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Showing 2 results for Separation Anxiety

Farnaz Ekvan,
Volume 14, Issue 18 (12-2022)
Abstract

The purpose of the current research is to predict separation anxiety based on parental mentalization with the mediating role of emotion regulation. The research method is correlation using structural equation modeling. The statistical population of the present study included all the third to fifth elementary students and their mothers in Tehran in the academic year of 1401-1400, and 160 of them were selected as a sample using multi-stage cluster sampling. . The measurement tools in this research were separation anxiety questionnaires (parent version) by Han et al. (2003), parental mentalization by Leviten et al. (2017) and emotion regulation by Gross and John (2003), all of which had acceptable validity and reliability. In order to analyze the data, two descriptive (central and dispersion indices) and inferential (structural equations) methods were used using SPSS-V24 and Lisrel-V8.8 software. The results showed that parental mentalization can directly and indirectly (with the mediating role of emotion regulation) predict separation anxiety. In general, the research results indicated that emotion regulation plays a mediating role in the relationship between separation anxiety and parental mentalization.
 
Fatemeh Darvishi Chaleshtari, Ahmad Ghazanfari,
Volume 17, Issue 21 (8-2023)
Abstract

The purpose of this study was to investigate the effectiveness of cognitive-behavioral game therapy on bullying, separation anxiety and academic enthusiasm of first grade female students in Shahrekord city. The method of the current research was semi-experimental with a two-group pre-test-post-test design (test-control) and two-month follow-up. The statistical population of the research consisted of all first grade female students of Shahrekord, numbering 11,832 people. In this research, available sampling method was used and a total of 30 people were selected and randomly divided into two groups (experimental and control). The research tools included the Illinois Bullying Standard Questionnaire (2001), Spence et al.'s (1999) separation anxiety, and Fredericks' academic enthusiasm, Blumenfield, Paris (2004). Cognitive-behavioral game therapy intervention was implemented for the experimental group during 8 sessions of 30 minutes and the data was analyzed using multivariate analysis of covariance and analysis of variance with repeated measurements in SPSS25 software. The findings indicated the effectiveness of cognitive-behavioral play therapy on bullying, separation anxiety and academic enthusiasm and their components. The results showed that the eta coefficient of the intervention effect on bullying was 0.738, separation anxiety was 0.623, and academic enthusiasm was 0.632 at a significant level of 0.001. The two-month follow-up showed that after two months of cognitive-behavioral game therapy training, there was no significant change in the variables of bullying, separation anxiety and academic enthusiasm. Therefore, this intervention can be used as an effective intervention to reduce bullying and separation anxiety of students and increase students' academic enthusiasm.
 


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