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Journal ArticleDOI

Impacts of the CARE for Teachers program on teachers’ social and emotional competence and classroom interactions

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TLDR
CARE for Teachers as discussed by the authors is a mindfulness-based professional development program designed to promote teachers' social and emotional competence and improve the quality of classroom interactions, using a cluster randomized trial design involving 36 urban elementary schools and 224 teachers.
Abstract
Understanding teachers’ stress is of critical importance to address the challenges in today’s educational climate. Growing numbers of teachers are reporting high levels of occupational stress, and high levels of teacher turnover are having a negative impact on education quality. Cultivating Awareness and Resilience in Education (CARE for Teachers) is a mindfulness-based professional development program designed to promote teachers’ social and emotional competence and improve the quality of classroom interactions. The efficacy of the program was assessed using a cluster randomized trial design involving 36 urban elementary schools and 224 teachers. The CARE for Teachers program involved 30 hr of in-person training in addition to intersession phone coaching. At both pre- and postintervention, teachers completed self-report measures and assessments of their participating students. Teachers’ classrooms were observed and coded using the Classroom Assessment Scoring System (CLASS). Analyses showed that CARE for Teachers had statistically significant direct positive effects on adaptive emotion regulation, mindfulness, psychological distress, and time urgency. CARE for Teachers also had a statistically significant positive effect on the emotional support domain of the CLASS. The present findings indicate that CARE for Teachers is an effective professional development both for promoting teachers’ social and emotional competence and increasing the quality of their classroom interactions. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2017 APA, all rights reserved)

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Journal ArticleDOI

Statistical Analysis with Missing Data

Martin G. Gibson
- 01 Mar 1989 - 

An Interaction-Based Approach to Enhancing Secondary School Instruction and Student Achievement.

TL;DR: A randomized controlled trial of My Teaching Partner–Secondary—a Web-mediated approach focused on improving teacher-student interactions in the classroom—examined the efficacy of the approach in improving teacher quality and student achievement.
Journal ArticleDOI

Social and Emotional Learning and Teachers.

TL;DR: The extent to which US teacher education programs prepare teacher candidates to promote their own and their students' social-emotional competence is examined, and Kimberly Schonert-Reichl argues that the authors can and should do much more.
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Teacher stress and burnout in urban middle schools: Associations with job demands, resources, and effective classroom practices.

TL;DR: This article examined the interplay of job demands and resources, stress and burnout, and effective classroom practices (operationalized as warm-demanding teaching) in urban public school teachers.
References
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Cutoff criteria for fit indexes in covariance structure analysis : Conventional criteria versus new alternatives

TL;DR: In this article, the adequacy of the conventional cutoff criteria and several new alternatives for various fit indexes used to evaluate model fit in practice were examined, and the results suggest that, for the ML method, a cutoff value close to.95 for TLI, BL89, CFI, RNI, and G...
Journal ArticleDOI

A Coefficient of agreement for nominal Scales

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a procedure for having two or more judges independently categorize a sample of units and determine the degree, significance, and significance of the units. But they do not discuss the extent to which these judgments are reproducible, i.e., reliable.
Journal ArticleDOI

A global measure of perceived stress.

TL;DR: The Perceived Stress Scale showed adequate reliability and, as predicted, was correlated with life-event scores, depressive and physical symptomatology, utilization of health services, social anxiety, and smoking-reduction maintenance and was a better predictor of the outcome in question than were life- event scores.
Book

Statistical Analysis with Missing Data

TL;DR: This work states that maximum Likelihood for General Patterns of Missing Data: Introduction and Theory with Ignorable Nonresponse and large-Sample Inference Based on Maximum Likelihood Estimates is likely to be high.
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What are the data collection methods that are used to measure teachers' competence, social interactions, and emotional learning?

The data collection methods used in this study included self-report measures completed by teachers, assessments of participating students, and classroom observations using the Classroom Assessment Scoring System (CLASS).