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Birioukov, Anton – Canadian Journal of Education, 2021
Despite mandatory school attendance policies, many students in Canada are frequently absent from school. Absenteeism is linked to numerous negative educational outcomes and is a growing educational issue internationally. This has lead universities in many countries to study the factors associated with absenteeism in order to reduce it. However,…
Descriptors: Attendance, Attendance Patterns, Foreign Countries, Educational Research
Elizabeth Garis – Communique, 2024
If students at your school are not attending classes or coming to school at all, they may be engaging in school refusal. Understanding what school refusal is, as well as the functions behind it, is key to evaluation and a collaborative school-home approach to intervention.
Descriptors: Attendance, Attendance Patterns, Student Behavior, School Phobia
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Firmin, Michael; Proemmel, Elizabeth – College Teaching Methods & Styles Journal, 2008
In this conceptual paper, based on teaching and TA experience, seven suggestions are made for improving the statistics experience of students in social science courses. These include hiring non-mathematicians to teach the course; emphasize conceptual statistics rather than computational approaches; recognize that many, or ever most, social science…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Social Sciences, Statistics, Higher Education
Wimmer, Mary – Principal Leadership, 2008
School attendance is an ongoing concern for administrators, particularly in middle level and high school. Frequent absences affect student learning, test scores, and social development. Absenteeism is often the result of emotional disorders, such as anxiety or depression. Administrators who understand the causes of school refusal behavior and are…
Descriptors: Intervention, Emotional Disturbances, Attendance, School Phobia
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Halpin, David – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2008
Far too much curriculum time in primary schools is overly regulated and assessment driven, with the result that many children attending them are either bored or made to feel anxious. The antidote to this tendency is for teachers to rediscover the value of deregulated ("wasted") curriculum time via a renewed commitment to the value of play,…
Descriptors: Scheduling, Time Management, Productivity, Anxiety
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Doobay, Alissa F. – Psychology in the Schools, 2008
School refusal behavior can lead to disruptions in both educational attainment and social development. One of the common causes of school refusal behavior is separation anxiety disorder (SAD). Research suggests that children with SAD and school refusal behavior show an increased rate of psychiatric consultation and a decreased likelihood of…
Descriptors: Educational Attainment, School Phobia, Social Development, Separation Anxiety
Wimmer, Mary – Education Digest: Essential Readings Condensed for Quick Review, 2008
School attendance is an ongoing concern for administrators, particularly in middle-level and high school. Frequent absences affect student learning, test scores, and social development. Administrators who understand the causes of school refusal behavior and are aware of effective intervention strategies can help provide supportive school…
Descriptors: Intervention, Attendance, Coping, School Phobia
Church, Jean; Edwards, Berwyn – Special Education: Forward Trends, 1984
A special unit for children failing to attend school addressed the needs of students with school phobia, psychosomatic symptoms, fantasies, difficulties with parents, problems with clothes and behavior, poor self-image, and gaps in knowledge. The program aimed for reintegration into ordinary schools. (CL)
Descriptors: Emotional Disturbances, Psychosomatic Disorders, School Phobia, Special Schools
Exceptional Parent, 1985
The case study describes counseling for a family whose 7-year old refused to go to school and whose parents had never really come to terms with the death of their physically handicapped son. (CL)
Descriptors: Death, Disabilities, Emotional Adjustment, Family Problems
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McAnanly, Eileen – Journal of School Health, 1986
The importance of prompt treatment of the school phobic child, and the need for good communication among those concerned, are addressed in this article. The manifestation of school phobia is described and intervention methods are reviewed. (Author/MT)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Intervention, Parent School Relationship, School Nurses
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Kearney, Christopher A.; Lemos, Amie; Silverman, Jenna – Behavior Analyst Today, 2004
School refusal behavior refers to child-motivated refusal to attend school and/or difficulty attending classes for an entire day (Kearney & Silverman, 1996). As such, the term represents an umbrella construct for many historical ones that have been used to describe youths with problematic absenteeism, including truancy, psychoneurotic truancy,…
Descriptors: Functional Behavioral Assessment, Resistance (Psychology), Attendance, School Phobia
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Brulle, Andrew R.; And Others – Elementary School Guidance and Counseling, 1985
Describes the characteristics, epidemiology, treatment, and implications of school phobia. Treatment methods focus on psychodynamic, cognitive and behavioral approaches. (BL)
Descriptors: Children, Client Characteristics (Human Services), Counseling Techniques, Counselor Role
Friesen, Mary – School Guidance Worker, 1985
Non-attendance in school as an avoiding behavior is discussed with implications for counselor intervention. (BL)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Attendance, Coping, Counseling Techniques
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Boimare, Serge – International Journal of Early Childhood, 2001
Discusses ways to reduce children's fear and discomfort in the learning situation by accommodating the children's interests through cultural themes that represent emotions and anxieties preventing the organization of thought. (JPB)
Descriptors: Childhood Attitudes, Cultural Activities, Early Childhood Education, Emotional Adjustment
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Miranda, Michael V. – Community College Enterprise, 2007
The academically underprepared community college student may also be psychosocially underprepared for college, a condition contributing to the development of classroom-specific social phobia and to the high attrition rate at community colleges. The "Find Your Voice Program" uses individual and group cognitive-behavioral techniques to develop…
Descriptors: Social Integration, Community Colleges, Academic Persistence, Active Learning
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