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Kevin R. McClure; Margaret W. Sallee – Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2025
Higher education institutions rely on staff working in a variety of roles to perform their core functions, including custodians, librarians, food service workers, career counselors, and residence hall directors. Research within and beyond the field of higher education offers multiple approaches leaders can consider to improve their workplace…
Descriptors: Higher Education, School Personnel, Labor Turnover, Work Environment
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Antoine Pennaforte; Anne-Marie Fannon – International Journal of Work-Integrated Learning, 2025
This paper explores ways to support the wellbeing of neurodivergent individuals participating in co-operative education (co-op). The authors propose a theoretical model for supporting neurodivergent student wellbeing in co-op, based on the current understanding of wellbeing in WIL and interventions for neurodivergent individuals at work and in…
Descriptors: Student Welfare, Neurodevelopmental Disorders, Cooperative Education, Mental Health
Mallory Warner; Annie Davis Schoch – Office of Planning, Research and Evaluation, 2024
Understanding the best ways to support the well-being of the child care and early education (CCEE) workforce is important for states and CCEE programs. CCEE teachers and caregivers have demanding jobs and receive low compensation for their work--a combination that often negatively affects their well-being. Research has linked CCEE workforce…
Descriptors: Child Care, Early Childhood Education, Well Being, Labor Force Development
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Carolina E. González; Dawn Meza Soufleris – Journal of Education Human Resources, 2025
With a growing demand for addressing the mental health needs of students, so is the need for faculty and practitioners in student affairs and academic affairs to engage in supporting students through their trauma, due to a lack of mental health resources and a rise in students' feelings of isolation and anxiety, as a direct result of the COVID-19…
Descriptors: Student Personnel Workers, Student Personnel Services, Mental Health, Student Needs
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Elisabeth Counselman-Carpenter; Stephen Cummings; Matthea Marquart – Journal of Faculty Development, 2023
This article discusses the impact of collective trauma on faculty with a focus on creating a more trauma-informed learning and working environment. In addition to discussing social justice self-care, six categories of macro-level strategies and reflection questions are shared to encourage a more trauma-informed approach to faculty development.…
Descriptors: Trauma Informed Approach, Educational Strategies, Resilience (Psychology), Faculty Development
Robert Hackey – Experiential Learning and Teaching in Higher Education, 2023
A focus on resilience in experiential education provides students in pre-professional programs opportunities to reflect upon their experiences as interns while also supporting their mental health and professional growth. Faculty must help students to identify strategies to manage stress and develop professional norms needed to thrive in a variety…
Descriptors: Resilience (Psychology), Experiential Learning, Reflection, Internship Programs
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Cormier, Christopher J.; Wong, Venus; McGrew, John H.; Ruble, Lisa A.; Worrell, Frank C. – Learning Professional, 2021
Teaching in K-12 schools is stressful, as educators know and research documents. Although all teachers experience stress, minoritized teachers of color often experience unique stressors. Common examples include being asked to translate for parents who do not speak English or function as the disciplinarian for students experiencing behavioral…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Stress Variables, Teaching Conditions, Teacher Burnout
Jones, Kel Hughes – Educational Leadership, 2021
Many Black female educators feel pressure to be super-strong. They neglect self-care, often leading to serious health problems (what one psychologist has termed the StrongBlackWoman cycle). Hughes Jones shares her story of denying work-related stress and breaking down, and suggests ways leaders can create more supportive work environments for…
Descriptors: Females, Women Faculty, African American Teachers, Mental Health
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Steiner, Elizabeth D.; Woo, Ashley; Suryavanshi, Aarya; Redding, Christopher – RAND Corporation, 2023
Teacher morale declined during the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic, and teachers reported worse wellbeing than other working adults. Interventions to restore teacher well-being could improve job performance, job satisfaction, engagement, and retention. Although it is known that working conditions are related to well-being among other teachers…
Descriptors: Teaching Conditions, Well Being, Geographic Location, Teacher Attitudes
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Okello, Wilson Kwamogi; Quaye, Stephen John; Allen, Courtney; Carter, Kiaya Demere; Karikari, Shamika N. – Journal of College Student Development, 2020
Bell's (1992) thesis of racial realism, in concert with the work of Wilderson (2007), Hartman (1997), and Sharpe (2016), positions the afterlife of slavery as an irreconciled event that is ongoing and permanent. If the assumption is that racism exists and, subsequently, racial battle fatigue is and will be an enduring embodied experience that…
Descriptors: Racial Bias, African American Students, Coping, Blacks
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Chen, Charles P.; Zhou, Zimo – Australian Journal of Career Development, 2021
In an era of rapid development, the world is showing greater openness towards diversity and inclusiveness. There is also an increasing amount of career-related research that has shed light on the LGBTQ+ population. Still, the literature reports many career issues that concern young LGBTQ+ individuals. The current article aimed to highlight the…
Descriptors: LGBTQ People, Career Development, Barriers, Mental Health
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Redekopp, Dave E.; Huston, Michael – British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 2019
Work is a significant factor in mental health and wellbeing outcomes. Career development processes can be helpful in finding and managing work trajectories that lead to these as well as additional wellbeing outcomes. Conversely, mental illness can impede the acquisition and retention of suitable work as well as the ability to fully engage in…
Descriptors: Career Development, Work Environment, Well Being, Mental Disorders
Adams, Gina; Ewen, Danielle; Luetmer, Grace – Urban Institute, 2021
The COVID-19 pandemic has created unprecedented, urgent challenges for the child care and early education workforce. Though the workforce has always been fragile, new stressors presented over the past year have highlighted fundamental structural problems in the system, including the inequities facing Black, Latina, and Native American child care…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Early Childhood Teachers, Child Caregivers, State Policy
Mann, Angela; Zaheer, Imad; Kelly-Vance, Lisa – Communique, 2019
School psychologists deal with challenging situations, including taking on student traumatic experiences, screening for mental health difficulties, dealing with difficult parents, navigating conflict-filled team meetings, advocating for student and family needs, hearing stories of abuse, and supporting school staff who may be experiencing…
Descriptors: School Psychologists, Work Environment, Burnout, Barriers
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Bates, Susan – Early Childhood Folio, 2018
All workers in New Zealand can expect to have their rights to health implemented in their workplaces. For early childhood teachers, health risks extend to the children they care for, as well as their own offspring. Teachers and carers in daycare and kindergarten are exposed to a range of diseases and sustain various injuries through work practices…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Teachers, Child Caregivers, Occupational Safety and Health, Foreign Countries
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