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Vatterott, Cathy – Educational Leadership, 2019
Excessive workloads, crammed schedules, and "perfectionism" are causing today's teens undue stress. Cathy Vatterott, an international expert on K-12 homework, describes this as an epidemic of "rudderless box checkers--four AP classes, check; debate team, check; two sports, check; honor roll, check." What can educators do then…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Personality Traits, Stress Variables, Stress Management
Benbassat, Jochanan – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2019
Undergraduate clinical education follows the "bedside" tradition that exposes students to inpatients. However, the hospital learning environment has two main limitations. First, most inpatients require acute care, and students may complete their training without seeing patients with frequent non-emergent and chronic diseases that are…
Descriptors: Clinical Experience, Undergraduate Study, Hospitals, Experiential Learning
Morrison Straforini, Carol – Journal of College Student Psychotherapy, 2015
The published psychological literature on the developmental milestone that is the doctoral dissertation emphasizes either psychological interpretations or practical strategies as ways to help, each often failing to note the critical importance of the other. Clinicians need to understand underlying psychological issues that may complicate the…
Descriptors: Doctoral Dissertations, Academic Persistence, Student Motivation, Graduate Students
Casey, George W., Jr. – American Psychologist, 2011
The stress and strain on the U.S. Army's community due to nearly a decade of protracted war is well documented in the press and in scientific literature. In response, the Army's Comprehensive Soldier Fitness (CSF) program is a preventive program that seeks to enhance psychological resilience among all members of the Army community, which includes…
Descriptors: Medical Services, Personality Traits, Military Personnel, Resilience (Psychology)
Murphy, Jerome T. – Phi Delta Kappan, 2011
Experiencing discomfort as a leader is part of the job. But discomfort does not have to turn to anguish. Leaders who learn a new way to respond to the stress and strain of leadership can enhance their performance and enrich their experience.
Descriptors: Instructional Leadership, Work Environment, Stress Variables, Anxiety
Lavner, Justin A.; Bradbury, Thomas N. – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2010
Although marital satisfaction starts high and declines for the average newlywed, some spouses may follow qualitatively distinct trajectories. Using 8 self-reports of satisfaction collected over 4 years from 464 newlywed spouses, we identified 5 trajectory groups, including patterns defined by high intercepts and no declines in satisfaction,…
Descriptors: Divorce, Personality Traits, Spouses, Marital Satisfaction
Nemeth, Karen; Brillante, Pamela – Young Children, 2011
It can be difficult for any teacher to support a child whose behavior is disruptive, but a language barrier can certainly complicate the situation. Children who are new to English may not be able to tell teachers what's going on. This makes it even more important for teachers to learn specific strategies to interpret the child's actions and plan…
Descriptors: Personality Traits, Second Language Learning, Child Health, Behavior Problems
Thomas, Sally Spencer – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
As a faculty adviser at Regis University, the author has seen countless students who feel under stress and wonder if they are up for the challenge of college life. That stress has only been compounded by the financial difficulties that many more students and their families are now facing. But the good news is that individuals who work on campuses…
Descriptors: Emotional Intelligence, Mental Health, Student Leadership, Faculty Advisers
Belsky, Jay; Pluess, Michael – Psychological Bulletin, 2009
Evolutionary-biological reasoning suggests that individuals should be differentially susceptible to environmental influences, with some people being not just more vulnerable than others to the negative effects of adversity, as the prevailing diathesis-stress view of psychopathology (and of many environmental influences) maintains, but also…
Descriptors: Psychopathology, Parent Child Relationship, Environmental Influences, Stress Variables
Abarbanel, Janice – Intercultural Education, 2009
Having an "emotional passport" means acquiring skills to regulate intense emotional challenges experienced in cultural transitions. This paper addresses ways to help young travelers become more resilient problem-solvers, better at tolerating ambiguity, and more competent with cultural difference. It points out how the intercultural field misses…
Descriptors: Psychological Needs, Intercultural Communication, Culture Conflict, Young Adults
Tom, A.; Yuen, S.; Fong, G.; Nemoto, M.; Hisatake, T.; Choy, A.; Chang, W. – Center on the Family, University of Hawaii Manoa (NJ3), 2009
Financial hardship can result from many different circumstances--a poor economy, the loss of a job, underemployment, the prolonged illness of a family member, divorce, poor money management, or a combination of several factors. Whatever the cause, the resulting impact on a family can be stressful for all members, including children. Stress from…
Descriptors: Personality Traits, Economically Disadvantaged, Money Management, Mental Health
Maegusuku-Hewett, Tracey; Dunkerley, David; Scourfield, Jonathan; Smalley, Nina – Children & Society, 2007
This article aims to makes a contribution to redressing a methodological and theoretical imbalance in existing research on refugee and asylum-seeking children. It draws on two qualitative studies from Wales with children and young people. The samples include unaccompanied minors and children living with families as well as both children who are…
Descriptors: Children, Refugees, Adjustment (to Environment), Coping
Yeary, Julia – Zero to Three, 2007
With current U.S. combat operations in Afghanistan and Iraq, military families are facing an unprecedented level of stress because of repeated and lengthy separations. The impact on children of these separations from one or both parents depends to a large extent on the remaining caregiver's ability to respond to the needs of the children. By…
Descriptors: Stress Variables, Child Rearing, Coping, Foreign Countries
Cummins, Paige N.; Massey, Linda; Jones, Anita – Journal of Humanistic Counseling, Education and Development, 2007
This article describes challenges to wellness that counselors face when working with clients. Autobiographical reflections are used to illustrate the personal nature of some of these challenges and how this affects counselor effectiveness and wellness. Additionally, assessment measures and theoretical models for promoting and maintaining wellness…
Descriptors: Models, Counseling Effectiveness, Wellness, Mental Health
Turner, R. Jay; Russell, David; Glover, Regan; Hutto, Pamela – Journal of Health and Social Behavior, 2007
Anger has been shown to be an important factor in occupational maladjustment, family conflict, physical and sexual assault, criminal behavior, and substance abuse. It has also been linked with such adverse health outcomes as hypertension, heart disease, and cancer. Focusing on anger proneness, conceptualized as a relatively enduring propensity to…
Descriptors: Substance Abuse, Sexual Abuse, Heart Disorders, Young Adults
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