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Showing 1 to 15 of 20 results Save | Export
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Larrivee, Anne – Public Services Quarterly, 2014
This article describes the different stressors and anxieties facing new librarians. It also addresses the various ways that new librarians can cope with location, emotional, and work-related stressors. The article is broken into four different categories of stress; some stressors have been more explored than others. The research is based on an…
Descriptors: Librarians, Stress Variables, Novices, Anxiety
Gomez, Daniel P.; Ybanez, Cindy – School Business Affairs, 2012
Envision the military family, being given as few as 30 days to pack, take their children out of school, leave their residence, settle in a new home, enroll the children in a new school, and take care of the myriad details for the military parent's relocation or deployment. Military families undergo this process over and over. The moves can affect…
Descriptors: Children, Military Personnel, Relocation, Migrant Children
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Xi, Juan; Hwang, Sean-Shong – Social Indicators Research, 2011
The involuntary relocation of people for development purposes has become prevalent across the world in recent decades. Depression is one of the documented negative outcomes of involuntary relocation among resettlers. Viewing the affected population simply as passive victims, past studies have largely ignored the coping strategies employed by…
Descriptors: Coping, Foreign Countries, Relocation, Depression (Psychology)
Stroh, Linda K.; Brett, Jeanne M. – 1989
This study investigated the effect of relocation on 309 children of randomly selected employees of 10 Fortune 500 corporations. Even through U.S. corporations transfer over 400,000 households annually, there is little research on the effects of such moves on employees' children. This study tested hypotheses drawn from child development theory…
Descriptors: Children, Coping, Incidence, Parent Influence
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Frame, Marsha Wiggins; Shehan, Constance L. – Family Relations, 1994
Used Double ABCX model of family stress and adaptation to identify factors that are associated with successful adaptation to frequent involuntary relocation among 212 clergy families. Wives reported significantly higher stress, more negative perceptions of their most recent relocation, lower coping resources, and lower well-being that did clergy…
Descriptors: Clergy, Coping, Relocation, Spouses
Rutman, Deborah L.; Freedman, Jonathan L. – 1987
Research has examined the effects of relocation on the physical and psychological well-being of the elderly, but has usually neglected the pre-relocation or anticipatory period. A study was conducted to examine the experiences of older persons waiting to relocate to subsidized age-segregated apartments. Subjects were interviewed twice over a…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Coping, Foreign Countries, Older Adults
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Meeks, Suzanne; And Others – International Journal of Aging and Human Development, 1989
Conducted three studies of coping in older people, two addressing coping with health problems, the other coping with moving. Results in all studies showed the number of coping strategies decreased with age. However, results did not support the idea that decreases in the number of strategies implied decrements in the quality of coping. (Author/ABL)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Aging (Individuals), Change, Coping
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Ammons, Paul; And Others – Family Relations, 1982
Examined the specific sources of stress among 122 recently transferred executives and their spouses. Results indicated differences among husbands and wives and various stressors related to mobility. Discusses ways in which families, communities and corporations may facilitate adaption and coping. (Author/RC)
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Administrators, Community Support, Coping
Connell, Patricia – 1987
The negative sequelae that relocation to a nursing home has on the elderly is well documented. This study evaluated the effects of stress reduction information on the newly admitted patients' state anxiety based on self-reported distress using the Stresses in Institutional Care Scale. Anxiety was assessed using the Anxiety State Scale of the…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Anxiety, Coping, Information Utilization
Kampfe, Charlene; Wedl, Lois C. – 1989
Research on residential relocation has reported mixed findings on the impact of such relocation on psychological well-being. Theorists have postulated that one's perception of an event will influence one's response to it and that response will influence the outcome. This study examined older persons' reactions to a residential relocation based on…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Coping, Life Satisfaction, Locus of Control
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Matter, Darryl E.; Matter, Roxana Marie – Elementary School Guidance and Counseling, 1988
Examined child development research and relocation research to help school counselors understand a child's age-related concept of and typical reaction to relocation. Suggests action steps for counselors that can maximize a child's positive adjustment to a new environment. (NB)
Descriptors: Child Development, Coping, Counselor Role, Developmental Stages
Beiser, Morton – Migration World Magazine, 1995
Data from 1981, 1983, and 1991 to 1993 permit an analysis of the changes in stress, social resources, coping, mental health, employment, English proficiency, family reunification, consumer practices, and traditional and Canadian customs over the first decade of resettlement for Southeast Asian refugees in Canada. (SLD)
Descriptors: Acculturation, Coping, Cultural Differences, Economic Factors
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Donohue, Kevin C.; Gullotta, Thomas P. – Adolescence, 1983
Used an inventory of coping behaviors to examine how adolescents (N=41) cope with the stress of relocation. The most helpful techniques were establishing friendships, starting over, experiencing loneliness, and maintaining current functioning. Females seemed to use more coping behaviors successfully than males. Age differences were less…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Age Differences, Coping, Family Mobility
Rutman, Deborah L. – 1988
People who decide or are forced to relocate often undergo a lengthy waiting period before they can move. This waiting period may be a highly stressful time for individuals anticipating relocation. This study explored relocating older adults' (N=63) coping strategies and the impact of these strategies on health, cognitive functioning, and well…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Anxiety, Coping, Expectation
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Pittman, Joe F.; Bowen, Gary L. – Youth & Society, 1994
Personal, external, and family adjustment following relocation were studied for 882 adolescents in highly mobile Air Force families through the use of a crisis model focusing on objective aspects of a stressor, coping, and perceptions of the stress. Perceptions of the stressful situation are most important to external and personal adjustment. (SLD)
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Adolescents, Attitudes, Beliefs
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