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Communique, 2017
Sleep--not getting enough or not getting good sleep--can greatly affect students' cognitive, academic, behavioral, emotional, and social functioning. Sleep issues are relatively common, occurring in as many as 25% of children and are more prevalent in those with certain medical conditions (pain, asthma, traumatic brain injury) or psychiatric…
Descriptors: Sleep, Parent Student Relationship, School Activities, Behavior Patterns
National Inst. of Mental Health, Rockville, MD. Div. of Education and Service Systems Liaison. – 1988
This training manual on emotional responses to disaster is designed for use by mental health professionals in the training of emergency medical teams whose job is to immediately respond to both large- and small-scale disasters. It is noted that members of these teams are usually not mental health professionals, but they must deal with a range of…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Behavior Problems, Emergency Medical Technicians, Emotional Response
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Myer, Rick; James, Richard K. – Elementary School Guidance and Counseling, 1991
Presents cost- and time-effective assessment technique for school counselors. The technique described, early recollections, uses children's early memories to help counselors discern a pattern of their behavior. Discusses assumptions upon which technique of early recollections is built and explains how to incorporate early recollections into…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Counseling Techniques, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students
Hunt, Claire Y. – 1986
This document presents guidelines for school staff to use in responding to an adolescent suicide. It gives statistics on teenage suicides and suicide attempts and examines characteristics of high-risk adolescents. Behavior patterns associated with adolescent suicide are described, paying close attention to the patterns of depression, substance…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Behavior Patterns, Crisis Intervention, Elementary Secondary Education
Fried, Hilda, Ed. – Journal of the International Association of Pupil Personnel Workers, 1981
Parents and teachers must allow children to feel all their feelings, including anger. Children can be helped to accept their feelings and to channel and direct them to constructive ends. Discipline should be motivated by the need to protect and teach, not a desire to punish. (JAC)
Descriptors: Aggression, Behavior Change, Behavior Patterns, Children