viernes, 5 de junio de 2026

Coping Strategies and Religiosity as Predictors of Mental Well-Being Among Israeli-Palestinian Teachers By European Scientific Journal ESJ

https://www.academia.edu/168039057/Coping_Strategies_and_Religiosity_as_Predictors_of_Mental_Well_Being_Among_Israeli_Palestinian_Teachers This cross-sectional study examined whether coping strategies and religiosity predict mental well-being among Israeli-Palestinian teachers. Using a convenience sampling technique, data were collected from 415 Israeli-Palestinian teachers who completed an anonymous online survey including the Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-Being Scale, the Brief-COPE, and the Arab Scale for Religiosity. Descriptive findings showed moderate to high levels of problem-focused and emotion-focused coping, lower levels of avoidant coping, and generally high levels of mental wellbeing and religiosity. Correlation analyses indicated small positive associations between mental well-being and both problem-focused and emotion-focused coping, whereas religiosity showed a strong positive association with mental well-being. Multiple regression analysis revealed a significant overall model explaining 9.1% of the variance in mental wellbeing. Religiosity emerged as a significant, unique predictor, while coping styles and demographic variables showed relatively small effects. The findings suggest that religiosity may serve as an important protective resource for teachers' mental well-being, whereas coping contributes in expected but more modest ways. The study highlights the value of culturally responsive approaches to supporting teacher well-being in the Arab educational context in Israel. ...

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