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Allee-Herndon, Karyn; Roberts, Sherron Killingsworth – International Journal of the Whole Child, 2018
The field of education is beginning to understand more concretely how specific conditions, such as poverty, affect brain and cognitive development and the related impacts on academic achievement. More than 10 million children who live below the poverty threshold attend public preK-12 schools, and over 1 million of these children attend public…
Descriptors: Poverty, Cognitive Development, Academic Achievement, Executive Function
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Holochwost, Steven J.; Propper, Cathi B.; Rehder, Peter D.; Wang, Guan; Wagner, Nicholas J.; Coffman, Jennifer L. – Journal of Research on Educational Effectiveness, 2019
Early childhood education programs, and particularly those designed to reduce gaps in school readiness between children in poverty and their more affluent peers, have increasingly addressed children's self-regulatory abilities -- their ability to manage behaviors, emotions, and cognitive processes. Although self-regulation is typically defined in…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Educational Research, Physiology, Stress Variables
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Sewell, Karen M. – Journal of Social Work Education, 2020
Social work students are tasked with learning the meta and procedural competencies required of the profession while facing their own emotional responses to vulnerable populations and managing clients' difficult experiences. Social work educators can support students in exploring, understanding, and learning to tolerate, regulate, and manage their…
Descriptors: Social Work, Counselor Training, Self Control, Emotional Response
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Paolini, Allison C. – Journal of School Counseling, 2021
This Brief Resource addresses anxiety and the dire impact anxiety has on student well-being and performance. Anxiety prevents students from focusing, concentrating, feeling safe, grounded, and at ease. There are immeasurable numbers of students who are experiencing anxiety during this pandemic. Social Emotional Learning works to enhance students'…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Well Being, Achievement, COVID-19
Barr, Donald A. – Phi Delta Kappan, 2018
Many kindergarten teachers have encountered children who enter school lacking the ability to control their behavior, but they may not understand the social and biological processes behind these children's disruptive behavior. The author reviews research into early childhood brain development to explain how trauma and chronic stress can make it…
Descriptors: Trauma, Kindergarten, Interference (Learning), Self Control
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DePasquale, Carrie E.; Gunnar, Megan R. – Future of Children, 2020
Parental sensitivity and nurturance are important mechanisms for establishing biological, emotional, and social functioning in childhood. Sensitive, nurturing care is most critical during the first three years of life, when attachment relationships form and parental care shapes foundational neural and physiological systems, with lifelong…
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Parenting Styles, Child Development, Attachment Behavior
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Malkemes, Mike; Waters, Joan – Journal of Applied Research on Children, 2017
A review of the effects of generational poverty on the development of children and the well-being of their families is compared with nine years of experience by Generation One, a non-profit organization that operates a school and a revitalization program in the Third Ward of Houston, Texas. Analysis of student behavior and the level and quality of…
Descriptors: Social Development, Emotional Development, Student Behavior, Parent Participation
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Diestel, Stefan; Schmidt, Klaus-Helmut – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2010
Two specific sources of stress at work have recently received increasing attention in organizational stress research: emotional dissonance (ED) and self-control demands (SCDs). Both theoretical arguments and experimental findings in basic research strongly suggest that ED and different SCDs draw on a common limited regulatory resource.…
Descriptors: Stress Variables, Structural Equation Models, Anxiety, Burnout
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Cicchetti, Dante; Rogosch, Fred A. – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2009
The study of resilience in maltreated children reveals the possibility of coping processes and resources on multiple levels of analysis as children strive to adapt under conditions of severe stress. In a maltreating context, aspects of self-organization, including self-esteem, self-reliance, emotion regulation, and adaptable yet reserved…
Descriptors: Child Abuse, Coping, Personality Traits, Stress Variables
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Compas, Bruce E. – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2009
This chapter identifies four challenges to the study of the development of coping and regulation and outlines specific theoretical and empirical strategies for addressing them. The challenges are (1) to integrate work on coping and processes of emotion regulation, (2) to use the integration of research on neuro-biology and context to inform the…
Descriptors: Research Utilization, Coping, Child Development, Adolescent Development
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Kopp, Claire B. – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2009
This chapter explores paths toward emotion-focused coping among typically developing young children and their more or less average parents--portraying characteristic developmental patterns, demands, and stresses. Emotion-focused coping strategies are effortful and aim to decrease negative emotions in stress-inducing interpersonal contexts. The…
Descriptors: Young Children, Coping, Stress Variables, Child Development
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Lee, Kyoung Hag; Yoon, Dong Pil – Social Work, 2011
This study explores factors that influence the general well-being (anxiety, depression, positive well-being, self-control, vitality, and general health) of low-income Korean immigrant elders by interviewing 206 older adults living in Los Angeles County and Orange County, California. Ordinary least squares regression results reveal that lack of…
Descriptors: Financial Problems, Low Income, Physical Health, Interviews
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Rueda, M. Rosario; Rothbart, Mary K. – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2009
Temperament refers to individual differences in two broad aspects of behavior: (1) emotional, motor, and attentional reactivity and (2) self-regulatory processes that modulate such reactivity. These individual differences are grounded in people's constitution and influence both stress reactions and patterns of coping. In this chapter, we examine…
Descriptors: Intervention, Personality, Coping, Individual Differences
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Feldman, Ruth; Eidelman, Arthur I.; Rotenberg, Noa – Child Development, 2004
To examine the development of triplets, 23 sets of triplets were matched with 23 sets of twins and 23 singletons (N138). Maternal sensitivity was observed at newborn, 3, 6, and 12 months, and infants' cognitive and symbolic skills at 1 year. Triplets received lower maternal sensitivity across infancy and exhibited poorer cognitive competencies…
Descriptors: Family Environment, Child Rearing, Twins, Cognitive Development
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Edwards, Dana; Gfroerer, Kelly; Flowers, Claudia; Whitaker, Yancey – Professional School Counseling, 2004
Previous research using adult subjects suggests that social interest affects an individual's coping resources. The purpose of this research was to examine empirically the relationship of social interest and coping skills in young children. Data collected from 127 elementary students were used to test a structural equation model that examined the…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Social Influences, School Counselors, Self Confidence