Army
School Transitions Among Military Adolescents: A Qualitative Study of Stress and Coping
Qualitative data from students, parents, and school staff were used to examine transition-related stressors experienced by mobile military students (i.e., those who experience multiple military-related moves), the efforts utilized to help these students cope with stress, and to identify strategie
School Personnel's Perceptions of Family-School Communication: A Qualitative Study
Family involvement contributes to student success, and family-school communication (FSC) is intended to promote parent involvement; however, little is known about the communication processes that enlist that involvement.
School Personnel's Perceptions of Family-School Communication: A Qualitative Study
This qualitative study used an ecological framework to explore educator perceptions of family-school communication at two elementary schools serving U.S. Military families.
Romantic Relationships Following Wartime Deployment
This study examines the romantic relationships of reservists following wartime deployment. Members of an Army Reserve unit and their partners participatedin seven waves of interviews in the year following the reservists’ return from deployment.
Romantic Relationships Following Wartime Deployment
U.S. Army Reservists and partners of U.S. Army Reservists were interviewed about their relationships after the Reservists returned from a year-long deployment in Iraq.
Responding to the Needs of Military Students and Military-connected Schools: Perceptions and Actions of School Administrators
Military children experience a variety of military-specific stressors. Stressors include repeated geographic relocation and parental separation, both of which can negatively affect social, emotional, psychological, and academic outcomes.
Responding to the Needs of Military Students and Military-connected Schools: Perceptions and Actions of School Administrators
School administrators from the Building Capacity Consortium schools (140 schools dedicated to developing military friendly school environments) were surveyed to uncover how they understand the needs of military connected students and actions their school takes to address those needs.
Reporting for Double Duty: A Dyadic Perspective of the Biopsychosocial Health of Dual Military Air Force Couples
There are approximately 1.5 million active duty service members in today’s military and approximately 726,000 (56.1 %) of these individuals are married. Therefore, healthy couple functioning is important for the military community.
Reporting for Double Duty: A Dyadic Perspective of the Biopsychosocial Health of Dual Military Air Force Couples
Dual military couples were recruited from a military family medicine clinic and completed questionnaires about relationship functioning. Levels of physiological stress were also assessed in both partners.