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Showing 91 to 105 of 482 results Save | Export
Kuchner, Joan F. – 1998
Many parents find that the daily stress of coping with the demanding realities of their work lives leaves them with little personal and family time; playing with their children may therefore fall to the bottom of the "to-do list." One of the tasks of early childhood professionals thus becomes helping parents understand the nature and…
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Parent Child Relationship, Parents, Play
Belle, Deborah; And Others – 1978
Stress appears to jeopardize mental health and maternal behavior and indirectly to jeopardize the mother-child relationship by increasing the risk of maternal depression. An intensive study investigated the stresses experienced by low-income mothers. While both life event and life condition stress were strongly associated with depression, life…
Descriptors: Community Services, Depression (Psychology), Family Counseling, Family Life
Eisenstadt, Jeanne Watson; Powell, Douglas R. – 1984
This study examined ways in which 42 low income mothers used a multifaceted neighborhood-based parent education program. Two different patterns of sequential relationship between use of staff services, verbal participation in a discussion group, attendance, and formation of peer ties were identified. These patterns were shown to be related to…
Descriptors: Children, Citizen Participation, Community Programs, Conceptual Tempo
Parfenoff, Sheila H.; Jose, Paul E. – 1989
A study of school-age children was designed to: (1) identify hassles that children experience in their families, among peers, and at school; (2) determine the ability of hassles to predict unhealthy psychological and physical functioning; and (3) explore the effect of daily hassles on school behavior. A measure of children's daily stress that used…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students, Interpersonal Competence
Honig, Alice S.; Gardner, Cathy – 1985
Researchers have pointed out that the effects of generic stressors such as poverty may be mediated through other stressors in the microsystem of parent-child relationships or personal characteristics of family members. Specific, potential mediating stressors were sought in this study involving 191 low income Moslem families who had immigrated from…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Family Environment, Family Life, Family Relationship
Dail, Paula W. – 1986
Unemployment and the resulting financial hardships which occur are among the most difficult circumstances imposed upon families. A study was undertaken to identify the sources and degree of stress experienced by families affected by economic displacement through unemployment. A sample of unemployed families (N=146) responded to components of the…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Age Differences, Family Income, Family Problems
Neely, Margery A. – 1985
Studies have traced a possible link between patterns of family interaction, faulty socialization, child abuse, and delinquent behavior. Counselors can respond to the needs of society to reduce violence by their access to the research on human development and in their work with families and children. Some types of discipline and parental attitudes…
Descriptors: Antisocial Behavior, Child Abuse, Coping, Counselor Role
Carson, David K.; Swanson, Dee M. – 1991
A total of 38 children of 5-6 years in one of four early childhood or kindergarten programs participated in a study of the predictive relationship of stress and coping to development and psychosocial adjustment. Measures of independent variables included the Life Events Scale for Children, Family Invulnerability Test, Hassles Scale for Children,…
Descriptors: Coping, Elementary School Students, Individual Development, Predictor Variables
Duncan, David F. – 1983
Children experience stress just as adults do. Various responses to stress can damage the body's health in at least two different ways. First, they may do direct damage to the tissues--especially those of the circulatory system. Second, and more often important to the health of children, they may suppress the body's natural defenses against…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Adults, Child Development, Child Psychology
Krauss, Marty Wyngaarden – 1993
This study tracked parental stress among 115 mothers of infants and toddlers with disabilities to evaluate patterns of stability and change in parental adaptation during the early childhood period. Parents were given the Parenting Stress Index three times: upon entry into an early intervention program, 1 year later, and when the child reached age…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Behavior Problems, Change, Child Rearing
Lorber, Rudy; And Others – 1982
To understand the origins of demonstrated tracking deficits possessed by parents of problem children, a study examined in detail possible differences between a sample of parents with behavior-problem children and a sample of parents with "normal" children. Subjects were 48 mothers who had children between the ages of 4 and 10. While…
Descriptors: Aggression, Antisocial Behavior, Behavior Problems, Children
Rinear, Eileen E. – 1985
This paper recognizes murder as a major cause of mortality among adolescents and young adults and addresses the need for research examining the effects of murder on the victim's surviving family members. The information contained in this report was obtained from surveys completed by 237 members of the Parents of Murdered Children support group.…
Descriptors: Children, Coping, Death, Grief
Chandler, Louis A. – 1982
Rating scales are increasingly popular in research and clinical studies of children. The Stress Response Scale was developed to test whether a child's behavior rating scale could be constructed based on a theoretical model of personality and if it could be validated by empirical means in order to obtain clinically useful factor scores. The scale…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Behavior Rating Scales, Elementary Secondary Education, Emotional Problems
Valentine-Dunham, Karrie; Gipson, Martin T. – 1980
A brief overview describes a study in which high school students were taught to deal effectively with "critical incidents" in a pre-parenting program. The program described involved pretest; training in anger control, alternative responses to stress, and appropriate responses to behaviors; and posttesting. The study found students could be taught…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Child Abuse, Conditioning, Emotional Response
Quinn, Kathleen L. – 1992
Literature exists to support the statement that children suffer from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). The diagnosis is not one that is commonly made in children and is generally considered occurring in returning war veterans or adult victims of trauma, including incest. The American Psychological Association (APA) Diagnostic and Statistical…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Children, Clinical Diagnosis
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