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Lori D. Ungemah – English Journal, 2017
Research in English education needs further exploration on the purposeful implementation of death and grief within English curriculum. In this article Lori D. Ungemah examines how, as a high school English teacher, she integrated death and grief into a unit of study with her eleventh- grade English class. She discusses how her curriculum…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Language Arts, Death, Grief
Khalid, Nikita; Zapparrata, Nicole; Loughlin, Kevin; Albright, Glenn – Online Submission, 2022
Many Pre-K through grade 12 (PK-12) students have experienced traumatic events throughout the pandemic in a myriad of ways including the death of family members and peers, loss of social interaction and increased violence at home. The consequences can be traumatic and manifest themselves in fear, anxiety, anger, isolation, and loneliness. Too…
Descriptors: Preschool Education, Elementary Secondary Education, Trauma, Death
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McCafferty, Paul; McCutcheon, Judith – Child Care in Practice, 2021
Caring for a child that has Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) has implications for parents' social and emotional health and well-being. The following article presents the findings from a review of the literature to help elucidate some of the issues that these parents experience. The article begins by arguing that early intervention is the key to…
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Stress Variables
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Wentworth, Annette – Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education, 2021
Black women in South Africa (SA) face multiple and interlocking systems of oppression every-day; among them gender-based violence, economic marginalization, and the legacy of racialized and gendered subjugation under centuries of colonization, followed by the apartheid regime. On the heels of South Africa's transition to democracy in 1994, the…
Descriptors: Females, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS), Pandemics, Foreign Countries
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Chen, Cliff Yung-Chi; Panebianco, Andrea – Child & Youth Care Forum, 2018
Background: Many young children experience the death of a family member and they may be at risk for developing psychological and behavioral problems, but not much is known about how to help young children cope with such a stressful and painful experience. Objective: The purposes of this study are to identify the interventions for bereaved young…
Descriptors: Intervention, Young Children, School Health Services, Mental Health Programs
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Streeter, Kaitlyn; Deaver, Sarah – Art Therapy: Journal of the American Art Therapy Association, 2018
This multiple case study investigated the impact of art therapy treatment on depressive symptoms in women diagnosed with infertility. A mixed-methods study design was implemented in which 13 participants each engaged in 6 individual art therapy sessions. The Beck Depression Inventory-II (BDI-II) was administered before and after the 6 sessions,…
Descriptors: Art Therapy, Females, Mixed Methods Research, Case Studies
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Aucott, Clare; Soni, Anita – Educational Psychology in Practice, 2016
Providing support to schools following a critical incident has become an established part of service delivery for many Educational Psychology Services (EPSs) in the UK. This article offers reflections on the use of Critical Incident Stress Debriefing (CISD) in schools. A review of the literature on critical incidents, trauma, resilience and…
Descriptors: Stress Management, Literature Reviews, Critical Incidents Method, Resilience (Psychology)
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Nilsson, Doris; Ängarne-Lindberg, Teresia – Child Care in Practice, 2016
There are few studies that have investigated children and adolescents' own perceptions of early intervention following the death of a parent, and even fewer that focus on children and adolescents who have lost a parent suddenly. The aim of this study was to use interviews to identify what children and the surviving parent perceived to be helpful…
Descriptors: Children, Parents, Death, Interviews
Brown, Gerald B. – ProQuest LLC, 2016
Grief is widely defined and covers a plethora of losses that involves a range of sometimes easily discernible emotions. While grief can be the result of loss in general, it can be either prolonged or temporary and indiscriminate of age or gender. Children are no exception. When considering the loss of a significant individual such as a parent…
Descriptors: Parents, Death, Grief, Elementary School Students
Crepeau-Hobson, Franci – Communique, 2020
COVID-19 is a crisis unlike any the country has faced before. Unlike other events, the pandemic is affecting every community in some way. The constantly evolving situation is creating significant stress and uncertainty--not only for children and youth, but also for those charged with caring for those students at home and in educational and mental…
Descriptors: Public Health, Crisis Management, Caregivers, School Role
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Fu, Rong – SAGE Open, 2019
The burden of dementia in China is expected to increase dramatically. This study aimed to estimate the potential impact of early parental death on cognitive functioning in late life and whether education is a possible mechanism underlying this association. Data were derived from the 2002 and 2005 waves of the Chinese Longitudinal Healthy Longevity…
Descriptors: Dementia, Older Adults, Parents, Foreign Countries
Jarvis, Thomas M. – Georgia School Counselors Association Journal, 2015
School counselors play a crucial role when schools face any type of tragedy or loss, many times learning from experience because response plans are not in place. School counselors are called upon to help shape and provide the response to students, staff, and parents. The demands of managing all of the aspects of school tragedy, in addition to the…
Descriptors: School Counselors, Counselor Role, Coping, Grief
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Clayton, Robert E. – Journal of College Student Psychotherapy, 2015
Inhibition of emotional experience is a widely acknowledged characteristic of many Western-raised men. While this affective inhibition may impact men chronically in many ways, it becomes particularly salient when men are bereaved or otherwise grieving and are unable fully to experience normative emotional responses to loss. This article briefly…
Descriptors: Males, Grief, Inhibition, Emotional Experience
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Joldersma, Clarence W. – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2014
The paper develops a conceptual framework for understanding the work of ethical remembrance in the classroom. Using David Hansen's recent example of using Sebald's novels in his classroom to do the work or remembrance, the paper argues that the effect of Sebald's novels is best understood using Walter Benjamin's figure of the…
Descriptors: Ethics, Memory, Novels, Teaching Methods
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Ungemah, Lori – Learning Communities: Research & Practice, 2017
In this narrative piece, the author describes how a learning community was able to transfer their practices of care to support a colleague as he faced illness and death. The author chronicles how the learning community responded to support their team member, other members of the campus community, and the students. She reflects on this experience…
Descriptors: Death, Communities of Practice, Caring, Helping Relationship
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