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Showing 1 to 15 of 21 results
Noam, Gil G.; Bernstein-Yamashiro, Beth – New Directions for Youth Development, 2013
This conclusion to the volume presents a dialogue from the perspective of educator and clinician. With examples from professional development and practice, the discussion revolves around teacher training and the role of the administrator in creating a bounded and safe environment in which teachers can develop healthy relationships. It discusses…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Relationship, Mental Health Workers, Interprofessional Relationship, Counselor Teacher Cooperation
Bernstein-Yamashiro, Beth; Noam, Gil G. – New Directions for Youth Development, 2013
In data derived from student interviews, students describe how they see teacher-student relationships function for them in their experience of school, their personal development, and their academic success. These relationships are central to students' ability to feel connected at school and to their emerging identities. Students describe how…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Mentors, Interviews, Teacher Student Relationship
Bernstein-Yamashiro, Beth; Noam, Gil G. – New Directions for Youth Development, 2013
Because schools rarely provide guidelines for teachers that outline how they should conduct personal relationships with students, teachers must wrestle individually with how to establish, communicate, and maintain clear boundaries in their interactions. As schools work to become more personal environments, school administrators will need to help…
Descriptors: Teacher Student Relationship, Mentors, Interpersonal Communication, Interpersonal Competence
Bernstein-Yamashiro, Beth; Noam, Gil G. – New Directions for Youth Development, 2013
Teachers find that having close personal relationships with students is deeply rewarding in their work and that they contribute to more effective classrooms. The relationships, which many consider to be part and parcel of good teaching, afford teachers the opportunity to reach students intellectually and emotionally. Still, the relationships can…
Descriptors: Teacher Student Relationship, Interviews, Teaching Experience, Teacher Attitudes
Noam, Gil G.; Bernstein-Yamashiro, Beth – New Directions for Youth Development, 2013
This article addresses the fact that student-teacher relationships uncover many clinical issues, such as trauma. It looks at statistics of how prevalent mental health disorders and problems are and then shows that no teacher can handle all of the kinds of problems that will emerge in open relationships with the students. They need to do this work…
Descriptors: Public Health, Mental Health, Mental Disorders, Counselor Teacher Cooperation
Bernstein-Yamashiro, Beth; Noam, Gil G. – New Directions for Youth Development, 2013
A substantial percentage of students come to school with a number of stress factors from life circumstances, personal clinical attributes, and typical adolescent challenges. As a result, some students become disengaged from school, are unsuccessful, or drop out of school. School structures are not always equipped to respond to such problems. A…
Descriptors: Teacher Student Relationship, Emotional Development, Social Development, Social Cognition
Bernstein-Yamashiro, Beth; Noam, Gil G. – New Directions for Youth Development, 2013
This article describes activities that can be used with multiple audiences of teachers, administrators, or other caregivers regarding setting boundaries in personal relationships with students. First, participants must think about and discuss relationships that they experienced with their own teachers in the past and determine what aspects of…
Descriptors: Teacher Student Relationship, Caregivers, Group Activities, Interpersonal Competence
Noam, Gil G.; Bernstein-Yamashiro, Beth – New Directions for Youth Development, 2013
This article examines the kinds of relationships that nonteacher educators, especially youth development practitioners working in after-school settings, have with students. It addresses the fact that these adults in schools have an explicit youth-oriented and relational approach, find out many productive and anxiety-provoking facts about their…
Descriptors: After School Programs, School Personnel, Interprofessional Relationship, Social Cognition
Strohmeier, Dagmar; Noam, Gil G. – New Directions for Youth Development, 2012
This chapter reviews recent research on bullying from an educator's perspective. It is well known that bullying, a serious issue in schools, can be prevented when educators intervene. But research has shown that it is difficult for educators to detect bullying situations in their school and intervene competently and effectively. This chapter…
Descriptors: Bullying, Educational Environment, Teacher Role, Prevention
Malone, Helen Janc; Noam, Gil G. – New Directions for Youth Development, 2011
Expanded learning time and opportunities (ELTO) has emerged in recent years as a viable whole-school and whole-child strategy that both honors academic goals and supports broader educational and developmental ones. More schools serving low-income students are extending their schedules, using time as an important lever to expand learning…
Descriptors: Educational Opportunities, School Schedules, Educational Change, Equal Education
Malti, Tina; Noam, Gil G. – New Directions for Youth Development, 2008
The authors provide a selected review of mental health and educational concerns evident in U.S. middle schools and describes promising and important strategies to ameliorate the high rates of students with mental health and academic difficulties. Despite some promising and important strategies, service systems are fragmented, and comprehensive…
Descriptors: Student Needs, Middle Schools, Emotional Disturbances, Mental Health
Noam, Gil G.; Malti, Tina – New Directions for Youth Development, 2008
The authors introduce the RALLY (Responsive Advocacy for Life and Learning in Youth) approach. RALLY is a school- and afterschool-based approach addressing academic success, youth development, and mental health for youth. Based on developmental and relational principles, RALLY's main goals are to promote students' resiliency, development, and…
Descriptors: Mental Health, Youth Programs, Advocacy, After School Programs
Yablon, Yaacov B.; Noam, Gil G. – New Directions for Youth Development, 2008
The authors describe practitioners' professional development, the challenges and dilemmas that they confront, and the support they receive in their work. They focus on examples of supervision sessions and describe typical dilemmas and solutions that come up during these sessions. These examples reflect four main themes that were identified as…
Descriptors: Practicum Supervision, Supervisory Methods, Supervisor Supervisee Relationship, Group Discussion
Davidson, Adina; Schwartz, Sarah E. O.; Noam, Gil G. – New Directions for Youth Development, 2008
In order to maximize the effectiveness of prevention and intervention efforts with youth and address the needs of the whole student, it is necessary to work not only directly with youth, but also to partner with other key adults in a young person's life: parents and guardians, teachers, after-school staff, and clinicians. Inherent in RALLY's…
Descriptors: Youth Opportunities, Youth Programs, Comprehensive School Health Education, Intervention
Liu, Cindy H.; Malti, Tina; Noam, Gil G. – New Directions for Youth Development, 2008
An assessment from a holistic perspective considers the overall well-being of the adolescent and seeks to understand the adolescent's development and resiliency in relation to social relationships and their context and risks, given the association between these factors and the goal to promote each area. It is recommended that measures in the…
Descriptors: Holistic Approach, Adolescents, Student Evaluation, Well Being
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