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Kendra Wells; Lia M. Daniels – Canadian Journal of Education, 2024
This narrative inquiry study delves into the emotional experiences of teachers during the COVID-19 pandemic, using restorying (Connelly & Clandinin, 1990) as a primary data analytic approach. Drawing on terror management theory, theories of emotional coping, broaden-and-build theory, and theories of emotion regulation, this study explores…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary School Teachers, COVID-19, Pandemics
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E. Bonetto; J. B. Pavani; G. Dezecache; N. Pichot; T. Guiller; M. Simoni; V. Fointiat; T. Arciszewski – Creativity Research Journal, 2024
Emergency situations are generally described as combining both threat and time pressure. Creative solutions to deal with such situations are important. The present studies (N[subscript total] = 1190) investigated how people are able to produce creative solutions in an emergency. Our first study was correlational, and assessed individual creativity…
Descriptors: Creativity, Emergency Programs, Problem Solving, Responses
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Henriette R. Steinvik; Amanda L. Duffy; Melanie J. Zimmer-Gembeck – International Journal of Bullying Prevention, 2024
A lack of empathy for victimized individuals has been cited as a reason for why bystanders fail to intervene when they witness bullying. However, limited research has addressed how different empathic and compassionate responses could account for diverse bystander behaviors. In this study, we investigated the unique associations of empathic…
Descriptors: Audiences, Barriers, Prosocial Behavior, Memory
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Abbas Hadizadeh; Mehmet Kanik – European Journal of Education, 2025
This qualitative study explores the perceptions and conceptions of academic writing among 14 ELT students in an English medium instruction (EMI) context at an international university in Northern Cyprus, an under-researched setting. The study revealed that participants faced a variety of challenges and employed strategic approaches that created…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Student Attitudes, Knowledge Level, Academic Language
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Lei Yang; Manfu Duan – Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2025
The detrimental effects of negative emotional states on teachers' professional performance have triggered numerous researchers to study these variables and their potential interactions within second and foreign language classes. Nonetheless, most scholars have examined negative emotional states and their possible associations through monolithic…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Emotional Response, Bilingual Teachers, Language Teachers
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Rachele Lievore; Irene C. Mammarella – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2025
The aim of the study was to investigate mathematics anxiety in autistic school-aged boys compared with non-autistic peers, by considering the distinction between trait and state components of mathematics anxiety. The study involved 110 boys aged between 8 and 16 years old: 50 autistic participants without intellectual disability and 60…
Descriptors: Mathematics Anxiety, Autism Spectrum Disorders, Males, Children
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Johan Wong; David Foxe; James Carrick; Rebekah M. Ahmed; James R. Burrell; Olivier Piguet – International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders, 2025
Background: Impacts of dementia syndromes on caregivers are well established, but research specific to Primary Progressive Aphasia (PPA) populations is scant. In particular, little is known about the impacts of non-language symptoms (e.g., emotion recognition and behavioural disturbance) on caregiver outcomes in PPA. Aims: The present study sought…
Descriptors: Dementia, Aphasia, Caregivers, Coping
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April R. Coetzee; Felicity L. Brown; Vania Alves; J. Lawrence Aber; Juliana Córdoba; Mark J. D. Jordans – Journal on Education in Emergencies, 2025
Support to improve teacher wellbeing is scarce in almost all contexts, but especially so in low- and middle-income settings in which teachers face both professional and personal challenges (Kirk and Winthrop 2007; Mendenhall, Gomez, and Varni 2018). In this field note, we discuss War Child's development of Coaching-Observing-Reflecting-Engaging…
Descriptors: Intervention, Teachers, Well Being, Foreign Countries
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Achala Gupta; Xi Zhao – Journal of Education Policy, 2024
This article offers unique insights into the relationship between education policy and teachers' work. It considers how globally pervasive responsibilising regimes make teachers' work more burdensome. Drawing on interviews with 15 school teachers, this article shows how China's 2021 Double Burden Reduction Policy has reconfigured educators'…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teacher Attitudes, Educational Policy, Public Policy
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Ka I Ip; Alison L. Miller; Li Wang; Barbara Felt; Sheryl L. Olson; Twila Tardif – Developmental Science, 2024
Are children from "Eastern" cultures less emotionally expressive and reactive than children from "Western" cultures? To answer this, we used a multi-level and multi-contextual approach to understand variations in emotion displays and cortisol reactivity among preschoolers living in China and the United States. One hundred two…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Emotional Response, Self Management, Self Expression
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Charity Okeke; Windvoël Simphiwe – Perspectives in Education, 2024
School violence perpetrated against teachers is becoming a scourge in South African schools, and as a result, teachers feel stressed, depressed, unsafe and demotivated to continue teaching. This problem, which has had a severely negative impact on the quality of teaching and learning, has also permeated the entire educational system in South…
Descriptors: School Violence, Teaching Experience, Coping, Teacher Student Relationship
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Fang, Shuanghu; Ding, Dongyan – School Psychology International, 2023
The purpose of this study is to examine the relationship between stressful life events (SLE) and school engagement and to determine if there are some likely mediating variables between them. A sample of 1517 Chinese junior high school students (51.5% female) completed the adolescent self-rating life events checklist (ASLEC), Utrecht Work…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Correlation, Learner Engagement, Student Attitudes
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Moodliar, Julian; Abdulhamid, Lawan – Pythagoras, 2021
In South Africa, limited studies have been conducted investigating responsive teaching and little is known about how teachers respond to unexpected events 'in the moment' that did not form part of their planning. In this article, we report how a Grade 9 novice and expert teacher responded to unexpected learner offers during the teaching of algebra…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teacher Response, Feedback (Response), Grade 9
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H. Rauterkus; T. Hennemann; T. Hagen; J. Krull; J. Nitz; K. Eiben; P. R. Kulawiak; L. Verbeck; C. Hanisch – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2024
Teaching remains a profession that is associated with certain health risks. Teachers complain of psychosomatic experiences such as exhaustion, fatigue, headache, and tension more than people in other professions. High levels of stress amongst teachers also pose a risk for students, as this is associated with poorer teaching quality and lower…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Emotional Response, Self Control, Elementary School Teachers
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Yingying Zhang; Fahainis Mohd Yusof – European Journal of Education, 2025
Language teaching is inherently emotional, yet the negative emotional experiences of novice English as a Foreign Language (EFL) teachers in Chinese universities remain underexplored. This study examines the negative emotional trajectories of novice university EFL teachers across three career stages--survival, consolidation and enhancement--through…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Language Teachers, Teacher Attitudes, Foreign Countries
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