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Lisa Parker; Kennedy Wittman; William P. Bintz – Reading Teacher, 2024
This article focuses on the difficult event of death. The audience for this article is classroom teachers, librarians/media specialists, curriculum developers, and so on. The purpose is to share points to consider when choosing quality picture books focusing on death as well as exemplars to represent these points. These points were concluded as a…
Descriptors: Picture Books, Death, Reading Material Selection, Coping
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Mark Findlay – BU Journal of Graduate Studies in Education, 2024
Childhood maltreatment has had a damaging effect on many people in our society. The abuser strips the victim's innocence and leaves him or her to maneuver through a lifetime of harmful residue. Creating a healthy societal awareness and offering effective counselling solutions are necessary to minimize the damage of maltreatment.
Descriptors: Child Abuse, Counseling, Children, Access to Health Care
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Anat Korem – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 2024
Teasing among children is frequent in school life. Continued exposure to verbal abuse has negative effects on children's development, including damage to their feeling of safeness and their self-image, withdrawal, and avoiding social situations. This essay focuses on developing the social competence of children who face continuing situations such…
Descriptors: Models, Interpersonal Competence, Peer Relationship, Bullying
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Koichi Kasahara – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2024
This article describes the possibilities of art workshops which have been conducted in Fukushima Prefecture that were affected by the earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear power plant accident on March 11, 2011. In coastal areas, many people experienced unexpected domestic migrations/relocations and unwelcome changes in their lives due to the disaster,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Natural Disasters, Art Activities, Art Expression
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J. Scott Baker; Daniel Gebur; Jessica Sester; Jamie Smith; Whitney Yambrick – Art Education, 2024
As our world endures multiple crises, educators have turned their eye to what does and does not work effectively to assist students in the school environment, regardless of changing landscapes, such as lingering impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, anti-critical race theory legislation, anti-LGBTQ+ legislation, personal crises students face, as well…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Teacher Educators, Coping, Art Therapy
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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
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Lauren Margulieux; James Prather; Masoumeh Rahimi – Educational Psychology Review, 2025
Failure can be an effective tool for learning, but it comes with negative consequences. Educators and learners should practice strategies that leverage the benefits of failure while managing its negative consequences on learners' motivation and persistence. Towards that goal, this paper examines the biological effects of failure on learning to (1)…
Descriptors: Biology, Failure, Learning Processes, Priming
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Jayne K. Sommers; Keith Edwards; Steven Herndon; Amanda Knerr – About Campus, 2024
Higher education institutions can often serve as sites of growth and possibility. At the same time, trauma in varying forms permeates higher education across institutional types. The authors define trauma as the short- and long-term direct and indirect response to deeply distressing events. Students, faculty, and staff all experience various…
Descriptors: Trauma, Higher Education, Student Personnel Workers, College Role
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Colleen L. Eddy; Keith C. Herman; Wendy M. Reinke – Journal of Emotional and Behavioral Disorders, 2024
Stress management programs have been developed to improve teacher coping and prevent burnout. While many of these programs have promise, few have included special educators in intervention studies. Intervention programs may be beneficial for teachers in special education to increase their awareness of stress and use of coping skills, which in turn…
Descriptors: Stress Management, Special Education Teachers, Coping, Teacher Burnout
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Carolyn M. Bates – Journal of Physical Education, Recreation & Dance, 2025
This article explores the importance and value of using recreation therapy (RT) as a way to increase social connection. RT can be incorporated into a school-based environment through a collaboration between members of the individualized education program (IEP) team, including physical educators.
Descriptors: Therapeutic Recreation, Interpersonal Relationship, Mental Health, Interpersonal Competence
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Ash Tea; Dax Ovid – CBE - Life Sciences Education, 2024
Informed by social science fields including psychology and public health, we propose a Model for Emotional Intelligence to advance biology education research in affective learning. The model offers a shared discourse for biology education researchers to develop and assess evidence-based strategies to perceive, use, understand, and manage emotions…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Science Instruction, Biology, Emotional Intelligence
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April R. Coetzee; Felicity L. Brown; Vania Alves; J. Lawrence Aber; Juliana Córdoba; Mark J. D. Jordans – Journal on Education in Emergencies, 2025
Support to improve teacher wellbeing is scarce in almost all contexts, but especially so in low- and middle-income settings in which teachers face both professional and personal challenges (Kirk and Winthrop 2007; Mendenhall, Gomez, and Varni 2018). In this field note, we discuss War Child's development of Coaching-Observing-Reflecting-Engaging…
Descriptors: Intervention, Teachers, Well Being, Foreign Countries
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Fernanda Goñi; Loreto Quiroga; Juan Ignacio Venegas-Muggli; Gonzalo Gallardo – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2025
This paper describes the results of qualitative and exploratory research into the transition to and experiences of the working world of graduates from a Chilean technical-professional higher education institution, whose student body is mainly made up of first-generation higher education students. The study includes eight in-depth and six group…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Graduates, First Generation College Students, Barriers
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Amanda Cox; Sarah L. Boyle; Elissa Newby-Clark; Margaret N. Lumley – Journal of College Student Development, 2025
Sixty percent of students experience the death of a close person at some point in their post-secondary studies. This life stage is characterized by cognitive, academic, social, physical, emotional, and identity-related stressors which together may also intensify grief. Importantly, post-secondary students' unique needs may not be addressed by…
Descriptors: Death, Grief, College Students, Coping
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Kathleen A. Boothe; Marla J. Lohmann – Networks: An Online Journal for Teacher Research, 2024
The COVID-19 pandemic had significant impacts for both teachers and students at all levels. Instructional delivery had to be modified to respond to the need for social distancing. Even courses that were already fully online required adaptations to accommodate the needs of university students during COVID. One of the biggest changes that the…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Online Courses, Teacher Education Programs
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