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Carnegie-Diaz, Margaret Simone – ProQuest LLC, 2023
The impact of employment on academic achievement and college-going is readily evaluated within the literature, primarily through a quantitative lens. In such studies, youth employment is commonly found to negatively affect high school grades, persistence, and the likelihood of attending college. This qualitative study responds to the dominant…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, College Attendance, Student Employment, Grades (Scholastic)
Kristi LaNell Hopkins – ProQuest LLC, 2023
Novice teacher induction is not well studied nor developed for non-native teachers in foreign countries. Consequently, there is a high turnover rate among novice teachers in those countries. This study aimed to gain a deeper understanding of the experiences, acculturation, and coping mechanisms of novice teachers in Honduras. The methodology that…
Descriptors: Cultural Awareness, Beginning Teachers, Beginning Teacher Induction, Acculturation
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Zainab Almohsin; Millicent M. Musyoka; Lekeitha R. Morris; Clementine Msengi; Thangi Appanah – International Research and Review, 2023
A mother's hearing status can influence her motherhood experience, particularly when the mother is Deaf, and the children are Deaf or hearing. The study aims to describe and interpret the Deaf mothers' experience raising Deaf and hearing children. The study employed a narrative research design with three Saudi Arabia Deaf mothers of Deaf and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Deafness, Mothers, Child Rearing
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Allison J. Naber; Ranelle Nissen; Whitney Lucas Molitor; Susan E. Puumala; Jewel Goodman Shepherd – Journal of Occupational Therapy Education, 2023
Mental health concerns are prevalent among occupational therapy graduate students and entry-level practitioners entering the workforce. Prior research has highlighted that the rise in mental health concerns and the high-achieving nature of occupational therapy students impacts their success in the classroom and the clinic. While formal and…
Descriptors: Occupational Therapy, Allied Health Personnel, Graduate Students, Attitudes
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Sihui Ke – Educational Linguistics, 2023
Guided by the conceptual model of biliteracy development (Dixon & Wu Language Teaching, 47(4), 414-449, 2014), this research aimed to examine tertiary-level English-as-a-foreign-language (EFL) literacy development in ethnic minorities (EM) in China, an underexamined population in the literature. Three research questions (RQs) were posed: RQ1:…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Minority Group Students, Language Minorities, Postsecondary Education
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James Sebastian; David Aguayo; Wenxi Yang; Wendy M. Reinke; Keith C. Herman – Grantee Submission, 2023
The present study analyzed concurrent and predictive validity of single-item scales for assessing principal stress and coping. We examined concurrent and prospective relations among stress and coping single-items with principal job satisfaction, overall health, perceptions of school safety, and principal leadership self-efficacy. We also compared…
Descriptors: Principals, Stress Variables, Stress Management, Coping
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Grace Imondi; E. B. Caron; Lillian Blanchard; Emilie Butler; Golda S. Ginsburg – Grantee Submission, 2025
School-based anxiety interventions reduce anxiety and related impairment, but little is known about whether they improve academic outcomes, especially when delivered by non-mental health specialists. This study examined the impact of two brief, school nurse-delivered anxiety interventions on working memory, school functioning, and school…
Descriptors: School Nurses, Elementary School Students, Elementary Schools, Anxiety
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Catherine P. Bradshaw; Heather McDaniel; Elise T. Pas; Katrina J. Debnam; Jessika H. Bottiani; Nicole Powell; Nicholas S. Ialongo; Antonio Morgan-Lopez; John E. Lochman – Grantee Submission, 2025
We report findings from a 40 middle school randomized controlled trial of an adapted version of Coping Power (Lochman & Wells, 2002a) for middle schoolers, called the Early Adolescent Coping Power (EACP) Program (Bradshaw et al., 2019) to determine the impact of EACP on adolescents' mental health outcomes, as indicated by student self-reported…
Descriptors: Middle School Students, Early Adolescents, Coping, Program Effectiveness
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Michaela Andreadis; Tara C. Marshall – Journal of American College Health, 2025
Social isolation during the COVID-19 pandemic increased negative affect and feelings of loneliness among university students. Objective: Given that identifying as a member of a social group, like a university student, serves as a protective factor against diminished well-being, we examined whether students' social identity might offer a…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Distance Education, Sense of Belonging
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Xiaoyi Zhang; M. Obaidul Hamid – Australian Review of Applied Linguistics, 2025
Many studies have reported language problems faced by international students in cross-cultural study-abroad settings. The present study investigated Chinese international students' linguistic insecurity during their study-abroad in Australia, and the strategies that they deployed to manage this. Based on interviews with ten students from two…
Descriptors: Foreign Students, Student Attitudes, Study Abroad, Second Language Learning
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Henry Sevilla-Morales; Lindsay Chaves-Fernández – IAFOR Journal of Education, 2025
This phenomenological study sought to understand the lived experiences of socially disadvantaged students from the Universidad Nacional, Costa Rica, who faced digital inequality during emergency remote education amid the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as their challenges vis-à-vis the transition to in-person classes in 2022. Using a hermeneutic…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Equal Education, Access to Computers, Distance Education
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Nicole Martins; Erica Scharrer; Karyn Riddle – Journal of Children and Media, 2025
This study investigates the impact of persistent news coverage of school shootings on adolescent mental health. We surveyed a large, national sample of U.S. adolescents aged 13-17, focusing on the Uvalde school shooting, to explore the link between news exposure and depression. Our findings reveal that such exposure is associated with both…
Descriptors: Mass Media Effects, News Reporting, Depression (Psychology), Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Sternberg, Robert J. – Phi Delta Kappan, 2020
Society largely has accepted a conception of general intelligence that is ill-fitted to the world we live in today. Our standardized tests are based on this conception, as is much of our instruction. The problem is that the kinds of problems we test for and teach to are unlike the complex problems we face in real life. In this article, Robert…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Adjustment (to Environment), Coping, Social Problems
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Gabriele-Black, Kaitlin – Journal of Catholic Higher Education, 2020
Catholic campuses can be perceived to be hostile spaces for LGBTQ+ students, given the Catholic Church's stance on gender and sexuality. This qualitative study explored how being at a Catholic college--and specifically, a Mercy institution--influenced queer students' experiences. Twenty-nine emerging adults representing a range of genders and…
Descriptors: Catholic Schools, College Environment, College Students, LGBTQ People
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Isa, Khairunesa; Palpanadan, Sarala Thulasi – International Journal of Higher Education, 2020
As an academician, lecturers are tied to job scope that are related to teaching and learning, research, publication, consultancy, and community services. All these tasks have occasional loads and excessive load may cause stress to lecturers. This study was conducted to identify the level of Malaysian lecturers' stress and the major prevalence…
Descriptors: Stress Variables, Coping, Foreign Countries, College Faculty
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