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Marlo Kozak – BU Journal of Graduate Studies in Education, 2025
Trauma significantly impacts students and educators, affecting learning, behaviour, and well-being. However, trauma-informed practices can promote resilience through school-wide strategies such as routines, SEL programs, and secure attachments. Classroom-specific approaches can support regulation and skill development by building emotional…
Descriptors: Resilience (Psychology), Trauma, Classroom Techniques, Academic Achievement
Gutierrez, Akira S.; Krachman, Sara B.; Scherer, Ethan; West, Martin R.; Gabrieli, John D. – Transforming Education, 2019
This paper, authored in collaboration with researchers from Harvard University's Center for Education Policy Research and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, reviews findings from a randomized controlled trial (RCT) at a partner school, focused on understanding the effects of a direct-to-student intervention on students' mindfulness…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Teaching Methods, Intervention, Middle School Students
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Busso, Daniel S. – Mind, Brain, and Education, 2014
This article focuses on the concepts of risk and resilience and their potential to inform clinical interventions, school-based prevention programs, and social policies. Research suggests that childhood adversity can trigger a cascade of psychological and neurobiological events that can lead to mental disorders in later life. Yet little is known…
Descriptors: At Risk Persons, Resilience (Psychology), Adolescents, Adolescent Development
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Rueda, M. Rosario; Rothbart, Mary K. – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2009
Temperament refers to individual differences in two broad aspects of behavior: (1) emotional, motor, and attentional reactivity and (2) self-regulatory processes that modulate such reactivity. These individual differences are grounded in people's constitution and influence both stress reactions and patterns of coping. In this chapter, we examine…
Descriptors: Intervention, Personality, Coping, Individual Differences
Tarullo, Amanda R.; Obradovic, Jelena; Gunnar, Megan R. – Zero to Three (J), 2009
Self-control is a skill that children need to succeed academically, socially, and emotionally. Brain regions essential to self-control are immature at birth and develop slowly throughout childhood. From ages 3 to 6 years, as these brain regions become more mature, children show improved ability to control impulses, shift their attention flexibly,…
Descriptors: Brain, Cognitive Processes, Self Control, Cognitive Development
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Dennis, Tracy A.; Hajcak, Greg – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2009
Background: The ability to modulate emotional responses, or emotion regulation, is a key mechanism in the development of mood disruptions. Detection of a neural marker for emotion regulation thus has the potential to inform early detection and intervention for mood problems. One such neural marker may be the late positive potential (LPP), which is…
Descriptors: Females, Identification, Emotional Development, Psychological Patterns