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Mishara, Brian L.; Ystgaard, Mette – Early Childhood Research Quarterly, 2006
We present the results of an evaluation of the implementation and short-term effects of "Zippy's Friends," a school-based 24-week mental health promotion program to teach children coping skills. The evaluation was conducted in Denmark (322 children in 17 first grade classes) and Lithuania (314 children in 16 kindergartens classes) with…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Grade 1, Hyperactivity, Coping
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Vasquez, Melba J. T.; Lott, Bernice; Garcia-Vazquez, Enedina; Grant, Sheila K.; Iwamasa, Gayle Y.; Molina, Ludwin E.; Ragsdale, Brian L.; Vestal-Dowdy, Elise – American Psychologist, 2006
In this article, six faculty and students of color who participated in a panel discussion at a symposium during the National Multicultural Conference and Summit of 2003 talk about the barriers they encountered and continue to encounter in their graduate training and places of employment. They also discuss strategies they found to be effective,…
Descriptors: Social Class, Sexual Orientation, Cultural Differences, Psychology
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Frazier, Patricia A.; Mortensen, Heather; Steward, Jason – Journal of Counseling Psychology, 2005
Two studies assessed whether coping strategies mediate the relations among 2 forms of perceived control (past and present control) and postassault distress among female sexual assault survivors. In Study 1, longitudinal data were gathered from 2 weeks to 1 year postassault (N=171). Past control (behavioral self-blame) was associated with more…
Descriptors: Coping, Cognitive Restructuring, Sexual Abuse, Victims of Crime
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Mosher, Catherine E.; Prelow, Hazel M.; Chen, William W.; Yackel, Molly E. – Journal of Black Psychology, 2006
This investigation examines mechanisms through which optimism may influence psychological adjustment among 133 Black college students. Specifically, this study evaluates the extent to which active and avoidant coping and social support account for the association between optimism and depressive symptoms. Participants completed questionnaires that…
Descriptors: Coping, Social Support Groups, Depression (Psychology), Symptoms (Individual Disorders)
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Evans, Linda; Oehler-Stinnett, Judy – School Psychology International, 2006
Worldwide children are impacted by natural disasters, including hurricanes, floods, tornadoes, earthquakes, wildfires, landslides and sandstorms, winter and severe storms, heat waves, volcanoes and tsunamis. School psychologists should understand natural disaster effects, such as economic loss, relocation and health concerns and mental health…
Descriptors: School Psychology, Natural Disasters, Mental Health, School Psychologists
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Clark, Rodney – Journal of Black Psychology, 2004
This study explored perceived racism and the usual ways of coping with these perceptions in a sample of 269 Black university students (53% female). Perceptions of inter- and intragroup racism were assessed with the Life Experiences and Stress scale, and coping was measured with the Coping Orientations to Problems Experienced scale. A principal…
Descriptors: Measures (Individuals), Stress Variables, Gender Differences, Student Attitudes
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Sim, Leslie; Zeman, Janice – Journal of Early Adolescence, 2005
Research suggests that negative affect is an important mediator in the relationship between body dissatisfaction and bulimic symptoms. This study examines the mediational role of specific emotion regulation processes (i.e., negative emotionality, poor awareness of emotion, nonconstructive coping with negative emotion) in bulimic symptoms. In…
Descriptors: Early Adolescents, Middle School Students, Females, Coping
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Ward, Kelly – Journal of Teaching in the Addictions, 2003
Resiliency is the ability to cope in the face of adversity. One protective factor that promotes resiliency in substance-abusing dysfunctional families is family rituals and traditions. Social workers and substance abuse counselors can teach family members how to instill resiliency in their families and themselves through rituals and traditions. To…
Descriptors: Learning Theories, Substance Abuse, Social Work, Personality Traits
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Lindle, Jane Clark – Journal of School Leadership, 2004
The study of school leaders' feelings during and about their work suffers from inadequate academic definitions about the depth, character, and legitimacy of those feelings, as well as from limitations on the means of capturing and recording those feelings. This study pushes the definitions of administrators' stress into the areas of traumatic…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Principals, Work Environment, Emotional Response
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Lewis, Marc D.; Zimmerman, Sara; Hollenstein, Tom; Lamey, Alex V. – Developmental Science, 2004
By the age of 1 year toddlers demonstrate distinct coping habits for dealing with frustration. However, these habits may be open to change and reorganization at subsequent developmental junctures. We investigated change in coping habits at 18-20 months, a normative age for major advances in social cognition, focusing on the dynamic systems…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Social Cognition, Coping, Child Development
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Manassis, Katharina; Hudson, Jennifer L.; Webb, Alicia; Albano, Anne Marie – Cognitive and Behavioral Practice, 2004
Theoretical models of childhood anxiety have emphasized temperamental vulnerability, principally behavioral inhibition, and its interaction with various environmental factors promoting anxiety (for example, overprotective parenting, insecure attachment, life stress). Although clearly establishing the importance of both nature and nurture in…
Descriptors: Models, Inhibition, Psychopathology, Children
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Greenhoot, Andrea Follmer; Johnson, Rebecca; McCloskey, Laura A. – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2005
This study examined the representation of internal states in childhood recollections of male and female adolescents with and without abuse histories. Participants' (N = 71) exposure to spousal violence, physical abuse, and sexual abuse was documented when they were 6 to 12 years old and 6 years later when they were 12 to 18 years old. At the Year…
Descriptors: Sexual Abuse, Child Abuse, Adolescents, Depression (Psychology)
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Lightsey, Owen Richard, Jr.; Hulsey, C. Duncan – Journal of Counseling Psychology, 2002
The authors investigated whether coping styles moderated the relationship between (a) impulsivity and stress and (b) stress and gambling behavior and tested whether impulsive persons who use avoidant or emotion-focused coping under high-stress conditions are most likely to gamble. Among 202 university student volunteers, 33% of men but only 3% of…
Descriptors: Coping, Stress Management, Stress Variables, Antisocial Behavior
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Deffenbacher, Jerry L.; Filetti, Linda B.; Richards, Tracy L.; Lynch, Rebekah S.; Oetting, Eugene R. – Journal of Counseling Psychology, 2003
High anger drivers acknowledging problems with driving anger and interest in counseling (high anger/problem [HP] drivers) were compared with high and low anger drivers not acknowledging problems with driving anger and seeking counseling (high and low/nonproblem [HNP and LNP, respectively] drivers). High anger groups reported more anger while…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Individual Characteristics, Motor Vehicles, Aggression
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Choi, Pik Lin; Tang, Sylvia Yee Fan – Teacher Development, 2005
Beginning teachers encounter new challenges as the role system in contemporary society has become more and more demanding. By means of the life history method, role management strategies of four Hong Kong beginning teachers employed to cope with role demands and intra-role conflicts were located in their biographical, workplace and wider…
Descriptors: Socialization, Biographies, Foreign Countries, Beginning Teachers
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