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Daniel Gibson; Hannah Murch; Fred Volk; Meagan Sabo – Christian Higher Education, 2025
Many leaders increase their risk of burnout, the strain from exposure to job-related stress, by neglecting to adequately care for themselves, especially as they experience conflict between the roles they perform and a lack of clarity around the limits of their responsibilities. Resident Assistant (RA) positions are often ambiguous and ill-defined,…
Descriptors: Student Leadership, Burnout, Christianity, Religious Colleges
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Isaura Castelao-Huerta – Gender and Education, 2024
In this article, I propose that caring/careful practices of becoming-supervisors are practices of response-ability within neoliberalized academia. These practices, based on a feminist ontology of reciprocity, active co-presence, sensitivity and receptive openness, created a friendly atmosphere where students' feelings and needs were taken into…
Descriptors: Doctoral Students, Student Attitudes, Student Responsibility, Student Reaction
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Handayani, Puji G.; Wiyono, Bambang B.; Muslihati; Hambali, I.M. – Pegem Journal of Education and Instruction, 2023
Adversity quotient has an impact on students' success in living life. Students who are victims of bullying are no exception. The low adversity quotient of students who are bullying victims will impact the chaotic management of their lives, characterized by stress, depression, trauma, and even suicide attempts. Students bullying victims with high…
Descriptors: Bullying, Victims, Mental Health, Gender Differences
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Herold, Debora S.; Chen, Tina – Journal of Teaching and Learning with Technology, 2021
The 2019 coronavirus disease pandemic disrupted higher education during spring 2020 by forcing all face-to-face classes to unexpectedly transition to online learning. To better understand how switching to remote learning affected students and the factors that impacted their ability to successfully complete classes, we asked 168 undergraduate…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Conventional Instruction, Web Based Instruction, COVID-19
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Savage, Sally – Studies in Continuing Education, 2023
When the COVID-19 pandemic hit Australia in 2020, lockdown restrictions meant that the lives of tertiary students and mothers underwent substantial adjustment. Universities quickly adapted to full online learning with implications for accessibility and efficacy of online technologies, and home environments suitable for learning. Mothers who were…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, COVID-19, Pandemics, Mothers
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Fynn, Angelo – Perspectives in Education, 2022
The transition to online learning at a time of intensive efforts to ensure that the academic project continued under the trying conditions brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic placed intense pressure on both staff and students, increasing their workload. The increased workload placed students at a risk of burnout. While most burnout research…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Distance Education, Burnout
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Phan, Anh Ngoc Quynh – Educational Forum, 2022
This paper features the emotional experiences of a Vietnamese doctoral student mother in New Zealand named Hoa who was stranded when COVID-19 hit the globe. As a temporary migrant and a mother who was separated from her children, she experienced displacement, nostalgia, mother guilt, and a diasporic feeling. When she managed to return to Vietnam,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Mothers, Child Rearing, Psychological Patterns
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Zainal Badri, Siti Khadijah; Wan Mohd Yunus, Wan Mohd Azam – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2022
The psychological wellbeing of remote-learning university students is becoming an increasing concern for educators in the COVID-19 era, due to the potential risk of conflict between academic and family/personal lives in the unusual environments they must now operate in. To determine how this conflict might influence students' psychological…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Mental Health, Well Being, COVID-19
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Hilpert, Jonathan C.; Bernacki, Matthew L.; Cogliano, MeganClaire – Journal of Research on Technology in Education, 2022
The COVID-19 disruption presented considerable challenges for university students, requiring the sudden need for increased engagement in remote learning environments and the ability to cope with academic and familial demands. To examine how students self-regulated their learning during the disruption, we surveyed undergraduates (n = 226) enrolled…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Self Management, Student Motivation
Emma Armstrong-Carter; Connie Siskowski; Julie Belkowitz; Catherine Johnson; Elizabeth Olson – Grantee Submission, 2022
In the United States, it is estimated that more than 5.4 million children and adolescents under age 18 provide care for adult family members who are aging or have a chronic illness, disability, or other health conditions that require assistance. However, little is known about how providing care to the family during childhood and adolescence…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Caregivers, Middle School Students, High School Students