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Chih-Ting Lee; Chung-Ying Lin; Carol Strong; Yun-Hsuan Chang; Yi-Ching Lin; Yi-Ping Hsieh; Yu-Fang Lin; Meng-Che Tsai – European Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2024
Bully victimization is known to cause adverse psychological outcomes; however, resilience may mitigate the more adverse effects. Little is known regarding the role played by BDNF Val66Met polymorphism in youth resilience against psychological harm caused by bully victimization. In this cross-sectional study, a community sample of 598 participants…
Descriptors: Bullying, Victims, Resilience (Psychology), Late Adolescents
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Luyao Xu; Xiaohua Liu; Yangyu Xiao – Asian-Pacific Journal of Second and Foreign Language Education, 2024
Drawing upon Frenzel's (2014) framework of appraisals, the current study explored language teachers' emotional experiences and their antecedents in the online teaching context. Moreover, the interrelations between teachers' emotions and their instructional practices were also investigated. Data were collected through semi-structured interviews…
Descriptors: Language Teachers, Psychological Patterns, Emotional Response, Online Courses
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Tamar Chen-Levi; Yaffa Buskila; Chen Schechter – Journal of Transformative Education, 2024
This research explored teachers' readiness for teaching in times of uncertainty and in global crisis situations through the perspective of teacher agency. Understanding the mechanisms by which teachers exercise their transformative agency was the main research aim. Teacher agency is conceptualized as a phenomenon that emerges ecologically from the…
Descriptors: Transformative Learning, Professional Autonomy, Readiness, Teacher Attitudes
Chandler Ann Findley – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The extant literature on regret as motivation for behavior presents inconclusive results, collectively. While it has often been agreed that regret motivates reparative action, most studies from the past 14 years indicate that regret may motivate either detrimental actions or, more commonly, no action at all. There also appears to be no published…
Descriptors: Correlation, Academic Achievement, Longitudinal Studies, Sample Size
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Zahra Sadat Manzari; Hassan Vossoughinia; Behzad Nedaei; Hossein Rafiei; Mohamad Hossein Mafi – Health Education Research, 2024
The use of the best teaching method to promote self-care in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) has not been well defined. Therefore, the current study was conducted to compare the effect of self-care education by two methods of teach-back and a smartphone application. The current clinical trial with a pre- and post-test design was…
Descriptors: Self Efficacy, Diseases, Patients, Self Management
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Rowhea Elmesky; Olivia Marcucci – AERA Open, 2024
Restorative justice has the potential to re-frame schools as caring and politically conscious educational spaces. As it moves to the mainstream, however, it risks being co-opted by the carceral logics that undergird the schooling of Black students in the United States. This ethnographic analysis interrogates how restorative justice provides…
Descriptors: Justice, African American Education, Politics of Education, Caring
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Muhammad Ayub Buzdar; Hamid Ikram – Online Learning, 2024
The effects of COVID-19 remained significant on university students' social and academic well-being. The pandemic raised various mental and psychological challenges for the students, and had the potential to deteriorate their academic engagement and performance in online learning environments. The emotion regulation theory hypothesizes that…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Stress Variables, Cognitive Processes
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Marie Helweg-Larsen; Stacey Bolton Tsantir – Frontiers: The Interdisciplinary Journal of Study Abroad, 2024
Research has examined how people think about their personal risks, but not how students conceptualize the risks they experience abroad. We examined how students describe their risks, how they see risk beliefs and experiences as tied to mitigation, and whether they view study abroad as a time to take (positive or negative) risks. We interviewed…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Psychological Patterns, Student Attitudes, Risk
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Huimin Wang; Saifon Songsiengchai; Kanon Somrang; Nadda Angsuwotai; Premsuree Chiamthong – International Journal of Education and Literacy Studies, 2024
This study focused on the Yuehua Secondary Vocational School students in Dezhou City. The objectives of this research were: (1) study the cooperative learning method's impact on the emotional involvement of art majors in secondary vocational schools, (2) to investigate how students' emotional involvement influences their learning outcomes and…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Psychological Patterns, Creativity, Literacy
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Assim S. Alrajhi – Cogent Education, 2024
Although research on boredom in second language (L2) learning contexts has garnered increasing attention, boredom as a negative emotion remains largely uncharted in EFL settings. Previous research has not thoroughly delved into specific categories of factors responsible for boredom in the English language classroom. Therefore, this study explores…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Psychological Patterns, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning
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Özlem Gökçe Tekin – Education and Information Technologies, 2024
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic affecting the whole world, education in Turkey, as in foreign countries, has been carried out through e-learning and therefore through a screen. This pandemic has been a factor that has increased the time students spend with screens out of the lesson. Since screens have become an essential part of daily life, it is…
Descriptors: Measures (Individuals), Test Construction, Test Validity, Computer System Design
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Benjamin J. Li; Andrew Z. H. Yee – Education and Information Technologies, 2024
Despite the post-COVID return to face-to-face teaching and learning, many higher educational institutions continue to utilize videoconferencing due to its numerous benefits. Along with this increased adoption, reports have surfaced regarding videoconference fatigue (VF), a phenomenon characterized by exhaustion from using videoconference…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Videoconferencing, Technology Uses in Education, Fatigue (Biology)
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Yahui Wang; Jia Liu – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2024
The COVID-19 pandemic has exerted a profound impact on numerous facets of our daily lives, including in higher education. International students have encountered unique challenges due to their vulnerability stemming from living abroad, including cultural adjustments, language barriers, and separation from families and friends. This review aims to…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Foreign Students, Influences
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Cecilia S. Dong; Erin Isings; Samantha M. Jones; Hugh Samson; Lisa McCorquodale; Thomas G. W. Telfer; Tracey Ropp; Christine E. Bell – Cogent Education, 2024
Addressing feedback-associated stress as a barrier to learning is increasingly relevant to student success and well-being. Mindfulness practices support stress management for students during the academic feedback process. Even if students receive high-quality feedback, the receiving end of feedback can be stressful, perhaps raising feelings of…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Stress Management, Academic Achievement, Well Being
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Alper Kaskaya; Tugba Çapar – Journal of Pedagogical Research, 2024
This study aims to explore perceptions of otherness among primary school children, focusing on 4th-grade students in the southern region of Türkiye. The study group consists of 48 Turkish and Syrian students selected through criterion sampling, a purposive sampling method. Employing a qualitative research approach, this study utilized a case study…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Refugees, Physical Characteristics, Student Attitudes
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