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Ramazan Yetkin; Zekiye Özer-Altinkaya – British Educational Research Journal, 2025
In the realm of foreign language learning, emotions play a pivotal role, yet boredom remains a largely overlooked aspect, with scant research exploring its dynamics in classroom settings. Addressing this gap, this study delves into the Turkish English as a Foreign Language (EFL) context to investigate the multifaceted nature of boredom, examining…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Elementary School Students, English (Second Language), Coping
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Weidner, Brian N.; Skolar, Ellen – Music Educators Journal, 2021
Failure is a common experience in the lives of musicians and educators that is frequently seen as a negative attribute for performances in music education. By shifting from a negative, destructive approach to a positive, constructive orientation to failure, music educators can help their students learn and advance forward from experiences of…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Failure, Music Education, Music Teachers
Baker, Kirsten M. – ProQuest LLC, 2022
The study was a latent profile analysis of teacher classroom management styles. The data used were derived from a randomized control trial that examined the efficacy of the CHAMPS behavior management program on middle school teachers. There were 187 teachers in this study recruited from Midwestern schools. A latent profile analysis was conducted…
Descriptors: Middle School Teachers, Teacher Behavior, Classroom Techniques, Stress Variables
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Bedera, Nicole – Teaching Sociology, 2021
As sociology instructors increasingly include materials on sexual violence in their courses, both instructors and students express anxieties over how best to handle such sensitive conversations. This article critically examines the conventional advice to offer a trigger warning, which can interfere with student education (e.g., requiring survivors…
Descriptors: Violence, Sexual Abuse, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Victims
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Chiang, Yi-Chen; Lee, Chun-Yang; Wang, Hong-Huei – Child & Youth Care Forum, 2016
Background: To adapt to dramatic changes from physical growth, physical development and the increasing demand of significant others, humor has been found to be an effective coping strategy. However, previous studies have found that adolescents start to express their humor styles with aggressive components which causes negative consequences, such…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Adolescents, Coping, Physical Development
Novak, Angela – Understanding Our Gifted, 2013
Overexcitabilities (OEs) are part of a larger theory, the Theory of Positive Disintegration (TPD), postulated by Polish World War I and II survivor Kazimierz Dabrowski. Simply put, an OE is a stimulus-response that is different from the norm; it is a heightened ability to both receive and respond to stimuli. Originally translated as…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Teaching Methods, Classroom Environment, Coping
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Stearns, Clio – Schools: Studies in Education, 2013
This article examines the idea of loss in relation to elementary education. The goal is to show the importance of teachers attending to their students' individual experience and, in particular, to the ways schools can make children feel lost or found. The article relies primarily on classroom narratives, focusing heavily on stories about one…
Descriptors: Learning Disabilities, Elementary Education, Classroom Environment, Psychiatry
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Brooks, Roberts; Goldstein, Sam – Canadian Journal of School Psychology, 2008
The assumptions educators possess about themselves, their role as teachers, and their students' capabilities play a significant role in determining expectations, teaching practices, and ultimately student happiness and success. This article provides an overview of the application of resilience principles in the classroom from the perspective of…
Descriptors: Personality Traits, Classroom Environment, Teaching Methods, Adjustment (to Environment)
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Sitler, Helen Collins – Clearing House: A Journal of Educational Strategies, Issues and Ideas, 2009
Educators are often unaware of the effects of psychological trauma on learners. Through the examples of two students, a fifth grader and a first-year college student, the author explores the intersections between trauma and learning and discusses how teachers might mitigate the effects of trauma in their classrooms.
Descriptors: Grade 5, Elementary School Students, College Freshmen, Classroom Environment
Greenberg, Polly – Early Childhood Today (1), 2005
It is hard for many people to accept anger as part of a young child's range of feelings. Teachers work so hard to make children happy, and feel frustrated, even resentful, when they do not respond with 100 percent happiness all the time. Teachers know in their minds that anger is a normal emotion and that they, too, sometimes feel angry. However,…
Descriptors: Coping, Emotional Response, Psychological Patterns, Teacher Role
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Hastings, Richard P.; Bham, Mohammed S. – School Psychology International, 2003
Explores the properties of a measure of student behavior in the classroom, and tests the prediction of burnout dimensions from dimensions of student behavior. Focuses on the potential role of psychological variables such as teacher self-efficacy and coping strategies in explaining how teacher well-being is effected by student behavior in the…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Coping, Foreign Countries, Predictor Variables
Shelton-Colangelo, Sharon, Ed.; Mancuso, Carolina, Ed.; Duvall, Mimi, Ed. – Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc., 2006
This edited collection addresses the growing need for ideas and methods conducive to holistic educational practices and aims to encourage more personal growth in students too often distracted by the background noise of war, violence, racism, and environmental deterioration. The contributors are working teachers and professors who have integrated a…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Personal Narratives, Field Studies, Educational Practices