Life events and strategies for coping with stress in the seventh grade schoolchildren

Stressful life events can range from everyday frustrations and conflicts to real traumas that can have profound consequences upon adolescents such as death of a close person, parents' divorce or war occurrences, etc. What particular consequences would stressful life events have for psycho-physi...

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Main Authors: Milenović Miodrag, Memeti-Ademi Gentiana
Format: Article
Language:Bosnian
Published: Univerzitet u Novom Pazaru 2019-01-01
Series:Univerzitetska Misao
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scindeks-clanci.ceon.rs/data/pdf/1451-3870/2019/1451-38701918041M.pdf
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author Milenović Miodrag
Memeti-Ademi Gentiana
author_facet Milenović Miodrag
Memeti-Ademi Gentiana
author_sort Milenović Miodrag
collection DOAJ
description Stressful life events can range from everyday frustrations and conflicts to real traumas that can have profound consequences upon adolescents such as death of a close person, parents' divorce or war occurrences, etc. What particular consequences would stressful life events have for psycho-physical state of an individual depends, to a large extent, upon the strategy he uses in a concrete stress situation (Lacković-Grgin, 2000). In this research project, conducted upon a sample of 100 of the seventh grade schoolchildren, a correlation between stress, measured by the Life Events Stress Scale - STRESS - D (Košta, Vulić-Prtorić, 2002) and individual strategies for overcoming them as expressed by the Children's Coping Strategies Checklist-Revision 1 (CCSC-R1) (Ayers, et al., 1996) is explored. The most stressful life events, in children's views, are physical changes due to growing up, death of a close cousin, accusation for something they have not done, elders' distrust and shaming before others, while the coping strategies are expressed through four factors, namely: active coping, distraction, avoidance of situation and support seeking. The statistical analysis has shown that the most important correlations are between a stressful event, death of a close cousin and active coping (r=.321; p<0.01), that is support from others (r=.326; p<0.01) as well as between shaming before others and avoidance (r=.328; p<0.01), that is, support seeking (r=.317; p<0.01). The results tell us that the experience of stressful events and coping strategies possess certain characteristics that are peculiar for the schoolchild of higher elementary school grades.
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spelling doaj.art-1891f9300ea3434f9edaffe97659836a2022-12-22T02:03:07ZbosUniverzitet u Novom PazaruUniverzitetska Misao1451-38702560-48212019-01-01201918415310.5937/univmis1918041M1451-38701918041MLife events and strategies for coping with stress in the seventh grade schoolchildrenMilenović Miodrag0Memeti-Ademi Gentiana1Filozofski fakultet u Nišu, Niš, SerbiaUniverzitet u Novom Pazaru, Novi Pazar, SerbiaStressful life events can range from everyday frustrations and conflicts to real traumas that can have profound consequences upon adolescents such as death of a close person, parents' divorce or war occurrences, etc. What particular consequences would stressful life events have for psycho-physical state of an individual depends, to a large extent, upon the strategy he uses in a concrete stress situation (Lacković-Grgin, 2000). In this research project, conducted upon a sample of 100 of the seventh grade schoolchildren, a correlation between stress, measured by the Life Events Stress Scale - STRESS - D (Košta, Vulić-Prtorić, 2002) and individual strategies for overcoming them as expressed by the Children's Coping Strategies Checklist-Revision 1 (CCSC-R1) (Ayers, et al., 1996) is explored. The most stressful life events, in children's views, are physical changes due to growing up, death of a close cousin, accusation for something they have not done, elders' distrust and shaming before others, while the coping strategies are expressed through four factors, namely: active coping, distraction, avoidance of situation and support seeking. The statistical analysis has shown that the most important correlations are between a stressful event, death of a close cousin and active coping (r=.321; p<0.01), that is support from others (r=.326; p<0.01) as well as between shaming before others and avoidance (r=.328; p<0.01), that is, support seeking (r=.317; p<0.01). The results tell us that the experience of stressful events and coping strategies possess certain characteristics that are peculiar for the schoolchild of higher elementary school grades.https://scindeks-clanci.ceon.rs/data/pdf/1451-3870/2019/1451-38701918041M.pdflife eventsstress coping strategiesschoolchildren.
spellingShingle Milenović Miodrag
Memeti-Ademi Gentiana
Life events and strategies for coping with stress in the seventh grade schoolchildren
Univerzitetska Misao
life events
stress coping strategies
schoolchildren.
title Life events and strategies for coping with stress in the seventh grade schoolchildren
title_full Life events and strategies for coping with stress in the seventh grade schoolchildren
title_fullStr Life events and strategies for coping with stress in the seventh grade schoolchildren
title_full_unstemmed Life events and strategies for coping with stress in the seventh grade schoolchildren
title_short Life events and strategies for coping with stress in the seventh grade schoolchildren
title_sort life events and strategies for coping with stress in the seventh grade schoolchildren
topic life events
stress coping strategies
schoolchildren.
url https://scindeks-clanci.ceon.rs/data/pdf/1451-3870/2019/1451-38701918041M.pdf
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