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Joseph R. Cohen; Jae Wan Choi; Jaclyn S. Fishbach; Jeff R. Temple – Prevention Science, 2025
Developing accurate and equitable screening protocols can lead to more targeted, efficient, and effective, teen dating violence (TDV) prevention programming. Current TDV screening protocols perform poorly and are rarely implemented, but recent research and policy emphasizes the importance of leveraging more trauma-focused screening measures for…
Descriptors: Dating (Social), Violence, Adolescents, Prevention
Melanie Fuller; Gene Margaret Moyle; Geoffrey Minett – Research in Dance Education, 2024
Dance research should consider time points within a season that may be associated with injury, and report on weekly dance training loads. The current study aimed to analyse injuries within each semester and participant, monitor load, mood and stress within one semester, and calculate compliance with monitoring in a tertiary dance training cohort.…
Descriptors: Injuries, Dance, Dance Education, Stress Variables
Brenda Jones Harden; Tiffany L. Martoccio; Lisa J. Berlin – Prevention Science, 2025
Although there is robust evidence of the benefits of attachment-based parenting interventions, limited research has examined their impact on dyadic mutuality and toddler behavior problems. Given the central question in prevention research of what works for whom, and the documented relation of maternal psychological risk to parenting and…
Descriptors: Mothers, Psychological Patterns, Risk, Attachment Behavior
Angela Mazzone; Anastasios Karakolidis; Vasiliki Pitsia; Yseult Freeney; James O'Higgins Norman – Higher Education Quarterly, 2024
Workplace bullying is a widespread phenomenon within Higher Education Institutions (HEIs). Employee tendency to remain silent is one of the most common reactions to workplace bullying. Yet, employee silence in the context of workplace bullying is poorly studied. Building on the Conservation of Resources Theory (COR) and the Learned Helplessness…
Descriptors: Bullying, Work Environment, Higher Education, Prevention
Hanson, Josef – Update: Applications of Research in Music Education, 2021
Teaching music can be a stressful endeavor. Decades of research findings indicate that music teachers are especially prone to professional burnout. The purpose of this research-to-resource article is to equip music teachers and other educational stakeholders with research-informed definitions, warning signs, and potential remedies for burnout.…
Descriptors: Music Teachers, Teacher Burnout, Anxiety, Psychological Patterns
Cristina Sechi; Cristina Cabras; Lucia Sideli – Journal of Beliefs & Values, 2024
Accumulating literature suggests that the risk of perpetrating bullying is greater among those who have been bullied. The association between the transition from victim to bully and revenge aggression suggests the critical role of forgiveness. However, evidence on the mediating role of forgiveness on the victimisation-bullying association is still…
Descriptors: Victims, Computer Mediated Communication, Bullying, Psychological Patterns
Flaviu A. Hodis; Georgeta M. Hodis – Educational and Developmental Psychologist, 2025
Objective: The first objective of this research was to investigate the interrelationships of regulatory focus (i.e. promotion and prevention) and the ability to direct attention when studying. The second was to examine whether unobserved groups of individuals having distinct combinations of regulatory focus and directing attention differed on…
Descriptors: Attention Control, Undergraduate Students, Psychological Needs, Personal Autonomy
Yeliz Temli Durmus – Journal of Pedagogical Research, 2023
The aim of this phenomenological study was to determine the experiences and views of elementary school teachers about mobbing. To address this issue, the researcher conducted semi-structured interviews with 20 female and 19 male elementary school teachers working in public elementary schools. Four themes emerged during the analysis: reasons for…
Descriptors: Elementary School Teachers, Teacher Attitudes, Bullying, Aggression
Cramer, Allie M.; Filderman, Marissa J. – Beyond Behavior, 2023
Students with emotional and behavioral disorders (EBD) can exhibit severely challenging behaviors that lead to events of crisis in an inclusive classroom. This article provides practitioners with an overview of the cycle of dysregulation experienced by some students with EBD. The article includes descriptions of stages in the dysregulation cycle,…
Descriptors: Students, Emotional Disturbances, Behavior Disorders, Inclusion
Franz Carrillo-Higueras; T. R. Walton – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2024
Homesick disposition, an individual's expectation about becoming homesick in the future, has been identified as an important predictor of homesickness. Homesick disposition can be detected and measured even before the separation from home has taken place, making it particularly relevant to understanding feelings and perceptions of rural school…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Students, Student Adjustment, Psychological Patterns
Sunhye Bai; Gregory M. Fosco; Mark E. Feinberg; Richard L. Spoth – Prevention Science, 2025
Universal and selective preventive interventions targeting youth behavioral problems have shown crossover effects on suicide risk, the second leading cause of death among youth. However, the mechanisms that explain this long-term unanticipated benefit are understudied and unclear. The current study examines the crossover effects of PROSPER, a…
Descriptors: Prevention, Intervention, Grade 6, Adolescents
Coifman, Karin G.; Disabato, David J.; Aurora, Pallavi; Seah, T. H. Stanley; Mitchell, Benjamin; Simonovic, Nicolle; Foust, Jeremy L.; Sidney, Pooja Gupta; Thompson, Clarissa A.; Taber, Jennifer M. – Grantee Submission, 2021
Background & Purpose: Primary prevention of COVID-19 has focused on encouraging compliance with specific behaviors that restrict contagion. This investigation sought to characterize engagement in these behaviors in U.S. adults early during the pandemic and to build explanatory models of the psychological processes that drive them. Methods: US…
Descriptors: Prevention, Health Behavior, COVID-19, Pandemics
Stickl Haugen, Jaimie; Sutter, Claudia C.; Tinstman Jones, Jessica L.; Campbell, Laurie O. – Child & Youth Care Forum, 2023
Background: Teachers are important gatekeepers in suicide prevention for children and youth, yet little is known about factors that contribute to suicide prevention training effectiveness and the influence of student suicidality on teachers' role as gatekeepers. Objective: This study examined teachers' attitudes and self-efficacy in suicide…
Descriptors: Teacher Role, Suicide, Prevention, Teacher Attitudes
Diana Nicholson Agnetti – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Using a qualitative design, a clinical mental health counselor explored the use of trauma-informed self-regulation strategies with clinical mental health counselors in training (CITs) to capture their experience of vicarious trauma. Participants included three CITs in an urban setting and two CITs in a rural setting enrolled in a CACREP-accredited…
Descriptors: Mental Health, Counselors, Trauma, Counselor Training
David Ortega-Jiménez; Mateo Peñaherrera-Aguirre; Silvia Vaca Gallegos; Belén Paladines-Costa; Francisco D. Bretones – Teaching in Higher Education, 2025
University professors are exposed to high levels of stress as a result of the multiple activities involved in their profession. The objective of this research is to explain how a sequence of psychosocial variables directly and indirectly influences stress. Method: A non-probabilistic and non-clinical sample of 480 professors from different…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Faculty, Stress Variables, Working Hours