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Szarkowski, Amy; Lindow-Davies, Candace – Odyssey: New Directions in Deaf Education, 2022
Fostering Joy is a movement that began in 2017 to support the intentional practice of looking for and encouraging joyful moments between families and/or caregivers and their children who are deaf or hard of hearing. The aim of Fostering Joy is to spark collaboration among families, caregivers, professionals, and adults who are deaf or hard of…
Descriptors: Deafness, Hearing Impairments, Positive Attitudes, Family Relationship
Vinny Alfonso; Nicole Barnes; Darlene Demarie; George DuPaul; Wendy Grolnick; Cara Laitusis; Patricia Perez; Sarah Rimm-Kaufman; Rena Subotnik; Pablo Tinio; Kathy Wentzel – American Psychological Association, 2024
Families and other caregivers play a major role in children's learning and success in school. Psychologists have learned a great deal about how families can help their children learn and thrive in the classroom. Through conversations with caregivers and extensive research, psychologists have developed ideas about how children learn, what helps…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Child Development, Child Behavior, Psychological Patterns
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Beck, Bernard – Multicultural Perspectives, 2018
Recent movies have used the familiar conventions of classic revenge movies, but the former have avoided the latter's grim resolutions in favor of a wiser, more forgiving attitude toward those who have offended the wronged. This unconventional change in a familiar story line points to the contrast between the pleasure of vicarious vindictiveness…
Descriptors: Films, Psychological Patterns, Mothers, Family Relationship
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Baldelomar, César – Religious Education, 2022
An expansive understanding of ancestors is integral to the opening of imaginative spaces for religious education--particularly in university and adult faith formation settings--to grapple deeply with contexts of precarity and the hopelessness such contexts breed. More specifically, this essay considers how hauntings by one's past selves…
Descriptors: Family Relationship, Religious Education, Religious Colleges, Psychological Patterns
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Rossetti, Ceara – Art Therapy: Journal of the American Art Therapy Association, 2021
Women hospitalized on an antepartum unit can benefit from an open studio art therapy group. A case description follows six women over five group sessions. Several common experiences that occurred throughout the sessions included isolation/boredom, uncertainty, lack of control, and family. Art therapy in a group setting allowed the women to express…
Descriptors: Females, Hospitals, Art Therapy, Group Therapy
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Ng, Carolyn – British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 2021
While grief is often perceived as an individual phenomenon, the grievers' family context before and after the death of a family member is always a stage set of their grief reactions. Operating from both meaning reconstruction and systemic perspectives, two case vignettes illustrate how the mourners' grief and adaptation were not only shaped by who…
Descriptors: Grief, Death, Family Relationship, Psychological Patterns
Chitwanga, Anissa; Ostler, Teresa – ZERO TO THREE, 2022
Told through the lens of Malawi customs, culture, and taboos, the authors describe the life experiences and mental health needs of Pilirani, a young Malawi Slay Queen, and her children. The article reveals the adversities she faced, her dreams for her children, how she and her children fared, and what helped them at various junctures in their…
Descriptors: African Culture, Mental Health, Health Needs, Parent Child Relationship
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Gerlach, Jennifer – Journal of School Counseling, 2020
Children and adolescents who experience parental incarceration are faced with significant challenges. Additionally, parental incarceration disproportionally affects African American families and families in urban settings. Due to institutional, economic, and social barriers, access to community mental health services for these affected children…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Parents, High School Students, Institutionalized Persons
David, Hanna – Online Submission, 2018
Adolescence is a period in everybody's life that is usually referred to as "time that everybody must go through" or "parents' hell". Transition between childhood and adulthood is indeed of great importance in everybody's life, but it is usually accompanied with a variety of questions, problems, dilemmas and a constant need to…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Gifted, Cognitive Ability, Emotional Development
Michael I. Sulkowski; James R. Pyle; Daniel J. Lamoreaux – Communique, 2024
Devastating school shootings have spawned a cottage industry of untested responses to school violence. Some involve target hardening, or making schools less vulnerable to violent attacks. School administrators and community members can be quick to gravitate towards target hardening measures for preventing school violence. However, crime prevention…
Descriptors: Administrators, School Safety, School Security, School Violence
Curtin, Dawn M.; Wilson, Linda L. – ZERO TO THREE, 2021
Early Head Start's intensive home- and center-based comprehensive services include proven significant impacts on young children's development and on parent's knowledge and behavior. However, how does a program continue delivery of supports and resources in a global health crisis? This article presents an overview of The Enola Group Early Head…
Descriptors: Creativity, COVID-19, Pandemics, Disadvantaged Youth
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Kent, Marcia – Reclaiming Children and Youth, 2013
A child and adolescent psychiatrist describes the dyadic nature of family conflict and provides practical strategies for preventing and managing interpersonal aggression. When parents ignore basic needs such as sleep, hunger, hydration, safety, and security, their children are likely to display qualities like hyperactivity, hypervigilance. and…
Descriptors: Family Violence, Conflict, Aggression, Family Relationship
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Deffenbacher, Jerry L. – Cognitive and Behavioral Practice, 2011
Anger is conceptualized within a broad cognitive-behavioral (CBT) framework emphasizing triggering events; the person's pre-anger state, including temporary conditions and more enduring cognitive and familial/cultural processes; primary and secondary appraisal processes; the anger experience/response (cognitive, emotional, and physiological…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Cognitive Restructuring, Behavior Modification, Therapy
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West, Lindsey M.; Davis, Telsie A.; Thompson, Martie P.; Kaslow, Nadine J. – Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 2011
Protective factors for fostering reasons for living were examined among low-income, suicidal, African American women. Bivariate logistic regressions revealed that higher levels of optimism, spiritual well-being, and family social support predicted reasons for living. Multivariate logistic regressions indicated that spiritual well-being showed…
Descriptors: Females, Suicide, Psychological Patterns, Low Income Groups
Mann, Janet C.; Kretchmar, Molly D.; Worsham, Nancy L. – Zero to Three (J), 2011
This article focuses on the experience of "Desirae," a young mother who participated with her children in services at The Children's Ark, an attachment-based intervention for families in foster care. The story of Desirae and her children highlights both the sometimes paradoxical truths about families fractured by addiction, abuse, and neglect and…
Descriptors: Altruism, Child Welfare, Foster Care, Profiles
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