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Search Results (635)

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Keywords = primary school design

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15 pages, 272 KB  
Article
Prevalence and Practice Domains of Advanced Practice Nurses Among Participants in the Latin American Nursing Leadership School: A Cross-Sectional Study
by Patricia Rebollo-Gómez, Esperanza Barroso-Corroto, Joseba Rabanales-Sotos, Ángel López-González, José Alberto Laredo-Aguilera and Juan Manuel Carmona-Torres
Healthcare 2025, 13(19), 2515; https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13192515 - 3 Oct 2025
Viewed by 213
Abstract
Aims: This study aimed to determine the prevalence of nurses in a Latin American leadership school who meet advanced nurse standards. Design: A descriptive cross-sectional study was conducted. Methods: Data were collected between January and November 2024 from a total of 92 participants [...] Read more.
Aims: This study aimed to determine the prevalence of nurses in a Latin American leadership school who meet advanced nurse standards. Design: A descriptive cross-sectional study was conducted. Methods: Data were collected between January and November 2024 from a total of 92 participants from the Latin American Leadership School of FUDEN-FEPPEN (Foundation for the Development of Nursing—Pan American Federation of Professional Nurses). The response rate was 13%. The Spanish version of the APRD (advance practice role delineation) was validated in Spanish. The study was approved by the Social Ethics Committee of UCLM (Universidad Castilla-La Mancha). Inference analysis was performed to examine factors associated with advanced practice domains. Results: A total of 92 nurses participated in the study. Among the participants, 35.86% (33 nurses) met the requirements for advanced practice nurses and the minimum training required by the International Council of Nurses. Nurses in both primary care and specialized care perform more advanced practice activities in direct care; however, nurses practicing teaching and research perform more advanced practice activities in the indirect practice domains (training, research and teaching). Conclusions: The percentage of nurses participating in the Latin American leadership school who met the standards was determined, with the most frequent domains those related to direct care, such as expert care planning, integrated care, and inter-professional collaboration. Implications for the profession and patient care: To our knowledge, this is the first study that describes the profile of advanced practice nurses in the Latin American context. This study shows that advanced practice activities exist and are practiced, but there is no clear delimitation or regulation of these activities. Reporting method: The study was conducted following the STROBE guidelines. Public contribution: This study did not include patient or public involvement in its design, conduct, or reporting. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Nursing)
44 pages, 80926 KB  
Article
Spatial Organization Patterns and Their Impact on Evacuation Efficiency: Evidence from Primary School Teaching Buildings
by Sen Cao, Wenjia Liu and Jiantao Zhang
Buildings 2025, 15(19), 3560; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15193560 - 2 Oct 2025
Viewed by 255
Abstract
Primary school teaching buildings represent a typical category of densely populated public architecture, where the safe evacuation of occupants is essential to ensuring their safety. The spatial organizational structure plays a pivotal role in determining overall evacuation efficiency. However, systematic research linking spatial [...] Read more.
Primary school teaching buildings represent a typical category of densely populated public architecture, where the safe evacuation of occupants is essential to ensuring their safety. The spatial organizational structure plays a pivotal role in determining overall evacuation efficiency. However, systematic research linking spatial organization with evacuation performance remains limited. This study addresses this gap by analyzing 102 real-world cases of primary school teaching buildings, identifying common spatial organizational patterns, and developing a spatial structural framework based on fundamental units and their organizational relationships. A hybrid methodology integrating weighted network analysis and evacuation simulation is employed to quantitatively evaluate the relationship between spatial organization types and evacuation performance, ultimately proposing three design principles—Integrity, Balance, and Stability—to guide evacuation efficiency optimization. The findings provide a methodological reference for evacuation research in public buildings and offer practical design guidance for optimizing primary school facility layouts. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Building Energy, Physics, Environment, and Systems)
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30 pages, 599 KB  
Article
The Effect of Differentiated Instruction on the Academic Achievement and Opinions of 3rd-Grade Students in Science Education: A Mixed-Methods Study
by Serpil Kara and Aysun Tekindur
J. Intell. 2025, 13(10), 126; https://doi.org/10.3390/jintelligence13100126 - 1 Oct 2025
Viewed by 180
Abstract
The purpose of the current study is to determine the effect of the differentiated instruction approach on 3rd-grade primary school students’ academic achievement (N = 45) in the “Electrical Devices and Tools” unit and to explore their opinions regarding the differentiated instruction process. [...] Read more.
The purpose of the current study is to determine the effect of the differentiated instruction approach on 3rd-grade primary school students’ academic achievement (N = 45) in the “Electrical Devices and Tools” unit and to explore their opinions regarding the differentiated instruction process. In this context, the content of the lessons prepared using student-centred approaches on students’ science achievement was examined, and students’ opinions on the differentiated instruction approach were also evaluated. The study was conducted in the spring term of the 2024–2025 school year in a major city located in the central region of Türkiye, and a mixed research design combining both quantitative and qualitative approaches was employed. In the current study, during the instructional process of the experimental group, differentiated instruction lesson plans available on the Education Information Network (EIN) portal provided by the Ministry of National Education (MoNE) were used. In the control group, the process outlined by the current curriculum was followed. When the findings were evaluated, statistically significant differences were found in favour of the experimental group, in which activities were implemented based on the differentiated instruction plan, compared to the control group that received instruction within the framework of the current curriculum. In addition, students’ opinions regarding the process indicated that the implementation contributed positively to their learning. In light of the findings obtained, recommendations were made for future research. Full article
31 pages, 366 KB  
Article
Sustainable and Inclusive Education Reform in Türkiye: A Cipp Evaluation of the Primary Turkish Language Curriculum
by Birsel Aybek and Osman Oğuz
Sustainability 2025, 17(19), 8659; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17198659 - 26 Sep 2025
Viewed by 367
Abstract
This study evaluates the effectiveness of the newly restructured 1st Grade Turkish Language Curriculum within the “Century of Türkiye Education Model” using Stufflebeam’s Context, Input, Process, and Product (CIPP) framework. The aim is to examine the program’s contribution to sustainable and inclusive educational [...] Read more.
This study evaluates the effectiveness of the newly restructured 1st Grade Turkish Language Curriculum within the “Century of Türkiye Education Model” using Stufflebeam’s Context, Input, Process, and Product (CIPP) framework. The aim is to examine the program’s contribution to sustainable and inclusive educational practices and to provide implications for similar developing contexts. In the research, a convergent parallel mixed method design was used simultaneously with 112 primary school teachers working in Adana, one of the largest cities in Türkiye, in the 2024–2025 academic year. Quantitative data were obtained through the CIPP Evaluation Scale, analyzed with descriptive statistics, t-tests, and ANOVA, while qualitative data from semi-structured interviews were subjected to content analysis. Results indicated generally positive teacher perceptions, highlighting contextual relevance, cultural alignment, flexible structure, and engaging content as strengths. However, limitations included insufficient adaptation for disadvantaged students, superficiality in some content, infrastructure inequalities, and assessment inadequacies. Process-related strengths included constructivist activities and instructional guidance, though time constraints and classroom incompatibilities were noted. In terms of outcomes, the program was found to enhance language and social skills. Demographic analyses revealed limited differences, mainly by gender, professional experience, and educational background. This study concludes with multidimensional recommendations addressing teacher training, resource equity, assessment diversity, international best practice adaptation, and future longitudinal research. Full article
15 pages, 270 KB  
Article
The Narrow Corridor of Heartfelt Leadership: Social and Emotional Leadership Practices in Bureaucratic School Cultures
by Sevgi Yıldız
Behav. Sci. 2025, 15(10), 1316; https://doi.org/10.3390/bs15101316 - 26 Sep 2025
Viewed by 294
Abstract
This qualitative study examines how school administrators enact “heartfelt leadership”—a socially and emotionally attuned form of leadership—within Türkiye’s bureaucratic school cultures. Using semi-structured interviews with six administrators and six teachers across primary, secondary, and high school, we employed a basic qualitative design with [...] Read more.
This qualitative study examines how school administrators enact “heartfelt leadership”—a socially and emotionally attuned form of leadership—within Türkiye’s bureaucratic school cultures. Using semi-structured interviews with six administrators and six teachers across primary, secondary, and high school, we employed a basic qualitative design with maximum-variation sampling. Thematic content analysis yielded four themes: (1) principals acknowledge the humanity of their teachers; (2) principals prioritize relationships and go beyond formal duties; (3) bureaucracy constrains but does not fully silence heartfelt leadership; and (4) heartfelt leadership fosters motivation, resilience, and retention. Heartfelt leadership was marked by empathy, recognition of significant moments, and proactive care that extends beyond job descriptions, cultivating trust, motivation, and commitment. Yet rigid procedures and centralized decision-making limited leaders’ autonomy and responsiveness. No consistent gender differences emerged among principals, because all participating teachers were female; therefore, cross-gender comparisons among teachers were not possible. Theoretically, the study bridges emotional-intelligence and bureaucratic-organization scholarship, showing how relational leadership can be sustained in centralized systems through micro-level strategies. Empirically, it broadens global leadership discourse by examining emotional leadership in a non-Western, bureaucratic context. Practically, findings suggest embedding social and emotional competencies in leadership preparation and enabling greater discretionary authority for responsive, human-centered school leadership. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Social and Emotional Learning in Schools)
11 pages, 391 KB  
Article
The Evolving Relationship Between Reading Motivation and Achievement: A Longitudinal Study
by Montserrat Cubillos and Rodrigo Troncoso
Educ. Sci. 2025, 15(10), 1274; https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15101274 - 24 Sep 2025
Viewed by 653
Abstract
This study examined the reciprocal relationship between reading engagement or motivation and reading achievement across primary and secondary grades in Chile. Using longitudinal SIMCE data from a cohort of 47,073 students assessed in Grade 4 (ages 9–10), Grade 8 (ages 13–14), and Grade [...] Read more.
This study examined the reciprocal relationship between reading engagement or motivation and reading achievement across primary and secondary grades in Chile. Using longitudinal SIMCE data from a cohort of 47,073 students assessed in Grade 4 (ages 9–10), Grade 8 (ages 13–14), and Grade 10 (ages 15–16), the study employed structural equation modeling to explore how reading comprehension and motivation influenced one another over time. Results revealed strong temporal stability in both constructs, with reading achievement showing robust continuity across all time points. From Grade 4 to Grade 8, reading achievement more strongly predicted later motivation than the reverse. In contrast, from Grade 8 to Grade 10, motivation became a stronger predictor of reading achievement. These findings suggest a shift in the directionality of influence, with motivation playing an increasingly important role in sustaining reading performance during secondary school. The results provide evidence on what to prioritize at different stages: in primary school, securing strong reading skills is essential for later engagement, while in secondary school, fostering motivation becomes key to maintaining achievement. In this way, the study offers guidance for schools and policymakers on how to design stage-specific strategies that support both skill development and long-term engagement with reading. Full article
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31 pages, 336 KB  
Article
Talking Tech, Teaching with Tech: How Primary Teachers Implement Digital Technologies in Practice
by Lyubka Aleksieva, Veronica Racheva and Roumiana Peytcheva-Forsyth
Informatics 2025, 12(3), 99; https://doi.org/10.3390/informatics12030099 - 22 Sep 2025
Viewed by 566
Abstract
This paper explores how primary school teachers integrate digital technologies into their classroom practice, with a particular focus on the extent to which their stated intentions align with what actually takes place during lessons. Drawing on data from the Bulgarian SUMMIT project on [...] Read more.
This paper explores how primary school teachers integrate digital technologies into their classroom practice, with a particular focus on the extent to which their stated intentions align with what actually takes place during lessons. Drawing on data from the Bulgarian SUMMIT project on digital transformation in education, the study employed a mixed-methods design combining semi-structured interviews, structured lesson observations, and analysis of teaching materials. The sample included 44 teachers from 26 Bulgarian schools, representing a range of educational contexts. The analysis was guided by the Digital Technology Integration Framework (DTIF), which distinguishes between three modes of technology use—Support, Extend, and Transform—based on the depth of pedagogical change. The findings indicated a strong degree of consistency between teachers’ accounts and observed practices in areas such as the use of digital tools for content visualisation, lesson enrichment, and reinforcement of knowledge. At the same time, the study highlights important gaps between teachers’ aspirations and classroom realities. Although many spoke of wanting to promote independent exploration, creativity, collaboration, and digital citizenship, these ambitions were rarely realised in observed lessons. Pupil autonomy and opportunities for creative digital production were limited, with extended and transformative practices appearing only occasionally. No significant subject-specific differences were identified: teachers across disciplines tended to rely on the same set of familiar tools, while more advanced or innovative uses of technology remained rare. Rather than offering a definitive account of progress, the study raises critical questions about teachers’ digital pedagogical competencies, contextual constraints and the depth of technology integration in everyday classroom practice. While digital tools are increasingly present, their use often remains limited to supporting traditional instruction, with extended and transformative applications still aspirational rather than routine. The findings draw attention to context-specific challenges in the Bulgarian primary education system and the importance of aligning digital innovation with pedagogical intent. This highlights the need for sustained professional development focused on learner-centred digital pedagogies, along with stronger institutional support and equitable access to infrastructure. Full article
14 pages, 522 KB  
Protocol
Designing, Developing, and Evaluating a Stakeholder-Informed Mobile App to Promote Physical Activity in Children
by Olga Papale, Emanuel Festino, Lamprini Papargyri, Cristina Cortis and Andrea Fusco
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2025, 22(9), 1460; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22091460 - 20 Sep 2025
Viewed by 753
Abstract
Background: Prolonged sedentary behavior and associated obesity are recognized risk factors for poor health across the lifespan. Globally, data show that many children and adolescents aged 5 to 17 significantly increased their sedentary behaviors during the COVID-19 pandemic, failing to meet recommended [...] Read more.
Background: Prolonged sedentary behavior and associated obesity are recognized risk factors for poor health across the lifespan. Globally, data show that many children and adolescents aged 5 to 17 significantly increased their sedentary behaviors during the COVID-19 pandemic, failing to meet recommended physical activity levels and reporting increased smartphone use. While mobile devices and video games have been traditionally linked to physical inactivity, formats like exergaming, which combine gameplay with gross motor activity, offer potential to promote physical activity. However, many digital health tools for children are developed without incorporating feedback from key stakeholders and end-users (e.g., children, teachers, and guardians). Therefore, this paper, within the Walk around the Earth (E-Walk) project, describes a prospective study that aims (1) to identify the most influential factors or characteristics affecting engagement with and usability of a mobile application promoting physical activity among primary school students; (2) to develop a mobile application for children based on the identified factors and characteristics. Methods: This project will use a group concept mapping approach to identify the most influential features/factors/characteristics affecting engagement with and usability of an app. By involving primary stakeholders (e.g., children, teachers, guardians, and physical activity experts), the project seeks to align the app’s features with primary end-user needs and motivations. Following the app’s development, its effectiveness in increasing physical activity levels and reducing sedentary behaviors will be evaluated through a mixed-method design, incorporating anthropometric data, validated physical activity questionnaires (Physical Activity Questionnaire for Older Children (PAQ-C) and International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ)), and engagement metrics. Conclusions: The E-Walk project integrates participatory design with educational content and activity-based challenges, representing a multidimensional strategy for promoting health and learning in primary school students. Ultimately, this study contributes to the development of user-informed digital interventions that support sustainable behavioral changes, in line with broader goals of child well-being and digital health promotion. Full article
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37 pages, 8081 KB  
Article
Visualizing ESG Performance in an Integrated GIS–BIM–IoT Platform for Strategic Urban Planning
by Zhuoqian Wu, Shareeful Islam and Llewellyn Tang
Buildings 2025, 15(18), 3394; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15183394 - 19 Sep 2025
Viewed by 524
Abstract
As cities confront intensifying environmental challenges and increasing expectations for sustainable governance, extending Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) evaluation frameworks to the urban scale has become a pressing need. However, existing ESG systems are typically designed for corporate contexts, lacking city-specific indicators, integrated [...] Read more.
As cities confront intensifying environmental challenges and increasing expectations for sustainable governance, extending Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) evaluation frameworks to the urban scale has become a pressing need. However, existing ESG systems are typically designed for corporate contexts, lacking city-specific indicators, integrated data representations, and reliable ESG information with high spatial and temporal resolution for informed decision-making. This study proposes a comprehensive ESG evaluation framework tailored to green cities, which consists of three core components: (1) The construction of a green-oriented ESG indicator system with an expert-informed weighting system; (2) the design of a GIS-BIM-IoT integrated ontology that semantically aligns spatial, infrastructure, and observational data with ESG dimensions; and (3) the implementation of a web-based data integration and visualization platform that dynamically aggregates and visualizes ESG insights. A case study involving a primary school and an air quality monitoring station in Hong Kong demonstrates the system’s capability to infer material recycling rates and pollution concentration scores using ontology-driven reasoning and RDF-based knowledge graphs. The results are rendered in an interactive 3D urban interface, supporting real-time, multi-scale ESG evaluation. This framework transforms ESG assessment from a static reporting tool into a strategic asset for transparent, adaptive, and evidence-based urban sustainability governance. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Towards More Practical BIM/GIS Integration)
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16 pages, 254 KB  
Article
Different Sides of University Life: An Exploratory Study Investigating How Multiple Visits to a Campus Nurture a Rounded View of the Setting and Strengthen Intentions Towards Higher Education Progression
by Cherry Canovan, Hibah Sohail and Anna Graham
Trends High. Educ. 2025, 4(3), 55; https://doi.org/10.3390/higheredu4030055 - 19 Sep 2025
Viewed by 307
Abstract
The evidence base supporting practices to widen participation in higher education, such as campus visits and multi-intervention programs for younger students, remains limited. In order to address this gap, this exploratory study examines the impact of repeated university campus exposure on primary-aged children [...] Read more.
The evidence base supporting practices to widen participation in higher education, such as campus visits and multi-intervention programs for younger students, remains limited. In order to address this gap, this exploratory study examines the impact of repeated university campus exposure on primary-aged children in the UK. We studied the influence of a campus tour on the views of a group of 78 primary school children who had visited the setting on a previous occasion. Our cohort (32M, 45F, aged 10–11) was drawn from schools with high populations of pupils from low-socioeconomic status backgrounds. Using a pre- and post-visit survey design, we assessed changes in perceptions following a second campus tour, building on a prior visit. We found that while one visit was enough to establish basic perceptions—for example, a university is big not small—a second visit allowed participants to see a different side of the university experience, adding nuance, expanding university-related vocabulary, and increasing comfort with the campus environment. Notably, repeat visits strengthened intentions to pursue higher education. We conclude that multiple campus visits benefit low-participation groups by fostering familiarity and exposing younger pupils to different motivations for university attendance. While this study provides a useful foundation from which to explore this area, further work is needed to address limitations such as the small sample size and the UK-specific context. Full article
16 pages, 558 KB  
Article
Developing and Validating a Childhood Trauma-Informed Curriculum for Primary School Teachers in Limpopo Province, South Africa
by Muimeleli Munyadziwa and Lufuno Makhado
Children 2025, 12(9), 1256; https://doi.org/10.3390/children12091256 - 18 Sep 2025
Viewed by 316
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Childhood trauma significantly hinders the developmental and academic outcomes of learners, particularly in under-resourced schools such as those in Limpopo province, South Africa. Teachers in these settings often face challenges in supporting trauma-exposed learners due to a lack of knowledge, training, [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Childhood trauma significantly hinders the developmental and academic outcomes of learners, particularly in under-resourced schools such as those in Limpopo province, South Africa. Teachers in these settings often face challenges in supporting trauma-exposed learners due to a lack of knowledge, training, and appropriate resources. Addressing this gap requires the development of structured, trauma-informed educational support systems. Methods: This study forms the final phase of a multi-phase research project aimed at developing a trauma-informed curriculum for primary school teachers. A multi-phase mixed method design was adopted across four phases: (1) a global scoping review to identify effective trauma-informed interventions; (2) empirical interviews with primary school teachers, trauma center managers, clinical psychologists, and social workers to understand local needs and experiences; (3) development of a conceptual framework grounded in theoretical and empirical findings; and (4) curriculum development guided by El Sawi’s curriculum design model. The curriculum was validated using structured questionnaires with a panel of stakeholders including educators, mental health professionals, and curriculum experts. Results: The study identified critical issues, including teachers’ limited understanding of childhood trauma, lack of standardized training, and inadequate classroom strategies. Key curriculum components were developed to address these gaps, including modules on the nature of trauma, early identification of symptoms, trauma-informed teaching practices, and collaboration with mental health professionals. Validation results indicated strong agreement on the curriculum’s clarity, relevance, and potential impact. Conclusions: The developed trauma-informed curriculum provides primary school teachers in Limpopo with the knowledge, tools, and confidence to support trauma-exposed learners. It emphasizes early identification, responsive classroom strategies, and inter-professional collaboration. This curriculum has the potential to enhance learning environments and promote better educational and psychosocial outcomes for trauma-affected learners. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Global Pediatric Health)
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26 pages, 1194 KB  
Article
Pronoun Mixing in Netherlandic Dutch Revisited: Perception of ‘u’ and ‘jij’ Use by Pre-University Students
by Suzanne Pauline Aalberse
Languages 2025, 10(9), 235; https://doi.org/10.3390/languages10090235 - 18 Sep 2025
Viewed by 314
Abstract
Prescriptive grammars of Netherlandic Dutch usually explicitly warn against mixing T- and V-pronouns. Although the prescriptive norm opposes mixing, pronoun mixing does occur, and its use can often be interpreted as strategic, in the sense that mixing pronouns might help to balance conflicting [...] Read more.
Prescriptive grammars of Netherlandic Dutch usually explicitly warn against mixing T- and V-pronouns. Although the prescriptive norm opposes mixing, pronoun mixing does occur, and its use can often be interpreted as strategic, in the sense that mixing pronouns might help to balance conflicting needs such as signaling respect and formality to the addressee on the one hand as well as expressing closeness on the other hand. This article explores the perception of pronoun mixing among high school students who were in the process of acquiring the norm. As part of a student science project, we asked students to categorize real-world examples of pronoun mixing that they themselves had gathered as a strategy or as a mistake. Based on the students’ responses, we extrapolated that the most acceptable forms of mixing were brief switches to V in a T-context to express humor or urgency and—if there was no clear default pronoun—that mixing was most acceptable (1) when the text was free of spelling errors and other signs of sloppiness, (2) when the mixing was intersentential, (3) when the number of switches was infrequent, and (4) when there was a clear division of tasks between the pronouns. As an offshoot of this student science project, we designed a brief follow-up survey to gain insight into domains and consensus and variation among the students’ perceptions of pronoun mixing. This follow-up survey revealed that if not explicitly asked, most students do not notice pronoun mixing. We asked students to rank four real-life examples of address pronoun mixing that they had gathered during the student science project. We expected that with respect to their perception of the mixing of address pronouns all students would rank examples of mixing in the same order. A primary result of this part of our exploration was that there were large individual differences in the perception of mixing and that there was variation in the ranking of examples among the students. Intersentential mixing yielded the most neutral evaluations by the students, but intrasentential mixing showed the most extreme evaluations. It was disliked most strongly by students who had a general dislike of mixing and liked best by students who appreciated mixing as a style. Briefly switching to V in contexts associated with the T-pronoun was perceived to be humorous by a quarter of the students, and half of the students perceived a switch to the petrified abbreviation AUB (‘if you-V please’) as expressing urgency. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Perception and Processing of Address Terms)
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18 pages, 807 KB  
Article
Let’s Learn About Emotions Program: Acceptability, Fidelity, and Students’ Mental Well-Being Outcomes for Finnish Primary School Children
by Yuko Mori, Tiia Ståhlberg, Xiao Zhang, Kaisa Mishina, Sanna Herkama, Tarja Korpilahti-Leino, Terja Ristkari, Meeri Kanasuo, Saara Siirtola, Vesa Närhi, Hannu Savolainen, Susanna Hinkka-Yli-Salomäki, Shiho Torii, Kohei Matsubara, Kohei Kishida, Noriko Hida, Shin-ichi Ishikawa and Andre Sourander
Children 2025, 12(9), 1251; https://doi.org/10.3390/children12091251 - 17 Sep 2025
Viewed by 738
Abstract
Background/Objectives: School-based universal mental health interventions offer an inclusive and scalable approach to promote mental health and well-being among children. This study evaluates the Let’s Learn About Emotions (Opitaan tunteista in Finnish) program, an evidence-based, teacher-led universal school-based intervention originally developed in [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: School-based universal mental health interventions offer an inclusive and scalable approach to promote mental health and well-being among children. This study evaluates the Let’s Learn About Emotions (Opitaan tunteista in Finnish) program, an evidence-based, teacher-led universal school-based intervention originally developed in Japan and culturally adapted for Finnish primary schools. Methods: A total of 512 fourth-grade students from 14 schools participated in the 12-week program during spring 2023. Using a mixed-methods design, we assessed (1) the program’s acceptability among students, parents, teachers, and school principals, (2) fidelity of implementation, and (3) changes in students’ mental well-being pre- to post-intervention. Quantitative data included standardized questionnaires with valid responses collected from 233 students at baseline and 209 students at post-intervention, as well as parents and teachers. Qualitative data were collected through focus group discussions involving parents, teachers, and school principals during spring 2024. Results: Acceptability was high across all respondent groups. Teachers adhered closely to the teaching manual, as confirmed by self-reports and direct classroom observations. Statistically significant improvements were observed in parent-reported conduct problems, hyperactivity, and peer problems, though student self-reports did not show similar benefits. Conclusions: The program was found to be both acceptable and culturally appropriate in the Finnish context. Findings from this study provide valuable insights for refining and improving the program for future implementation. To more rigorously examine its effectiveness, future studies should employ a randomized controlled trial design. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Mental Health and Well-Being in Children (2nd Edition))
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42 pages, 12964 KB  
Article
Development of an Optimal Novel Cascaded 1+TDFλ/PIλDμ Controller for Frequency Management in a Triple-Area Power Grid Considering Nonlinearities and PV/Wind Integration
by Abdullah Hameed Alhazmi, Ashraf Ibrahim Megahed, Ali Elrashidi and Kareem M. AboRas
Mathematics 2025, 13(18), 2985; https://doi.org/10.3390/math13182985 - 15 Sep 2025
Viewed by 454
Abstract
Continuous decrease in inertia and sensitivity to load/generation fluctuation are significant challenges for present-day power networks. The primary reason for these issues is the increased penetration capabilities of renewable energy sources. An imbalanced load with significant power output has a substantial impact on [...] Read more.
Continuous decrease in inertia and sensitivity to load/generation fluctuation are significant challenges for present-day power networks. The primary reason for these issues is the increased penetration capabilities of renewable energy sources. An imbalanced load with significant power output has a substantial impact on the frequency and voltage characteristics of electrical networks. Various load frequency control (LFC) technologies are widely used to address these issues. Existing LFC approaches in the literature are inadequate in addressing system uncertainty, parameter fluctuation, structural changes, and disturbance rejection. As a result, the purpose of this work is to suggest a better LFC approach that makes use of a combination of a one plus tilt fractional filtered derivative (1+TDFλ) cascaded controller and a fractional order proportional–integral–derivative (PIλDμ) controller, which is referred to as the recommended 1+TDFλ/PIλDμ controller. Drawing inspiration from the dynamics of religious societies, including the roles of followers, missionaries, and leaders, and the organization into religious and political schools, this paper proposes a new application of the efficient divine religions algorithm (DRA) to improve the design of the 1+TDFλ/PIλDμ controller. A triple-area test system is constructed to analyze a realistic power system, taking into account certain physical restrictions such as nonlinearities as well as the impact of PV and wind energy integration. The effectiveness of the presented 1+TDFλ/PIλDμ controller is evaluated by comparing their frequency responses to those of other current controllers like PID, FOPID, 2DOF-PID, and 2DOF-TIDμ. The integral time absolute error (ITAE) criterion was employed as the objective function in the optimization process. Comparative simulation studies were conducted using the proposed controller, which was fine-tuned by three recent metaheuristic algorithms: the divine religions algorithm (DRA), the artificial rabbits optimizer (ARO), and the wild horse optimizer (WHO). Among these, the DRA demonstrated superior performance, yielding an ITAE value nearly twice as optimal as those obtained by the ARO and WHO. Notably, the implementation of the advanced 1+TDFλ/PIλDμ controller, optimized via the DRA, significantly minimized the objective function to 0.4704×104. This reflects an approximate enhancement of 99.5% over conventional PID, FOPID, and 2DOF-TIDμ controllers, and a 99% improvement relative to the 2DOF-PID controller. The suggested case study takes into account performance comparisons, system modifications, parameter uncertainties, and variations in load/generation profiles. Through the combination of the suggested 1+TDFλ/PIλDμ controller and DRA optimization capabilities, outcomes demonstrated that frequency stability has been significantly improved. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section E: Applied Mathematics)
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11 pages, 601 KB  
Article
Recent Reminders with Word-Image Information Can Improve Children’s Prospective Memory Performance
by Yan Yang, Yunfei Guo and Mingyuan Wang
Behav. Sci. 2025, 15(9), 1258; https://doi.org/10.3390/bs15091258 - 15 Sep 2025
Viewed by 420
Abstract
Children’s prospective memory is not yet mature, and setting reminders is an effective method to improve their prospective memory. This study aimed to explore how reminders, placed at different distances from prospective memory cues, affect children’s prospective memory under different attention load conditions. [...] Read more.
Children’s prospective memory is not yet mature, and setting reminders is an effective method to improve their prospective memory. This study aimed to explore how reminders, placed at different distances from prospective memory cues, affect children’s prospective memory under different attention load conditions. A total of 170 primary school students aged 7–12 (M = 9.54, SD = 1.68) took part in the experiment in a laboratory environment. The experimental program was presented using E-prime 2.0 on one desktop computer. This study used a 3 (reminder conditions: recent reminder, distant reminder, control condition) × 2 (attention loads: low, high) between-subjects design. The results showed that in both low and high attention load conditions, the accuracy of prospective memory in the recent reminder condition was much higher than that in both the distant reminder and control conditions. The accuracy of ongoing tasks under the recent reminder condition was also significantly higher than that under the distant reminder and control conditions. The results showed that recent reminders can improve children’s prospective memory performance while reducing attentional expenditure, and the promoting effect of recent reminders on children’s prospective memory was not affected by attentional loads. Full article
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