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Peer reviewedNorton, Francis H. – Personnel and Guidance Journal, 1981
Discusses the developmental needs of foster children when they are seperated from their natural parents. Examines stages of separation trauma, including shock, protest, despair, and detachment. Notes suggestions for counseling with foster children, including a foster parent's and educator's view. (RC)
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Behavior Patterns, Coping, Counseling Techniques
Peer reviewedHiemstra, Roger – Educational Gerontology, 1981
Analyzes the evolutionary development of interest, knowledge, and professional involvement in educational gerontology. Discusses Howard McCluskey's many valuable contributions to the field, including his theory of margin which has clarified the need to balance in the aging stresses and demands (load) on a person with coping resources (power).…
Descriptors: Adult Development, Adult Education, Aging (Individuals), Coping
Wagner, Carol A.; McKenzie, Rita – Journal of College Student Personnel, 1980
Describes an approach to enhance success skills of high-risk undergraduate students from educationally and economically disadvantaged backgrounds. Efforts are focused on interpersonal, problem solving, and language skills necessary for coping and achieving in academia and life. Recommendations and implications for college personnel workers are…
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Coping, Disadvantaged Youth, Economically Disadvantaged
Juhan, Gary W. – Southern College Personnel Association Journal, 1980
Explores the effects of current divorce trends on the college-age population. Being informed of impending divorce is traumatic for college students and is often followed by shock, depression, anger and low self-esteem. Parental dating behavior, the loyalty dilemma, role reversal and remarriage represent problem areas in adjustment. (RC)
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), College Students, Communication Problems, Coping
Peer reviewedAmatea, Ellen S.; Cross, E. Gail – Journal of the NAWDAC, 1981
Professional women may have difficulties combining the role of professional worker with that of wife and mother. Describes common issues which face women, discusses methods for coping with competing demands, and presents a structured approach for helping women conceptualize the issue and choose appropriate intervention strategies. (Author)
Descriptors: Coping, Counseling Techniques, Employed Women, Family Relationship
Peer reviewedGerber, Lane A. – Journal of Medical Education, 1979
Finding a clinical attending physician role model is one mechanism that medical students can use to cope with the stress engendered by a clinical clerkship. A survey of medical students at the Medical College of Ohio explores this role modeling process. Relevant literature is related and implications of the attending physician role model are…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Clinical Experience, Coping, Higher Education
Peer reviewedHoltzman, W. H. – Human Development, 1979
Reviews the research methods, design, and main findings of the Austin-Mexico City cross-cultural study of personality and intellectual development using an overlapping longitudinal design. A span of 12 years of development was extrapolated from six years of repeated testing with children ages 6, 9, and 12 years. (SS)
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Style, Coping, Cross Cultural Studies
Peer reviewedGavidia-Payne, Susana; Stoneman, Zolinda – Child Development, 1997
Used structural equational modeling to examine the combined influence and predictive ability of family characteristics on maternal and paternal involvement in early intervention programs. Found that coping was a significant predictor of maternal and paternal involvement as well as a mediator variable between family functioning and parental…
Descriptors: Children, Coping, Disabilities, Early Childhood Education
Rosado, Luis A.; Ligons, Claudette Merrell – Teacher Education and Practice, 1997
Hispanic individuals typically experience several often traumatic stages of cultural adjustment as they adapt to life in the United States. This includes euphoria, culture shock (hostility), recovery (humor), and assimilation or adaptation. This article examines the challenges of each stage and explains the implications for schooling. (SM)
Descriptors: Acculturation, Adjustment (to Environment), Coping, Cultural Differences
Peer reviewedDevine, Danielle; Forehand, Rex – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1996
Examined marital and child factors in predicting divorce potential and divorce occurrence. Participants included 140 adolescents and their parents. For both parents, lower levels of marital satisfaction predicted higher levels of divorce potential. In turn, divorce potential predicted greater likelihood for divorce up to seven years later. No…
Descriptors: Adults, Coping, Divorce, Early Adolescents
Eimer, Timothy; And Others – Learning, 1996
This article examines the psychological needs of a high school student whose best friend was murdered. After describing how one teacher handled the situation, the article offers a school counselor's view and a school psychologist's view of how to handle such a situation. (SM)
Descriptors: Coping, Death, Emotional Response, Grief
Peer reviewedAyotte, Violaine; Saucier, Jean-Francois; Bowen, Francois; Laurendeau, Marie-Claire; Fournier, Michel; Blais, Jean-Guy – Journal of Primary Prevention, 2003
Evaluates a program that promoted adaptation of students in their first year of secondary school. The program focused on developing healthy self-perceptions, and cognitive, affective and behavioral skills. Analyses revealed the predicted positive effects of the program on psychological and social outcomes. Findings underline the need to address…
Descriptors: Coping, High Risk Students, Middle Schools, Program Effectiveness
Texas Child Care, 2002
Describes the common symptoms of stress exhibited by young children including: (1) social or behavioral; (2) physical; (3) emotional; (4) cognitive; and (5) language. Addresses causes of stress, which typically represent change, fear, or loss in children. Offers strategies for easing children's stress including muscle relaxation, deep breathing,…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Caregiver Child Relationship, Caregiver Role, Child Caregivers
Peer reviewedvan Huijgevoort, Toos – Journal of Visual Impairment & Blindness, 2002
This article describes how the self-confrontation method (SCM) can help people cope with visual impairment. The actual impact of the impairment can be studied by establishing how being visually impaired is expressed in self-narratives. The different phases of SCM are explained and two case studies are presented. (Contains references.) (Author/CR)
Descriptors: Adults, Case Studies, Coping, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedNyamathi, Adeline; Vasquez, Rose – Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences, 1989
The overwhelming focus of the lives of 43 poor, at-risk Hispanic women was coping with threats to their role as providers for their children. Threats included poverty, potential loss of health, drug addiction, lack of social support, low self-esteem, helplessness, and loss of control. Contains 27 references. (SV)
Descriptors: Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome, At Risk Persons, Content Analysis, Coping

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