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Showing 76 to 90 of 104 results Save | Export
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Tam, Vicky Chiu-Wan; Lam, Rebecca Siu-Yuk – Youth & Society, 2005
This study compared stress and coping among 243 migrant and 750 local-born Chinese adolescents in Hong Kong. Findings showed that compared to their local-born counterparts, migrants showed no difference in perceived stress, whereas they were less likely to use withdrawal coping and showed higher self-esteem and less delinquent behavior. Adjustment…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Immigrants, Adolescents, Stress Management
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Miller, Lindsay – Studies in Higher Education, 2007
This article explores how Hong Kong Chinese engineering students with low English language proficiency manage to cope with their lectures given in English. An ethnographic case study approach was used with multiple sources of data triangulated to provide a picture of the lecture event from both the students' and the lecturer's perspectives. One of…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Foreign Countries, English (Second Language), Language Proficiency
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Siu, Oi Ling – Chinese University Education Journal, 1995
Reviews conceptions of teacher stress and the literature on prevalence, sources, and effects of occupational stress on schoolteachers. Reviews research findings on how teachers cope with stress. Identifies policy changes in Hong Kong that could reduce stress levels among teachers and recommends the expansion of educational psychological services.…
Descriptors: Coping, Educational Policy, Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries
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Chan, David W. – Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 1998
Stressful life events, cognitive appraisals of their impact, desirability of these events, and psychological symptoms were assessed for 745 Chinese adolescents from Hong Kong. Adolescents reported experiencing an average of seven or eight stressful events in the past year. Implications of cognitive appraisals for adolescent coping are discussed.…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Chinese, Cognitive Processes, Coping
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Yiu-kee, Chan; Tang, Catharine So-kum – Journal of Mental Health Counseling, 1995
Mental health professionals (n=132) living in Hong Kong were surveyed about existential aspects of burnout. Purpose in life and motivation to seek purpose were found to be significant existential correlates of burnout whereas the former correlated with personal accomplishment and the latter with emotional exhaustion. Results varied by professional…
Descriptors: Burnout, Coping, Counselors, Emotional Response
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Siu, Angela F. Y. – Journal of Child and Family Studies, 2008
Studies in Hong Kong indicated that there is a tendency for young children to use internalizing as a means to cope with their daily difficulties. Mother-child relationship has been seen as a factor affecting a child's adaptive coping skills. In this study, we explored the prevalence of internalizing problems among primary school children in Hong…
Descriptors: Check Lists, Mothers, Incidence, Child Behavior
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Lee, Hing-chu B.; And Others – Journal of Adolescent Research, 1992
Examined relationship between coping styles and psychological distress in nonclinical sample of 832 Hong Kong Chinese adolescents. Factor analyses suggest adolescents used relatively similar coping strategies. Four broad coping styles were identified. Avoidance/blaming was found to be a significant and moderately strong predictor of psychological…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Coping, Developmental Tasks, Foreign Countries
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Wong, Kwok-Sai; Cheuk, Wai-Hing – Chinese University Education Journal, 1998
Extends a model of rejected helpers' reactions to the experience of secondary-school teachers by examining (1) effects of being spurned on burnout; (2) whether problem-focused coping styles are more effective than emotion-focused styles in reducing negative impacts; and (3) whether preparedness for job stress prevents the experience of being…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Coping, Foreign Countries, Secondary Education
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Chan, David W. – Gifted Child Quarterly, 2004
This study explored the relationships between social coping and psychological distress in a sample of Chinese students in Hong Kong. These students, nominated by their schools to join university gifted programs, were assessed with respect to their nonverbal IQ (nonverbal reasoning) social coping strategies in response to being gifted, and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Psychological Patterns, Peer Acceptance, Intelligence Quotient
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Chan, David W. – High Ability Studies, 2005
The relationships among emotional intelligence, social coping, and psychological distress were investigated in a sample of 624 Chinese gifted students in Hong Kong. A mediation-effect model specifying that emotional intelligence had an effect on psychological distress mediated by social coping was hypothesized and tested using structural equation…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Structural Equation Models, Emotional Intelligence, Academically Gifted
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Yum, Jessie C. K.; Kember, David; Siaw, Irene – International Journal of Lifelong Education, 2005
A characteristic shared by the majority of adult students is that they are undertaking part-time study. For these adult learners one of the major difficulties is how to find time for their study. This paper reports the coping mechanisms that part-time adult students adopt to meet the additional demands that study puts on their existing commitments…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Life, Time Management, Adult Learning
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Choi, Pik Lin; Tang, Sylvia Yee Fan – Teacher Development, 2005
Beginning teachers encounter new challenges as the role system in contemporary society has become more and more demanding. By means of the life history method, role management strategies of four Hong Kong beginning teachers employed to cope with role demands and intra-role conflicts were located in their biographical, workplace and wider…
Descriptors: Socialization, Biographies, Foreign Countries, Beginning Teachers
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Mak, Winnie W. S.; Ho, Gladys S. M. – Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities, 2007
Background: In this study, we tested the effects of three different coping strategies (i.e. problem-focused, emotion-focused and relationship-focused coping) on both positive and negative caregiving perceptions. Materials and Methods: Two hundred and twelve Chinese mothers of children with intellectual disability from a major non-governmental…
Descriptors: Mental Retardation, Family Environment, Mothers, Coping
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Aryee, Samuel; Luk, Vivienne; Leung, Alicia; Lo, Susanna – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 1999
A study of 243 Chinese employed parents in dual-earner families in Hong Kong found that parental overload was related to family-work conflict, which was moderated by spousal support. Family-work conflict was negatively related to job and life satisfaction. Coping behaviors were largely ineffective. (SK)
Descriptors: Coping, Dual Career Family, Employed Parents, Family Work Relationship
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Venter, Katharine – Open Learning, 2003
Conceptions of learning and preferred learning approaches have been suggested to vary cross-culturally. The extent to which learning is "student-centred" or "teacher-centred" also appears subject to cultural variation. This has led some to conclude that particular cultures exhibit learning preferences more suited to distance…
Descriptors: Masters Degrees, Graduate Students, Andragogy, Coping
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