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Showing 1 to 15 of 62 results Save | Export
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Heffernan, Amanda; Mills, Martin – Cambridge Journal of Education, 2023
This paper explores the emotional work involved in leading schools in marginalised communities, through case studies of Australian and English government-school principals theorised through Lynch's framework of affective justice and the embedded concepts of love, care and solidarity. Participants demonstrated solidarity in their choice of working…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Affective Behavior, Leadership, Foreign Countries
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Ting, Chih-Chung; Palminteri, Stefano; Lebreton, Maël; Engelmann, Jan B. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2022
Anxiety is a common affective state, characterized by the subjectively unpleasant feelings of dread over an anticipated event. Anxiety is suspected to have important negative consequences on cognition, decision-making, and learning. Yet, despite a recent surge in studies investigating the specific effects of anxiety on reinforcement-learning, no…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Reinforcement, Stress Variables, Young Adults
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Libing Liu; Xueying Li; Yu Sun; Nansheng Luo; Ru Bai; Xin Xu; Li Liu – Educational Psychology, 2024
This study examined the mediating effects of cognitive empathy and affective empathy in the relationship between dispositional awe and prosocial behaviour in medical students, and whether perceived stress moderated this association. A total of 631 medical students from two medical tertiary institutions in Liaoning Province, China, participated in…
Descriptors: Stress Variables, Medical Education, Medical Students, Prosocial Behavior
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Jõgi, Anna-Liisa; Aulén, Anna-Mari; Pakarinen, Eija; Lerkkanen, Marja-Kristiina – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 2023
Background: Teachers' stress, affect and general occupational well-being influence their teaching and their students. However, how teachers' daily physiological stress and positive affect are related in the classroom is unknown. To reduce teachers' stress and enhance their positive affect, it is crucial to understand how occupational well-being…
Descriptors: Teachers, Stress Variables, Psychological Patterns, Affective Behavior
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Counts, Cory J.; John-Henderson, Neha A. – Journal of American College Health, 2020
Objective: To investigate associations between risk in family environments and health-relevant outcomes in college and the role of loneliness. Participants: College students at a state university (N = 360). Methods: We utilized linear regression to examine relationships between risk in family environments and loneliness, perceived stress, affect,…
Descriptors: Risk, Family Environment, College Students, Correlation
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Reindl, Stefan – International Journal of Learning Technology, 2021
Emotion (or affective) artificial intelligence (AI) is a hot topic within the greater field of AI, in both, academic as well as practitioner circles. One of the industries with great potential for AI implementation is education. While emotion AI is commonly referred to as a field of growing interest, research in the specific context of education…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Artificial Intelligence, Educational Research, Technology Uses in Education
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Wang, Juanjuan; Wang, Chen; Gu, Xiaoming; Sun, Yi – Psychology in the Schools, 2023
The COVID-19 pandemic has led to a global crisis resulting in lockdowns worldwide. Studies found that these could amplify negative affects predictive of disturbances in time perception. However, all existing studies on this topic concentrated on the general population during a lockdown at home. There was no research on university students living…
Descriptors: Dormitories, COVID-19, Pandemics, School Closing
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Wielgus, Madeline D.; Hammond, Lauren E.; Fox, Andrew R.; Hudson, Melissa R.; Mezulis, Amy H. – Journal of College Student Psychotherapy, 2019
College students experience high levels of life stress that put them at increased risk for nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI). It is important to understand which vulnerabilities put students most at risk, in order to inform treatment in college counseling centers. This study investigated the joint contributions of specific vulnerabilities to lifetime…
Descriptors: Self Destructive Behavior, Psychological Patterns, Experience, Incidence
Hirshberg, Matthew J. – ProQuest LLC, 2017
Teaching is a demanding profession that requires adroitness in social, emotional, and intellectual realms. The high levels of stress and burnout teachers report, as well as the alarmingly high rates of teacher turnover reveal that many teachers are not adequately prepared to teach. There is mounting evidence that domain-general social, cognitive,…
Descriptors: Teacher Education Programs, Well Being, Teacher Burnout, Skill Development
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DeFalco, Jeanine A.; Rowe, Jonathan P.; Paquette, Luc; Georgoulas-Sherry, Vasiliki; Brawner, Keith; Mott, Bradford W.; Baker, Ryan S.; Lester, James C. – International Journal of Artificial Intelligence in Education, 2018
Tutoring systems that are sensitive to affect show considerable promise for enhancing student learning experiences. Creating successful affective responses requires considerable effort both to detect student affect and to design appropriate responses to affect. Recent work has suggested that affect detection is more effective when both physical…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Stress Variables, Educational Games, Intelligent Tutoring Systems
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Reynolds, Bridget M.; Robles, Theodore F.; Repetti, Rena L. – Developmental Psychology, 2016
Methodological challenges associated with measurement reactivity and fatigue were addressed using diary data collected from mothers (n = 47), fathers (n = 39), and children (n = 47; 8-13 years) across 56 consecutive days. Demonstrating the feasibility of extended diary studies with families, on-time compliance rates were upward of 90% for all…
Descriptors: Diaries, Mothers, Fathers, Children
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Finegood, Eric D.; Blair, Clancy; Granger, Douglas A.; Hibel, Leah C.; Mills-Koonce, Roger – Developmental Psychology, 2016
This study evaluated prospective longitudinal relations among an index of poverty-related cumulative risk, maternal salivary cortisol, child negative affect, and maternal sensitivity across the first 2 postpartum years. Participants included 1,180 biological mothers residing in rural and predominantly low-income communities in the United States.…
Descriptors: Poverty, Mothers, Correlation, Metabolism
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Sedlacek, David; Stevenson, Stanley; Kray, Carrie; Henson, Timothy; Burrows, Chelsea; Rosenboom, Mary Nell – Journal of Research on Christian Education, 2015
Several studies demonstrate the impact that childhood abuse has on adult life (Felitti et al., 1998; Galea, 2008). This study sought to examine the impact of childhood abuse on college student life. Physical, sexual, emotional, and spiritual abuse were examined in a group of college students from Andrews University and Southern Adventist…
Descriptors: Church Related Colleges, College Students, Child Abuse, Correlation
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Ari, Lilac Lev; Shulman, Shmuel – Journal of Youth Studies, 2012
One hundred and fifty Israeli first-year college students were assessed twice: during the first semester following the commencement of their undergraduate studies and toward the end of the second semester. At each semester, participants completed web-based daily diaries for seven consecutive days assessing daily sleep, affective mood, stress, and…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Multivariate Analysis, Diaries, Psychological Patterns
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Assor, Avi; Tal, Karen – Journal of Adolescence, 2012
We examined the idea that adolescents' perceptions of their mothers as using parental conditional positive regard (PCPR) to promote academic achievement are associated with maladaptive self feelings and coping. A study of 153 adolescents supported the hypothesis that PCPR predicts self-aggrandizement following success and self devaluation and…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Parent Child Relationship, Adolescents, Coping
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