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Showing 1 to 15 of 122 results Save | Export
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Silvia Postigo-Zegarra; Selene Valero-Moreno; Virginia Romero-Reignier; Konstanze Schoeps – Psychology in the Schools, 2025
The conservation of resources (COR) model has accumulated sufficient evidence to explain burnout in a variety of professions, including teachers, based on the relationship between organizational demands and personal resources, and its development from emotional exhaustion, cynicism and decreased self-actualization, in that order. From a holistic…
Descriptors: Emotional Intelligence, Educational Environment, Teacher Burnout, Context Effect
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Danah Henriksen; R. Keith Sawyer – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2025
Creativity is increasingly recognized not only as a cognitive asset but also as a contributor to emotional and psychological well-being. This paper explores the relationship between creativity and well-being across everyday, artistic, and educational contexts, highlighting how creative engagement supports resilience, stress reduction, and personal…
Descriptors: Creativity, Well Being, Mental Health, Learner Engagement
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Evelyn Mary-Ann Antony; Nadin Beckmann; Steve Higgins – JCPP Advances, 2025
Background: Recent research has suggested that emotion dysregulation (ED) is a key mechanism which explains the associations between mental health illnesses, including attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and internalising problems, among youth. However, literature reviews have led to mixed and inconclusive findings on the conceptualisations…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Children, Literature Reviews, Review (Reexamination)
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Kendra Knight; Stephanie Grau; Elissa Foster; Jay Baglia – Journal of Communication Pedagogy, 2025
In the post-pandemic learning era, communication faculty experience tensions among expectations for flexibility, sensitivity to students' well-being, and our commitment to the academic rigor of our courses. These tensions, we argue, may be resolved through offering academic (re)socialization as a stand-alone element of the communication…
Descriptors: Socialization, Workshops, Communication Skills, Success
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Katherine A. Grisanzio; Patrick Mair; Leah H. Somerville – Developmental Science, 2025
While day-to-day negative affect normatively rises across adolescence, emotional experiences also stratify, or diverge, across individuals. Moreover, negative affect is not a unitary construct but comprises distinct feeling states (e.g., sadness, anger, anxiety), each characterized by distinct age-related trends. Yet, most developmental research…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Adolescents, Children, Psychological Patterns
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Esteban Gómez-Muzzio; Katherine Strasser – Social Development, 2025
Conversational turns are an important predictor of cognitive and language development, but little is known about their relationship with socioemotional development. In a previous study using LENA technology, Gómez and Strasser (2021) found that conversational turns assessed with 43 infants at 18 months predicted socioemotional competencies at 30…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Communication, Interaction, Social Development, Emotional Development
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Julia Garon-Bissonnette; Lauren G. Bailes; Kate Kwasneski; Sarah Lempres; Sydney Takemoto; Lu Li; Julia DeLuca; Virginia C. Salo; Kathryn L. Humphreys – Child Development Perspectives, 2025
Given the relevance of caregivers' perceptions, cognitions, and emotions about their child's mental states for caregiving behavior and children's development, researchers from multiple theoretical perspectives have developed constructs to assess caregivers' cognitions, resulting in a large but scattered body of literature. In this article, we…
Descriptors: Schemata (Cognition), Empathy, Parent Child Relationship, Infant Behavior
Cindy L. James – Sage Research Methods Cases, 2025
To further my research investigating the affective skills of university students, I engaged in a longitudinal mixed-methods study that explored the emotional intelligence (EI) of law students. For this study, I collected quantitative data to measure changes in EI of law students from their first to final year in the degree program. Then I gathered…
Descriptors: Law Students, Emotional Intelligence, Student Characteristics, Student Attitudes
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Patrick K. Cooper – Journal of General Music Education, 2025
This article provides an overview of the research method meta-analysis as a tool for general music advocacy. "Why music education?" is framed as underlying advocacy efforts, noting a historical duality between musical outcomes and nonmusical outcomes. A vignette is provided to show how meta-analyses were used to impact legislation on…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Music, Advocacy, Research Methodology
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Yesim Yurdakul; Yelda Kublay – Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities, 2025
Background: This study aims to systematically synthesise qualitative research findings regarding the sexual development of adolescents with intellectual disabilities (ID) from the perspective of their parents. Method: A comprehensive search across seven databases identified 15 studies on parents' experiences regarding the sexual development of…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Puberty, Intellectual Disability, Parent Attitudes
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Ofra Walter; Izabella Mirochnik; Batel Hazan-Liran – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2025
The early years of childhood represent a critical time frame in emotional development. This qualitative study sought to elucidate the impact of parental relationships and parents' emotional intelligence on young children's development of emotional intelligence capacity, as well as changes in this development when a dyadic clinical intervention was…
Descriptors: Emotional Development, Young Children, Emotional Intelligence, Intervention
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Maite Román; Pablo Carrera; Jesús Palacios; Carmen Moreno – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2025
Emotion understanding (EU) is a socio-cognitive skill that enables us to understand the expression of emotions in ourselves and others. Exposure to early adversity hinders its development, since quality social interactions are essential for its growth. Language is a critical component of EU, and therefore, it may be a mediator between early…
Descriptors: Emotional Intelligence, Adoption, Children, Early Experience
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Christopher Riddell; Milica Nikolic; Mariska E. Kret – Developmental Science, 2025
We care about others' opinions of us and regulate our emotions to make positive impressions. This form of impression management may change during ontogeny as children become increasingly sensitive to others. To examine whether self-conscious emotions are influenced by audience presence across the lifespan, we induced embarrassment and pride in n =…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Young Children, Adults, Emotional Development
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Hongtu Sun; Nutteera Phakdeephirot; Songyu Jiang – African Educational Research Journal, 2025
In the context of increasing emotional vulnerability and social adjustment difficulties among university students in China, there is a growing need to understand the psychosocial mechanisms that support holistic student development. Physical exercise has been widely recognized not only for its physiological benefits but also for its potential role…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Students, Exercise, Emotional Development
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Erica M. Webster; Hopewell R. Hodges; Frederique Corcoran – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2025
Adverse experiences in early childhood may directly and indirectly impact children's development, including their preparedness to learn in their preschool and kindergarten classes. However, like many other developmental processes, these skills can be supported through positive experiences and resources in a child's environment. This work uses the…
Descriptors: Trauma, Preschool Children, School Readiness, Family Influence
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