under increasing scrutiny. The Teaching Excellence Framework is a new scheme, which…
Descriptors: Human Geography, Teacher Attitudes, Beginning Teachers, College Faculty
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Tomoniko, Sylvie – BU Journal of Graduate Studies in Education, 2019
Teenager anxiety can be fueled by the online social interactions of today's youth. Comparing one's life with others, coping with bullying behaviour, seeking acceptance from peers, and digital addiction can all have a role in the rising anxiety today's teenagers are experiencing. Educators and parents have an important role to play in teaching…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Adolescents, Computer Mediated Communication, Bullying
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Ferndale, Danielle; Munro, Louise; Watson, Bernadette – American Annals of the Deaf, 2015
Adopting a social constructionist framework, the authors conducted a synthetic discourse analysis to explore how people living in Australia with deafness construct their experience of deafness. An online forum facilitated access and communication between the lead author and 24 widely dispersed and linguistically diverse forum contributors. The…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Hearing Impairments, Deafness, Discourse Analysis
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Jaspal, Rusi – Perspectives: Policy and Practice in Higher Education, 2015
UK higher education (HE) has become increasingly diverse. Despite the clear social, economic and pedagogical benefits of diversity, it can also be challenging for identity as it may bring about psychological change and compel both the "dominant majority" and "minorities" to adjust to the presence, identities and worldviews of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Self Concept, Social Psychology
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Goodearl, Anna Ward; Salzinger, Suzanne; Rosario, Margaret – Journal of Early Adolescence, 2014
This study examined how peer relationships contribute to young adolescents' adaptation in the face of exposure to community and family violence. It tested hypotheses about peers' role in processes relating exposure to behavioral and psychological outcomes, specifically, aggression and anxiety. Data were collected from 667 middle school students,…
Descriptors: Correlation, Violence, Anxiety, Family Violence
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Rimm, Sylvia B. – Parenting for High Potential, 2015
School and life achievement patterns for girls and women differ from those of boys and men. While girls have made dramatic progress in school, they need to be inspired to connect to lifelong achievement. Both research and clinical work at the Ohio-based Family Achievement Clinic find that more boys than girls underachieve in school. There is much…
Descriptors: Gender Issues, Gifted, Academic Achievement, Gender Differences
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Buck, Katharine Ann; Dix, Theodore – Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 2012
Why do depressive symptoms increase during adolescence? Because inhibition and poor peer relationships predict adolescents' depressive symptoms concurrently, we hypothesized that adolescents who cope with the stresses of this period by becoming increasingly inhibited may experience increasing depressive symptoms both directly and due to increased…
Descriptors: Early Adolescents, Inhibition, Risk, Friendship
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