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Ariel Schwartz; E. Sally Rogers – Journal of Mental Health Research in Intellectual Disabilities, 2024
Background: Young adults (YA) with intellectual/developmental disabilities and co-occurring mental health conditions (MH) are underemployed. One reason may be a lack of accommodations that mitigate the impact of MH challenges at work. We explored common workplace MH impacts and supportive accommodations. Methods: Interviews with YA with…
Descriptors: Mental Health, Symptoms (Individual Disorders), Work Environment, Accessibility (for Disabled)
Julius J. Grayson – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Using an interpretative phenomenological analysis this study explored the rich experiences of seven racially minoritized student affairs professionals (RMSAPs) who experienced racial battle fatigue (RBF) and the impact it had on their health at a predominantly white institution (PWI). Social psychological research has identified both blatant and…
Descriptors: Student Personnel Workers, Minority Groups, Predominantly White Institutions, Racial Discrimination
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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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Ville Björck; Britt Hedman Ahlström; Nóra Kerekes – Higher Education, Skills and Work-based Learning, 2025
Purpose: Work readiness and the ability to change how work is conducted are key dimensions of employability. This study focuses on alumni from the social psychiatric care (SPC) programme at University West in Trollhättan, Sweden. As their work readiness and work-changing abilities have not been studied to this point, the purpose was to explore the…
Descriptors: Career Readiness, Employment Potential, College Graduates, Alumni
Anna Hunter – ProQuest LLC, 2021
Student affairs staff members experience stress and burnout as a result of frequent transformation within the higher education landscape. Although change affects all employees in the field of higher education, staff members in student affairs are faced with unique challenges that lead to the adoption of healthy or unhealthy coping behaviors. The…
Descriptors: Student Personnel Workers, Behavior Patterns, Well Being, Higher Education
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Gudrun Nyunt; Emily Sandoval; Yuan Zhou – Journal of College and University Student Housing, 2024
Promoting staff well-being has been a challenge for many residence life departments long before the COVID-19 pandemic led to a decrease in the mental well-being of the general population as well as in residence life staff. The stressful work environment and demanding work hours in residence life have been linked to burnout and intentions to leave…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Work Environment, Well Being
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Amy B. Wilson; Hermen Díaz III; Laura A. Brown – Journal of Education Human Resources, 2025
While many studies have examined work-life satisfaction within the field of student affairs, few have examined the dissonance between new professionals' expectations for professional practice and their experience in the first few years. Using a narrative inquiry method, this qualitative study investigated how professionalism is both practiced and…
Descriptors: Professionalism, Well Being, Student Personnel Workers, Theory Practice Relationship
Josephine Jackson Banks – ProQuest LLC, 2021
Background: Gallup (2013) reported that 30% of the U.S. workforce was not engaged in their work which means they were not reaching their full potential or productivity level. For organizations, lost productivity due to absenteeism or less than ideal performance at work impacts company performance and bottom line. Employee assistance programs are a…
Descriptors: Employee Assistance Programs, Counseling Services, Fringe Benefits, Mental Health Programs
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Gavin, James F. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 1975
The purpose of this study was to examine a model for investigating employee mental health in industrial environments and, more particularly, to determine the extent to which a worker's perceptionss of the environment covaried with mental health criteria. (Author)
Descriptors: Employee Attitudes, Job Satisfaction, Mental Health, Research Projects
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Taylor, William L.; Cangemi, Joseph P. – Psychology: A Journal of Human Behavior, 1988
Examines brief history of stress research and concludes that psychological factors can affect job satisfaction, work adjustment, work attitudes, and overall well-being in the work environment. Establishes relationship between mental and physiological functioning disturbances. Presents model relating effect of stress on health and illness. (Author)
Descriptors: Employee Attitudes, Job Satisfaction, Mental Health, Models
House, James S. – 1980
A study assessed the relation of potentially stressful objective job characteristics and perceived psychosocial job stress and the relation of both of these to a variety of indicators of physical and mental health. The study also determined whether any of these relationships were conditioned by a variety of individual characteristics (age,…
Descriptors: Blue Collar Occupations, Educational Attainment, Employee Attitudes, Individual Characteristics