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Holly N. Johnson; Ya-yu Lo; Benjamin Ade-Thurow – Beyond Behavior, 2025
Opportunities to respond (OTR) offer a useful approach to actively engage all students, including those with emotional and behavioral disorders, by enhancing their learning experiences and effectively reducing student problematic behavior due to lack of academic engagement. In this article, we discuss common challenges faced by teachers in…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Learner Engagement, Student Behavior, Barriers
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Lu Wang; Kristen D. Gulish; Alisha R. Pollastri – School Mental Health, 2024
In this mixed-methods experiment, we examined the impacts of an externally provided rationale and teachers' own beliefs on cognitive, emotional, and behavioral responses to student misbehavior. Teachers (N = 120) viewed a video describing three instances of a student's misbehavior, then were randomly assigned to receive one of three explanatory…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Teacher Behavior, Responses, Student Behavior
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Akpovo, Samara Madrid; Neessen, Sarah; Nganga, Lydiah; Sorrells, Cassie – Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood, 2023
This research examines one lead teacher's and two assistant teachers' emotional discomfort as they participated in an eight-month collaborative ethnography of 19 children's peer-culture aggression in an early care and education classroom in the USA. Two questions guided this analysis: (1) What are the emotional themes of teachers in relation to…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Teachers, Teaching Assistants, Emotional Response, Young Children
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Yasumitsu Jikihara; Shunsuke Suzumura; Akiko Hirose; Naoya Todo; Takahiro Kubo; Misako Aramaki; Naomi Shiozaki; Satoko Ando – Child & Youth Care Forum, 2025
Background: Positive marital relations are crucial for healthy family functioning, whereas conflict-ridden marital relations are linked to children's adjustment problems. According to the Emotional Security Theory, destructive interparental conflict leads to children's emotional insecurity, impacting their adjustment. Objective: This three-wave…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, Preschool Children, Emotional Response, Marital Instability
Reva Mathieu; Duaa Alzahrani; Kara E. McGoey – Communique, 2025
Special educators who teach students with significant behavioral challenges may encounter frequent classroom crises. In these moments, they may feel overwhelmed, drained, or even reactive, as they navigate environments that may trigger a fight or flight response. Humble and compassionate approaches can lay the foundation for meaningful…
Descriptors: Student Behavior, Behavior Problems, Special Education Teachers, Altruism
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Yi-Shan Sung; Chung-Ying Lin; Shin Ying Chu; Ling-Yi Lin – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2024
Emotion dysregulation is one of the challenges that children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and their families face. It is unclear whether emotion dysregulation plays a mediating role in the relationship between sensory processing patterns and problem behaviors among these children. This study examined the relations between emotion…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Sensory Experience, Behavior Problems, Child Behavior
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Moed, Anat – Developmental Psychology, 2022
Coercion theory well characterizes the behavioral aspects that often lead to dysfunctional family processes. Recent conceptualizations have incorporated emotion into models of coercive interactions, yet empirical evidence has been limited. In this study, repeated measures of mother-child dyads (N = 319) were assessed over the course of 2 years to…
Descriptors: Mothers, Children, Emotional Response, Child Behavior
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Linlin Liang; Ni Zhang; Wen Liu; Linlin Lin; Xue Zhang – Child & Youth Care Forum, 2025
Background: Externalizing problem behaviors, such as childhood aggression, have a significant impact on adolescent delinquency and even adult delinquency and violence. Mother's attitudes and behaviors can impact the self-control and regulation of preschoolers, which in turn reflect in preschoolers' externalizing problems. Objective: This…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Child Behavior, Aggression, Preschool Children
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Delshad M. Shroff; Annah R. Cash; Katelyn M. Garcia; Jasmine Lewis; Kylie Wijeratne; Rosanna Breaux – Social Development, 2025
Parent emotion socialization (ES), the process through which caregivers influence the development and expression of emotions in children, needs to be interpreted within a sociocultural context. ES literature in Eastern cultures is emerging; existing research has almost exclusively focused on school-age children and adolescents, and has generally…
Descriptors: Parent Influence, Parent Child Relationship, Emotional Response, Preschool Children
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Yael Paz; Sydney Sun; Michaela Flum; Yuheiry Rodriguez; Erin Brown; Rista C. Plate; Rebecca Waller – Child Development, 2025
Music is a powerful medium to study emotion recognition. However, findings are mixed regarding the proficiency of young children to detect emotion conveyed by music. Moreover, we lack knowledge about music emotion recognition and callous-unemotional traits, which portend risk for externalizing problems. The current study examined the performance…
Descriptors: Music, Psychological Patterns, Recognition (Psychology), Personality Traits
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Beverley Samways; Pauline Heslop; Sandra Dowling – International Journal of Developmental Disabilities, 2024
Background: Emotional distress has received less attention as an explanatory factor for self-injury in people with intellectual disabilities, with research and practice primarily focusing on biobehavioural factors. This systematic review examines the self-reported explanations for self-injury by people with mild or moderate intellectual…
Descriptors: Self Destructive Behavior, Mild Intellectual Disability, Moderate Intellectual Disability, Emotional Response
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Yael Braverman; Madison Surmacz; Gina Schnur; Nasim Sheikhi; Susan Faja – Infant and Child Development, 2024
Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia Reactivity (RSA-R) correlates both positively and negatively with externalizing behaviour in autistic individuals. These inconsistencies may result from task-based differences. This pilot study measured RSA-R in 4-to 6-year-olds, across two timepoints, using four validated tasks with matched baseline and challenge…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Autism Spectrum Disorders, Physiology, Young Children
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Anne Southall – British Journal of Special Education, 2024
Research documenting the effects of trauma in early childhood describes the profound and long-term consequences of child abuse and neglect on the developing brain and the subsequent deficits in critical cognitive and social development. While educators have increasingly endeavoured to understand this impact and become more 'trauma-informed' in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Trauma Informed Approach, Barriers, Mild Intellectual Disability
Jessica L. Herrod – ProQuest LLC, 2022
The Premack principle states that any Response A can reinforce any other Response B if the independent rate of A is greater than the independent rate of B (Premack, 1959). Applying the Premack principle involves arranging the environment to restrict access to certain responses based on relative probabilities of a set of given responses (Timberlake…
Descriptors: Student Behavior, Behavior Problems, Behavior Modification, Contingency Management
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Jirina Karasova; Jan Nehyba – British Educational Research Journal, 2025
Classroom behaviour management is a persistent and often overwhelming challenge for novice teachers; they face frequent disruptive behaviours that they struggle to resolve effectively, which harms both the teaching process and classroom climate. This study investigates the specific strategies novice teachers use to manage behaviour, detailing what…
Descriptors: Novices, Classroom Techniques, Student Behavior, Educational Strategies
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