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Maslach Burnout Inventory1
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Showing all 12 results Save | Export
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Escalera-Chávez, Milka Elena; Santana, Josefina C.; García-Santillán, Arturo – European Journal of Educational Research, 2021
Though Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) is not a disease that directly affects people's minds, the confinement measures intended to prevent its spread have been taking a toll on mental health. The objective of this study is to evaluate the level of anxiety, stress and depression in university students of the Middle Zone Multidisciplinary Academic…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Anxiety, Stress Variables
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Vijayan, Ranjit – Education Sciences, 2021
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic caused significant disruption to teaching and learning activities at all levels. Faculty, students, institutions, and parents have had to rapidly adapt and adopt measures to make the best use of available resources, tools and teaching strategies. While much of the online teaching pedagogies have…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Educational Change, Distance Education
Alvarado Alvarado, Sandra Cecilia – ProQuest LLC, 2019
The present study examines resilience, depression, anxiety, stress, and burnout among teachers in Mexico. Data collection took place in the city of Tijuana, Mexico. Thirty-six teachers participated in this study by filling out the paper-based survey with three instruments: Maslach Burnout Inventory for Educators Survey, Depression, Anxiety, Stress…
Descriptors: Teacher Burnout, Stress Variables, Resilience (Psychology), Depression (Psychology)
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Loyola-Hernández, Laura; Kahigi, Christine; Wangari-Jones, Peninah; Farrera, Abraham Mena – Educational Review, 2022
Based on in-depth interviews, surveys and autoethnography we explore ways in which staff responded to the COVID-19 pandemic in three Higher Education Institutions (HEIs) based in Kenya (University of Nairobi), Mexico (El Colegio de la Frontera Sur) and the United Kingdom (University of Leeds). HEIs are dependent on staff's resilience and goodwill…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Activism, College Faculty, Cross Cultural Studies
Noroña, Carmen Rosa; Flores, Luis E.; Velasco-Hodgson, M. Carolina; Eiduson, Rose – ZERO TO THREE, 2018
This article will address immigration as a psychosocial event and will describe the different stages of the immigration process, when immigration becomes traumatic, and how each immigration stage can place vulnerable Latin American families at high risk for traumatic stress. It will explore pre-migration experiences and the factors bringing young…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Immigration, Trauma, Hispanic Americans
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DeMatthews, David E.; Carrola, Paul; Knight, David; Izquierdo, Elena – Leadership and Policy in Schools, 2019
The mental health needs of school principals have been consistently overlooked in the field of educational leadership and in the preparation and professional development of principals. This mixed-method study compares rates of burnout and secondary trauma of principals in one urban school district along the U.S.-Mexico border with other…
Descriptors: Principals, Mental Health, Burnout, Work Environment
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Prasad, Ajnesh; Segarra, Paulina; Villanueva, Cristian E. – Studies in Higher Education, 2019
Scholars have increasingly recognized how efforts among business schools to attain or maintain accreditation from external agencies (i.e. Association of Advance Collegiate Schools of Business [AACSB]) have engendered myriad consequences on the experiences of academic faculty members. Extant research that has investigated this phenomenon…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Accreditation (Institutions), Foreign Countries, Work Environment
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Brietzke, Maria; Perreira, Krista – Journal of Adolescent Research, 2017
Previous research has linked stress to adverse mental health outcomes among Latino adolescents living in the United States. The mechanism through which this process operates continues to be explored, especially in regions of the country where Latin American immigrants and their children have only recently begun to migrate. Our study aimed to…
Descriptors: Stress Variables, Coping, Hispanic Americans, Mental Health
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Kousky, Carolyn – Future of Children, 2016
We can expect climate change to alter the frequency, magnitude, timing, and location of many natural hazards. For example, heat waves are likely to become more frequent, and heavy downpours and flooding more common and more intense. Hurricanes will likely grow more dangerous, rising sea levels will mean more coastal flooding, and more-frequent and…
Descriptors: Natural Disasters, Children, Climate, At Risk Students
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Wells, Lisa; Varjas, Kris; Cadenhead, Catherine; Morillas, Catalina; Morris, Ashley – School Psychology International, 2012
Limited information is available regarding the mental health of children and adolescents in Mexico (Paula, Duarte, & Bordin, 2007). The purpose of this exploratory qualitative study was to examine the construct of mental health of children and adolescents from the emic perspective of key informants in Mexico. Utilizing qualitative methods of…
Descriptors: Outcomes of Education, Mental Health, Adolescents, Foreign Countries
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Salgado de Snyder, V. Nelly – Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences, 1993
A comprehensive psychosocial investigation of 202 Mexican women who had never been out of Mexico and who were married to immigrant workers in the United States revealed that the women experienced stress associated with the welfare of the absent husband, acquisition of new responsibilities and obligations, and family disintegration. (KS)
Descriptors: Coping, Family Problems, Females, Foreign Countries
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Gettman, Dawn; Pena, Devon G. – Social Work, 1986
Occupational social work in the United States-Mexico border region requires knowledge of how gender, cross-cultural factors, and systemic factors affect industrial workers' mental health. A major concern involves knowing when the very structure of the industrial organization must be challenged in order to promote mental health in the workplace.…
Descriptors: Cross Cultural Studies, Employed Women, Females, Industrial Structure