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Tristan Bunnell; Adam Poole – Journal of Research in International Education, 2024
The number of international schools hit the 6,000-mark in 2012, and the 13,000-mark in 2022. In spite of continuous growth and diversity of provision, paradoxically some literature continues to paint a largely negative sociological imagination, associating the arena with micro-politics, high turnover, and increasing precarity. At the same time,…
Descriptors: Coping, Foreign Nationals, Peer Relationship, Overseas Employment
Tariq Qasim – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The 2014 genocide against the Yazidi community, perpetrated by ISIS, represents one of the most devastating humanitarian crises of the 21st century. This qualitative case study explores the lived experiences of Yazidi women, aged 25-40, who have resettled in Nebraska after surviving unspeakable atrocities, including mass killings, sexual…
Descriptors: Resilience (Psychology), Coping, Cultural Context, Victims of Crime
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Valdivia, Carolina – Harvard Educational Review, 2021
This article examines how the detention or deportation of a parent shapes the roles and responsibilities of young adults within the household and the consequences that these changes have on their educational experiences. Drawing from thirty-two in-depth interviews with young adults living in the United States whose parent was detained, author…
Descriptors: Young Adults, Parents, Undocumented Immigrants, Family Involvement
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Beck, Bernard – Multicultural Perspectives, 2016
Many recent movies about African American life have focused on people leaving the ghetto. Earlier movies about groups living in ghettoes have portrayed the ghetto as a permanent reality. Moviemakers explored ghetto life as an interesting subject and a source of cultural innovation. Life was hard, but social and cultural ways to cope with…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Didacticism, Disadvantaged Environment, Disadvantaged Youth
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Larrivee, Anne – Public Services Quarterly, 2014
This article describes the different stressors and anxieties facing new librarians. It also addresses the various ways that new librarians can cope with location, emotional, and work-related stressors. The article is broken into four different categories of stress; some stressors have been more explored than others. The research is based on an…
Descriptors: Librarians, Stress Variables, Novices, Anxiety
Kruse, Tricia – Exchange: The Early Childhood Leaders' Magazine Since 1978, 2012
According to national figures, 37.1 million people moved in 2009 (U.S. Census Bureau, 2010). In fact, the average American will move 11.7 times in their lifetime. Why are Americans moving so much? There are a variety of reasons. Regardless of the reason, moving is a common experience for children. If one looks at the developmental characteristics…
Descriptors: Relocation, Play, Children, Coping
Hintz, Kathy – Phi Delta Kappan, 2014
In June 2011, the Souris River flooded the city of Minot, North Dakota, destroying schools, businesses, and more than 4,000 houses. District administrators, staff, and teachers responded creatively to provide continuity for the students over a two-year period while three schools resided in temporary locations. The author details how the schools…
Descriptors: Natural Disasters, Emergency Programs, Community Support, Institutional Survival
Gomez, Daniel P.; Ybanez, Cindy – School Business Affairs, 2012
Envision the military family, being given as few as 30 days to pack, take their children out of school, leave their residence, settle in a new home, enroll the children in a new school, and take care of the myriad details for the military parent's relocation or deployment. Military families undergo this process over and over. The moves can affect…
Descriptors: Children, Military Personnel, Relocation, Migrant Children
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Xi, Juan; Hwang, Sean-Shong – Social Indicators Research, 2011
The involuntary relocation of people for development purposes has become prevalent across the world in recent decades. Depression is one of the documented negative outcomes of involuntary relocation among resettlers. Viewing the affected population simply as passive victims, past studies have largely ignored the coping strategies employed by…
Descriptors: Coping, Foreign Countries, Relocation, Depression (Psychology)
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Bradshaw, Catherine P.; Sudhinaraset, May; Mmari, Kristin; Blum, Robert W. – School Psychology Review, 2010
The research on highly mobile military adolescents has produced mixed findings. Whereas early descriptive studies reported that adolescents experiencing multiple residential moves exhibited symptoms of what was termed "military family syndrome", more recent quantitative studies have found few negative effects after controlling for prior status.…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Family Environment, Military Personnel, Relocation
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Vigil, Jacob M.; Geary, David C.; Granger, Douglas A.; Flinn, Mark V. – Child Development, 2010
The study examines group and individual differences in psychological functioning and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal and sympathetic nervous system (SNS) activity among adolescents displaced by Hurricane Katrina and living in a U.S. government relocation camp (n = 62, ages 12-19 years) 2 months postdisaster. Levels of salivary cortisol, salivary…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Relocation, Depression (Psychology), Coping
Sacerdote, Bruce – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2008
I examine academic performance and college going for public school students affected by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. Students who are forced to switch schools due to the hurricanes experience sharp declines in test scores in the first year following the hurricane. However, by the second and third years after the disaster, Katrina evacuees…
Descriptors: Natural Disasters, Public Schools, Coping, Academic Achievement