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Gal Harpaz; Tal Vaizman; Yosi Yaffe – Higher Education Quarterly, 2024
The connection between grit and achievement in a variety of areas is well documented. Nevertheless, the factors that affect domain-specific academic grit and the relationship of these factors to academic achievement still require clarification. The present study aimed to explore the contribution of three main categories of variables: subjective…
Descriptors: College Students, Academic Achievement, Persistence, Resilience (Psychology)
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Jeana Kriewaldt; Iain Hay; Donna Rady; Thea Schoeman; Xin Ai; Hongbo Sun; Nancee Hunter; Robert Bednarz; Chantal Déry; Anteneh Kallo – International Research in Geographical and Environmental Education, 2025
This paper examines how resilience is defined and understood in the context of geography education, and how geography curricula can contribute to developing resilience in individuals and societies. Although resilience has been studied widely in fields like ecology and psychology, its role in education needs further attention. This study…
Descriptors: Resilience (Psychology), Geography Instruction, Role of Education, Definitions
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Antonie Dvorakova – Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, 2024
This international, phenomenological study involved marginalised individuals who completed higher education despite their socioeconomically disadvantaged backgrounds. Two subsamples included first-in-family college graduates; 16 Roma professionals in the Czech Republic and 29 Native American academics across the United States. Due to the…
Descriptors: Socioeconomic Background, Disadvantaged Environment, Resilience (Psychology), Educational Attainment
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Niloufar Bayati; Cameron Denson; Paul Asunda – Journal of International Students, 2025
As international student enrollments surge in U.S. higher education, understanding their experiences is crucial for fostering an inclusive and successful environment. This study used a hermeneutic phenomenological approach to explore the challenges and coping strategies of international students during acculturation. Data were collected through…
Descriptors: Foreign Students, Acculturation, Coping, Barriers
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Anh Ngoc Quynh Phan; Linh Thi Thuy Pham; Ha Ngan Ngo – Asia Pacific Journal of Education, 2025
The paper, through the lens of positioning and agency theories, examines the experiences of being stranded in the home country due to the restricted mobility caused by the COVID-19 pandemic of 10 international doctoral students of different nationalities (Chinese, Vietnamese, Malaysian, and Indian), majoring in different disciplines (Education,…
Descriptors: Doctoral Students, Foreign Students, COVID-19, Pandemics
Yue Lyu – ProQuest LLC, 2022
This qualitative study explored the lived experiences of Chinese international students currently in search of internship positions during their Optional Practical Training (OPT) program after completing their degrees in the United States. Specifically, this study employed an interpretive phenomenological analysis (IPA) for exploring participants'…
Descriptors: Foreign Students, Internship Programs, Student Experience, Barriers
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Shelley L. Craig; Ashley S. Brooks; Katrin Doll; Andrew D. Eaton; Lauren B. McInroy; Jenny Hui – Journal of Adolescent Research, 2025
Minority stressors harm sexual and gender minority youth (SGMY). This may be mitigated by promotive and protective factors and processes that manifest resilient coping. SGMY increasingly interact with information communication technologies (ICTs) to meet psychological needs, yet research often problematizes youths' ICT use, inhibiting…
Descriptors: Minority Groups, LGBTQ People, Resilience (Psychology), Video Technology
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Sharon Lauricella, Editor; Shubha Sandill, Editor; Taima Moeke-Pickering, Editor – IGI Global, 2025
Women play a pivotal role when shaping higher education. They drive change through leadership, innovation, and advocacy for inclusivity, breaking barriers in academia and leading policy reforms. Women are redefining what it means to lead in educational institutions, and their contributions are advancing research, teaching, and administration while…
Descriptors: Females, Higher Education, Women Administrators, Women Faculty
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Hartcher, Karen; Chapman, S.; Morrison, C. – Cambridge Journal of Education, 2023
Teacher wellbeing is important, not least for the role teachers play in supporting students' social, emotional, physical and academic wellbeing. Effective teachers need to remain both physically and mentally healthy. This paper examines how teacher wellbeing is conceptualised through research to identify the influential ecological influences that…
Descriptors: Ecological Factors, Teachers, Well Being, Self Efficacy
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Bauer, Eurydice; Sánchez, Lenny – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2022
In this article, we present parallel narratives of an immigrant youth and her mother who have had to maneuver continual and abrupt interruptions in family cohesiveness and other daily experiences due to anti-immigrant policies and the materialization of being cast beyond love. We highlight how they created spaces of self-transformational love and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Mexican Americans, Immigrants, Hispanic American Students
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Sharma, M.; Idele, P.; Manzini, A.; Aladro, C. P.; Ipince, A.; Olsson, G.; Banati, P.; Anthony, D. – UNICEF Office of Research - Innocenti, 2021
COVID-19 lockdowns have significantly disrupted the daily lives of children and adolescents, with increased?time at home, online learning and limited physical social interaction. This report seeks to understand the immediate effects on their mental health. Covering more than 130,000 children and adolescents across 22 countries, the evidence…
Descriptors: Mental Health, COVID-19, Pandemics, Disease Control
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Greensfeld, Hava; Deutsch, Ziva – Athens Journal of Education, 2016
Mathematics has been perceived as a discipline centered on intellectuality. However, recent studies have found interaction between a variety of emotions and the quality of learning. This qualitative study focused on the characteristics of those who are willing to cope with mathematical challenges and on the emotions evoked by these challenges, and…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Females, Competition, Mathematics Skills
James Garbarino; Amy Governale; Patrick Henry; Danielle Nesi – Society for Research in Child Development, 2015
Hardly a week goes by in the United States (and to varying degrees, in the rest of the world) that the word "terrorism" does not appear in the collective consciousness, as represented, channeled, and shaped by the mass media in its many print, broadcast, and internet manifestations. While relatively few children worldwide (and even fewer…
Descriptors: Terrorism, Public Policy, Children, Youth
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Li, Ming-Hui; Nishikawa, Takeshi – Journal of College Counseling, 2012
This study compared predictors of active coping (people's tendency to actively cope with stress) among college students in the United States and Taiwan. In both samples, trait resilience predicted active coping and mediated the effect of self-efficacy on active coping. The findings indicate that trait resilience influences college students' active…
Descriptors: Resilience (Psychology), College Students, Self Efficacy, Coping
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Li, Ming-hui; Eschenauer, Robert; Yang, Yan – Journal of Multicultural Counseling and Development, 2013
This study explores factors that influence problem-solving coping style across cultures. There was no significant difference in applying problem solving across U.S., Taiwanese, and Chinese samples. The effective predictors of problem solving in the U.S. and Chinese samples were self-efficacy and trait resilience, respectively. In the Taiwanese…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Problem Solving, Resilience (Psychology), Predictor Variables
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