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Coping strategies and the impact of challenging behaviors on special educators' burnout

Coping strategies and the impact of challenging behaviors on special educators' burnout
Coping strategies and the impact of challenging behaviors on special educators' burnout
Although challenging behaviors have been identified as a source of staff stress, few researchers have directly addressed this relationship. In the present study, 55 teachers and support staff in special schools for children with mental retardation completed questionnaires assessing burnout, coping strategies for challenging behavior, and their exposure to challenging behavior. Results showed that (a) use of maladaptive coping strategies for challenging behaviors constitutes a risk for staff burnout, (b) this risk is in addition to that associated with exposure to challenging behavior, and (c) use of maladaptive coping strategies moderated the impact of exposure to challenging behaviors on emotional exhaustion burnout. Implications for future research and for the support of staff working with individuals who have challenging behaviors are discussed
0143-7550
148-156
Hastings, Richard P.
4fd1ea2a-233f-461b-94c0-769e7d9e2c3c
Brown, Tony
29681add-e036-4276-a087-72d3b668efd8
Hastings, Richard P.
4fd1ea2a-233f-461b-94c0-769e7d9e2c3c
Brown, Tony
29681add-e036-4276-a087-72d3b668efd8

Hastings, Richard P. and Brown, Tony (2002) Coping strategies and the impact of challenging behaviors on special educators' burnout. Mental Retardation, 40 (2), 148-156. (doi:10.1352/0047-6765(2002)040<0148:CSATIO>2.0.CO;2).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Although challenging behaviors have been identified as a source of staff stress, few researchers have directly addressed this relationship. In the present study, 55 teachers and support staff in special schools for children with mental retardation completed questionnaires assessing burnout, coping strategies for challenging behavior, and their exposure to challenging behavior. Results showed that (a) use of maladaptive coping strategies for challenging behaviors constitutes a risk for staff burnout, (b) this risk is in addition to that associated with exposure to challenging behavior, and (c) use of maladaptive coping strategies moderated the impact of exposure to challenging behaviors on emotional exhaustion burnout. Implications for future research and for the support of staff working with individuals who have challenging behaviors are discussed

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Published date: March 2002

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 44713
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/44713
ISSN: 0143-7550
PURE UUID: 0852ea46-746c-40c6-875c-d54e5d5e758f

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Date deposited: 09 Mar 2007
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 09:06

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Contributors

Author: Richard P. Hastings
Author: Tony Brown

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