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Todd McClimans – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Teachers are leaving the teaching profession before reaching the age of retirement at increasingly high numbers, many citing increased stress as a factor in their decision to quit, contributing to a national teacher shortage. This qualitative study investigated the stressors experienced by eight K-12 teachers in a rural Pennsylvania school…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Stress Management, Family Work Relationship, School Districts
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Dunifon, Rachel; Kalil, Ariel; Crosby, Danielle A.; Su, Jessica Houston – Developmental Psychology, 2013
Many mothers work in jobs with nonstandard schedules (i.e., schedules that involve work outside of the traditional 9-5, Monday through Friday schedule); this is particularly true for economically disadvantaged mothers. In the present article, we used longitudinal data from the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Survey (n = 2,367 mothers of…
Descriptors: Employed Parents, Parent Child Relationship, Scheduling, Well Being
Chandra, Anita – RAND Corporation, 2010
This testimony was presented before the House Armed Services Committee, Subcommittee on Military Personnel on March 9, 2010. It discusses the findings from the study "Children on the Homefront: The Experience of Children from Military Families." This study provided important data on the well-being of military children and quantitatively…
Descriptors: Military Personnel, Employed Parents, Family Work Relationship, Children
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Hsueh, JoAnn; Yoshikawa, Hirokazu – Developmental Psychology, 2007
Longitudinal data from the New Hope Project--an experimental evaluation of a work-based antipoverty program in Milwaukee, Wisconsin--was used to explore concurrent and lagged associations of nonstandard schedules and variable shifts with parental psychological well-being, regularity of family mealtimes, and child well-being among low-income…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, Behavior Problems, Low Income, Low Income Groups
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Dunifon, Rachel; Kalil, Ariel; Bajracharya, Ashish – Developmental Psychology, 2005
In the wake of welfare reform, thousands of low-income single mothers have transitioned into the labor market. In this article, the authors examine how the work conditions of mothers leaving welfare for employment are associated with the emotional well-being of 372 children ages 5 to 15 years. The authors examine the cumulative incidence, over a…
Descriptors: Welfare Services, Behavior Problems, Mothers, Children
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Eisenhower, A.; Blacher, J. – Journal of Intellectual Disability Research, 2006
Background: Two opposing perspectives--role strain and role enhancement--were considered as predictive of women's psychological and physical health. The authors examined the relation between multiple role occupancy (parenting, employment, marriage) and well-being (depression and health) among mothers of young adults with intellectual disability…
Descriptors: Young Adults, Mental Retardation, Ethnicity, Well Being