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Adolescent Coping: Promoting Resilience and Well-Being

✍ Scribed by Erica Frydenberg


Publisher
Routledge
Year
2018
Tongue
English
Leaves
227
Series
Adolescence and Society
Edition
3
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


How do young people cope with the multitude of difficult situations and scenarios that are associated with growing up, like anxiety and depression, as well as illness, rejection and family breakdown? How can we facilitate and encourage, through a combination of health, well-being and positive mindset, healthy development during adolescence and beyond?

With a substantial focus on the positive aspects of coping, including an emphasis on developing resilience and the achievement of happiness, Erica Frydenberg presents the latest developments in the field of coping. Adolescent Coping highlights the ways in which coping can be measured and implemented in a wide range of circumstances and contexts, with suggestions for the development of coping skills and coping skills training, and it provides strong scholarly evidence for the concepts and constructs that it promotes as providing a pathway to resilience. The work is framed as an ongoing interaction between individuals and their environments as represented by the psychosocial ecological model of Bronfenbrenner.

The major theories of coping are articulated that take account of the transactional model, resources theories and proactive models of coping. Areas of recent interest such as neuroscience and epigenetics are included, alongside a new chapter, β€˜Cyberworld’, which provides insights on new and relevant topics such as mindfulness and the impact of social media as they relate to coping in the contemporary context.


Adolescent Coping will be of interest to practitioners in psychology, social work, sociology, education and youth and community work as well as to students on courses in adolescent development in these fields.

✦ Table of Contents


Cover Page
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication Page
Contents
List of Illustrations
Foreword
Preface
Reference
Acknowledgements
List of Acronyms
Chapter 1: Positive psychology and related constructs
1.1 The socio-ecologicalmodel
1.2 Positive psychology
1.2.1 Happiness
1.3 Well-being
1.4 Resilience
1.5 Grit
1.6 Emotional intelligence
1.7 Summary remarks
Notes
References
Chapter 2:
What is coping?
2.1 Early approaches
2.2 Theoretical understandings
2.3 Defining coping
2.3.1 The role of appraisal
2.4 Resource theories of coping
2.4.1 Resource loss and gain spirals
2.5 Communal coping
2.6 Proactive coping
2.6.1 Proactive coping in education
2.7 Some theoretical issues
2.8 Summary comments
References
Chapter 3:
The measurement of coping
3.1 Reviews of coping
3.2 The ACS and the CSA
3.3 The short form of the ACS
3.4 Measuring effectiveness
3.5 Concluding remarks
References
Chapter 4: Coping:
What we have learned
4.1 Age and gender
4.2 Cross-cultural studies
4.3 Coping resources
4.4 Problem solving and coping
4.5 Well-beingand coping
4.6 Bullying
4.7 Proactive coping
4.8 Refugee adolescents and their coping
4.9 Special groups of young people
4.9.1 Type 1 diabetes
4.9.2 Autism spectrum disorder
4.10 Summary remarks
References
Chapter 5: Family coping:
Culture and context
5.1 Development and the family
5.2 The ideal family
5.3 Family patterns of coping
5.3.1 Overall comparisons of parent and child coping
5.3.2 Differences between fathers and sons, and mothers andd aughters
5.3.3 Similarities between parent and child coping responses
5.3.4 Differences of coping styles between fathers and sons
5.3.5 Differences of coping styles between mothers and daughters
5.4 Some issues to consider
5.4.1 Parental mental health
5.4.2 Siblings of adolescents with special needs
5.4.3 Family climate
5.5 Concluding remarks
Note
References
Chapter 6:
Well-beingand resilience
6.1 Well-being
6.2 Relationship between well-being and coping
6.3 School connectedness
6.4 School belonging
6.5 Academic coping
6.6 Mindset
6.7 Summary remarks
References
Chapter 7: An intersect:
Ecology, neuroscience and epigenetics
7.1 The ecological approach
7.2 The adolescent brain
7.3 The social brain
7.4 Epigenetics
7.5 Mindsight
7.6 Resilience and culture
7.7 Concluding remarks
Note
References
Chapter 8: Anxiety, depression and other related conditions
8.1 Anxiety
8.2 Self-esteemand anxiety
8.3 Anxiety sensitivity
8.4 Parenting style
8.5 Depression
8.6 Coping and depression
8.7 Suicide
8.8 Breaking the cycle
8.9 Prevention of adolescent depression through programs of instruction
8.10 The relationship between depression, stress and coping
8.10.1 Gender differences
8.11 Rumination
8.12 Self-harm
8.13 Summary remarks
Note
References
Chapter 9:
Coping with diverse conditions
9.1 Eating disorders
9.1.1 Anorexia nervosa
9.1.2 Bulimia nervosa
9.1.3 Binge eating disorder
9.1.4 Prevention
9.2 Coping with boredom
9.3 Loneliness and coping
9.4 Chronic illness
9.5 Concluding remarks
Notes
References
Chapter 10:
Adolescent risk
10.1 Transition
10.2 Risk factors
10.2.1 Parental separation and divorce
10.2.2 The impact of individual characteristics
10.2.3 The impact of poverty
10.2.4 Peer influence
10.2.5 Impact of war
10.3 Protective factors
10.4 Adolescent risk-taking
10.5 Coping with stress
10.6 Concluding remarks
Notes
References
Chapter 11:
Learning to cope
11.1 Coping resources
11.2 Using the adolescent coping scale for interventions
11.2.1 Identifying and using productive strategies
11.2.2 Understanding links to mental health issues
11.2.3 Maintaining well-beingin an educational context
11.3 Coping programmes
11.3.1 Study 1
11.3.2 Study 2
11.3.3 Study 3
11.3.4 Coping for success
11.3.5 Low resourced adolescence
11.3.6 Young people with diabetes
11.4 A clinical case example using the ACS-2
11.4.1 Jason’s coping profile
11.5 Mindfulness and compassion training
11.5.1 What is mindfulness?
11.5.2 Cultivating mindfulness attitudes
11.6 Concluding remarks
Notes
References
Chapter 12: Technology and social media:
The good and the bad
12.1 Opportunities and benefits
12.1.1 Educational outcomes
12.1.2 Supportive relationships
12.1.3 Identity formation
12.1.4 Sense of belonging and self-esteem
12.2 Challenges and risks
12.2.1 Cyberbullying
12.2.2 Sexting
12.2.3 Internet addiction
12.3 Risk-coping behaviours and digital resilience
12.4 Concluding remarks
References
Chapter 13:
Final thoughts
References
Index


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