This paper proposes a model of student support based on student goals and strengths, rather than addressing their weaknesses. It argues that Hope Theory can be used in education as it has been used in counselling to assist students to develop goal setting and a sense of agency by building on their strengths. It suggests that careful curriculum design and engaged learning are essential to building hope and eventual learning success; and that this can be achieved through ongoing collaboration between professional and academic staff. While acknowledging the limitations of a convenience sample, it presents a case study of a single first year course with an enrolment of 250 student
The purpose of the current study was to examine the impact of an alternative education program on gr...
Can teachers teach hope? This article considers Synder’s hope theory as a rationale for the importan...
Hope carries a connotation of non-cognitive emotions. However, as part of positive psychology, hope ...
<p><em>This paper proposes a model of student support based on student goals and strengths, rather t...
Student affairs practitioners have essential roles to play in assisting students in concretising a s...
Hope theory provides a framework for understanding individual differences in human motivation and ul...
As educators, it is in our best interest to care for the whole child, including social and emotional...
Within the framework of hope defined by Snyder et al. (1991) as being comprised of agency and pathwa...
Hope is one’s perceived ability to see a better tomorrow and the belief in one’s self that they can ...
Understanding trauma and the social-emotional needs of students enables us to better position them f...
The graduate landscape paints an austere outlook for law students with the ultra-competitive legal m...
The purpose of this convergent parallel mixed methods study was to investigate how students with a h...
Snyder’s Hope Theory defines the construct of hope as the “sum of perceived capabilities to produce ...
Abstract: Hope is the ability to plan pathways to desired goal despite obstacles and agency or motiv...
Supervision is defined as “a critical watching and directing” (Merriam-Webster). This strong use of ...
The purpose of the current study was to examine the impact of an alternative education program on gr...
Can teachers teach hope? This article considers Synder’s hope theory as a rationale for the importan...
Hope carries a connotation of non-cognitive emotions. However, as part of positive psychology, hope ...
<p><em>This paper proposes a model of student support based on student goals and strengths, rather t...
Student affairs practitioners have essential roles to play in assisting students in concretising a s...
Hope theory provides a framework for understanding individual differences in human motivation and ul...
As educators, it is in our best interest to care for the whole child, including social and emotional...
Within the framework of hope defined by Snyder et al. (1991) as being comprised of agency and pathwa...
Hope is one’s perceived ability to see a better tomorrow and the belief in one’s self that they can ...
Understanding trauma and the social-emotional needs of students enables us to better position them f...
The graduate landscape paints an austere outlook for law students with the ultra-competitive legal m...
The purpose of this convergent parallel mixed methods study was to investigate how students with a h...
Snyder’s Hope Theory defines the construct of hope as the “sum of perceived capabilities to produce ...
Abstract: Hope is the ability to plan pathways to desired goal despite obstacles and agency or motiv...
Supervision is defined as “a critical watching and directing” (Merriam-Webster). This strong use of ...
The purpose of the current study was to examine the impact of an alternative education program on gr...
Can teachers teach hope? This article considers Synder’s hope theory as a rationale for the importan...
Hope carries a connotation of non-cognitive emotions. However, as part of positive psychology, hope ...