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Kate Graham; George Stuart; Tina McAdie – Journal of College Student Retention: Research, Theory & Practice, 2025
Student attrition is now a global problem in Higher Education with most institutions experiencing high volumes of early exiting students. However, student resilience has yet to be adequately explored, particularly among the increasing online student population, as a possible mechanism to reduce attrition rates. In the present study, online,…
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, Undergraduate Students, Electronic Learning, Resilience (Psychology)
Anna E. Jaffe; Alexandra N. Brockdorf; Jennifer C. Duckworth; Jessica A. Blayney; Cynthia A. Stappenbeck – Journal of American College Health, 2025
Objective: Cannabis use in college students has increased over time and is linked to negative consequences. During the COVID-19 pandemic, many students experienced greater stress, which could heighten cannabis use and related consequences. This study was designed to clarify motivations for cannabis use that may link pandemic-related stressors to…
Descriptors: Marijuana, Drug Use, Coping, COVID-19
Thais França; Sofia Gaspar; Diego Mathias – Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education, 2024
Since the 2010s, Portugal has experienced a considerable growth in the number of Chinese international students, who have been attracted by the country's image of tolerance and openness for diversity. However, as it was reported in other contexts, throughout the health crisis, these students were blatantly confronted with racial microaggressions…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Foreign Students, Racism, Student Attitudes
Jenna Margie Leffring – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The purpose of this qualitative descriptive study was to understand how teachers who remained in the profession during the COVID-19 pandemic describe what it was about their self-perceived leadership qualities that influenced their decision to remain. Although literature regarding teacher retention exist, teacher description about their…
Descriptors: Teacher Persistence, COVID-19, Pandemics, Leadership Qualities
Stephanie Guzman; Robert D. Melara – Journal of American College Health, 2025
The outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic has been linked with caloric overeating and weight gain. We employed a mediation analysis to determine whether pandemic-associated overeating was a direct effect of COVID-19-related anxiety (affect regulation theory) or mediated by a coping mechanism of escape eating (escape theory). A diverse pool of college…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Body Weight, Obesity
Alexa G. Deyo; Alison Vrabec; Katherine M. Kidwell – Journal of American College Health, 2025
Objective: To examine associations among college students' worry about COVID-19, use of healthy and unhealthy coping techniques, and sleep-related impairment. Participants: The sample consisted of 366 undergraduate students (M[subscript age] =19.48 ± 1.76 years, 63.4% women; 62.6% college freshman). Methods: University students completed a series…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Coping, Stress Management
Kirsten M. Weber; Natalie F. Douglas; Tierney Popp; Rachael K. Nelson – About Campus, 2024
Often, experiences of trauma challenge a person's ability to cope. Although many students on college campuses carry around trauma, the COVID-19 pandemic placed a magnifying glass on student mental health that made it clear universities cannot be passive when it comes to supporting students through their trauma. In this article, the authors argue…
Descriptors: College Students, Trauma Informed Approach, COVID-19, Pandemics
Hale, Frankie B.; Mattheus, Deborah; Fletcher, Betty; Michel, Alexandra; Fontenot, Holly B. – Journal of School Nursing, 2023
This mixed-method study examined school nurses' experiences during the Coronavirus Disease 2019 pandemic related to role change, psychological feelings, and coping/resiliency in the State of Hawaii. A total of 30 school nurses completed a Brief Resilience Coping Scale plus a series of open-ended questions in January 2022. On the coping scale, over…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, School Nurses, Coping
Stephen Corbett; Karen Johnston; Adele Bezuidenhout – Educational Management Administration & Leadership, 2025
This paper considers wellbeing in the context of those working in the further education (FE) sector in England and how this has been affected by the COVID pandemic. There has been a growth of research into the impact of the pandemic on the workforce in the higher education sector and some considerations for schools. However, research that examines…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Well Being, Continuing Education, COVID-19
Joanna Peplak; Rachel Taffe; J. Zoe Klemfuss – Journal of Adolescence, 2025
Introduction: This mixed-method longitudinal study examined American adolescents' meaning making of salient COVID-19 pandemic events. Method: Within phone interviews, adolescents (N = 124, M[subscript age] = 15.76 years; 46% Latine) narrated their most emotionally impactful pandemic experience at two time points ~30 days apart between July 2020…
Descriptors: Adolescent Attitudes, Emotional Experience, COVID-19, Pandemics
Elizabeth A. D’Amico; Anna Thodhori; Feihong Wang – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly: A Peer Relations Journal, 2024
The COVID-19 pandemic caused tremendous stress in multiple ways for undergraduate college students in emergent adulthood, a period that is already challenging. This study examined the self-reported strategies undergraduate students used to cope with COVID-19-related stress across gender, ethnicity, and academic level using a mixed-method approach.…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Coping, COVID-19, Pandemics
James Howell – ProQuest LLC, 2023
Childhood trauma has a pronounced effect on both children who have experienced trauma as well as adults who were exposed to trauma as children (Felitti et al., 1998). This sobering reality is even more pronounced for more vulnerable communities (HHS, 2018), such as people of color, women, individuals who identify as LBGTQ+, and individuals of…
Descriptors: Trauma, Early Experience, Adults, Children
LeBlanc, Sarah Symonds; Spradley, Elizabeth; Beal, Heather Olson; Burrow, Lauren; Cross, Chrissy – New Horizons in Adult Education & Human Resource Development, 2022
This article examines how the COVID-19 pandemic impacts five MotherScholars, mothers and scholars blending their maternal and academic identities, through the use of interactive interviewing, autoethnography, and narrative. The narratives are presented from four distinct times during the first 10-months of the COVID-19 pandemic: beginning (March…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Mothers, Role
Corey M. Monley; Evan E. Ozmat; Jessica L. Martin; Junsung Oh – Journal of American College Health, 2025
Objective: Drinking more and drinking to cope increase undergraduates' likelihood of experiencing alcohol-related problems (ARP; e.g., driving intoxicated). In accordance with stress-coping models of addiction, anxiety about COVID-19 may motivate undergraduates to drink to cope, leading them to experience more ARP. However, this hypothesis has not…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Drinking, Coping, Anxiety
Robin Redmon Wright – Adult Learning, 2024
This evocative autoethnography is an exploration of learning and perseverance during a particularly dark time in my personal and professional life. In a period of just over 3 years, my spouse and I dealt with the need for several surgeries, the COVID-19-Delta pandemic and subsequent isolation, social unrest, an insurrection in the U.S., and the…
Descriptors: Coping, COVID-19, Pandemics, Health