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Showing 1 to 15 of 88 results Save | Export
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Maria D. Ryan – Adults Learning Mathematics, 2025
Adult learners make a solid contribution to their programme of study, bringing collective real-world experiences to their new learning situation. However, since many undergraduate programmes have mathematical content, this may give rise to mathematics anxiety on the part of the adult learner. A combination of factors contributes to mathematics…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Mathematics Anxiety, Adult Learning, Intervention
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Sheila Simons – Child Care in Practice, 2024
Domestic abuse continues to be a growing concern across the globe where the overwhelming majority of victims are women. Women also tend to experience more severe forms of violence, which includes murder. There is growing recognition that children who live in households where domestic abuse exists are directly harmed and often show psychological…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Family Violence, Child Abuse, Crime
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Christina O'Keeffe; Sinead McNally – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2025
Play is a central feature of childhood and a fundamental right of all children. Currently, our understanding of autistic play is based on a deficit perspective, most often framed in comparison to neurotypical 'norms' and assumptions where the views of the players themselves have been overlooked. In moving towards a strengths-based neuroaffirmative…
Descriptors: Play, Autism Spectrum Disorders, Children, Early Adolescents
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Emily K. Olsen; Danielle F. Lawson; Lucy R. McClain; Julia D. Plummer – Environmental Education Research, 2024
Can environmental education help to mitigate learners eco/climate anxiety? Anxiety surrounding climate change has drastically risen in youth in recent years. This paper aims to answer the call from Pihkala's (2020) previous review for more concrete information on educational approaches to support learners in processing eco/climate anxiety. As…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Ecology, Climate, Anxiety
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Emma Farrell; Jennifer Symonds; Dympna Devine; Seaneen Sloan; Mags Crean; Abbie Cahoon; Julie Hogan – Health Education, 2024
Purpose: The purpose of this study is to understand the meaning of the term well-being as conceptualised by parents, grandparents, principals and teachers in the Irish primary education system. Design/methodology/approach: A hermeneutic phenomenological approach was adopted to understand the nature and meaning of the phenomenon of well-being.…
Descriptors: Well Being, Elementary School Teachers, Parents, Grandparents
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Angela Mazzone; Anastasios Karakolidis; Vasiliki Pitsia; Yseult Freeney; James O'Higgins Norman – Higher Education Quarterly, 2024
Workplace bullying is a widespread phenomenon within Higher Education Institutions (HEIs). Employee tendency to remain silent is one of the most common reactions to workplace bullying. Yet, employee silence in the context of workplace bullying is poorly studied. Building on the Conservation of Resources Theory (COR) and the Learned Helplessness…
Descriptors: Bullying, Work Environment, Higher Education, Prevention
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Brennan, Damien; D'Eath, Maureen; McCallion, Philip; McCarron, Mary – British Journal of Learning Disabilities, 2023
Background: As the life expectancy of people with intellectual disability increases, they may now outlive their parents or their parents' ability to continue to care. Siblings of adults with intellectual disability often succeed their parents as primary carers. Little is known about the health and well-being of this important cohort of carers who…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Intellectual Disability, Siblings, Caregivers
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Helen Lowe – Irish Educational Studies, 2023
This paper examines attitudes to classism in Irish education using a thematic analysis of social media conversations about social class between 2018 and 2022. Previous research indicates that Irish education systems are designed by and favour the dominant and ruling classes. However, few studies use the voice of the lived experience to explore the…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Student Experience, Social Bias, Social Class
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Molly X. Manning; Caoimhe Cleary; Caitriona McCaughey – International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders, 2024
Background: Supporting psychosocial well-being in aphasia is necessarily person-centred, interdisciplinary and coordinated. Shortcomings in such support are described in Ireland and elsewhere. Speech and language therapists (SLTs) are integral; and describing current practice and barriers they experience is important for enhancing service…
Descriptors: Aphasia, Allied Health Personnel, Speech Language Pathology, Psychological Patterns
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Suzanne M. Egan; Mary Moloney; Jennifer Pope; Deirdre Breatnach; Clara Hoyne – Journal of Early Childhood Literacy, 2025
Although it is well established that reading with young children supports early language and literacy development, few studies have focused on the importance of parental beliefs about reading with infants. The current study, which sheds light on parental beliefs had three main aims. The first was to examine practices of shared reading in infancy…
Descriptors: Reading Aloud to Others, Infants, Parents, Parent Attitudes
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Sun, Yuning; Nolan, Conor – Journal of International Students, 2021
Little is known about the association between emotion regulation strategies and perceived stress in college students, and in particular, the strategies used by international students. The present research examined if differences exist in the use of emotion regulation strategies between Irish college students and Chinese international college…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Self Control, Anxiety, Foreign Countries
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Murphy, Gavin; Devine, Dympna – School Leadership & Management, 2023
The "Children's School Lives" (CSL) study provides a unique opportunity to learn first-hand from school principals as part of a large national study about their sensemaking as they led in a time of crisis and change in terms of teaching and learning. Major interconnected findings include: (1) the centrality of relationships and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary Schools, Principals, COVID-19
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Niamh Flynn; Clíona Murray; Cormac Forkan; Carmen Kealy – Irish Educational Studies, 2024
Many concerns exist about potential long-term psychosocial impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on young people. While the school has been identified as having a vital role in psychological recovery post-disaster more generally, it is unclear as yet how young people have adapted to the return to in-person education. This paper reports on the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Coping, In Person Learning, COVID-19
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Kirby, K.; Sweeney, S.; Armour, C.; Goetzke, K.; Dunne, M.; Davidson, M.; Belfer, M. – Child Care in Practice, 2022
The present study examined the efficacy of Hopeful Minds, a 12 week hope based school intervention programme in a sample of 153 pre- and early- adolescent secondary school children (11-14 years) in the North West of Ireland. This study used a one-group, pretest-posttest design to determine whether participants experienced changes regarding their…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Well Being, Psychological Patterns, Secondary School Students
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Andre Perusso; Robert Wagenaar – Studies in Higher Education, 2024
Driven by COVID-19, remote work is popularising. Companies and employees are increasingly embracing its benefits of flexibility and convenience, showing reluctance to return to full-time office schedules. Similarly, companies and HEIs started offering remote forms of work-based learning (WBL) -- or eWBL. However, remote work presents social and…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Workplace Learning, Trainers, Higher Education
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