The association between school staff's coping strategies following a student's suicide, school climate, and previous experience with suicide

Author:

Fire Noa Tiech1,Alkalay Sarit2ORCID,Gvion Yari3,Zalsman Gil456

Affiliation:

1. Ministry of Education Jerusalem Israel

2. Department of Psychology Yezreel Valley Academic College Emek Yezreel Israel

3. Department of Psychology Bar Ilan University Ramat Gan Israel

4. Geha Mental Health Center Petach Tikwa Israel

5. Sackler Faculty of Medicine Tel Aviv University Tel Aviv Israel

6. Department of Psychiatry, Division of Molecular Imaging and Neuropathology Columbia University and New York State Psychiatric Institute New York New York USA

Abstract

AbstractThis article examines whether and to what extent school climate and previous experience of attempted suicide or suicide of someone close, affect the strategies adopted by Israeli school staff members in coping with a student's suicide. Participants included 84 homeroom teachers, principals, counselors, and psychologists who work at schools where a student had died by suicide during the five preceding years. Our findings show that optimal school climate predicts elevated levels of overall coping strategies and higher problem‐focused strategies. Additionally, staff members who previously experienced suicide or attempted suicide of a close person exhibit lower levels of coping strategies, in general, and of emotion‐focused strategies in particular. Thus, they can be considered a risk group for less adaptive adjustment following a student's suicide. Finally, previous incidents of suicide or attempted suicide of a close person do not moderate the link between optimal school climate and coping strategies. Thus, optimal school climate has a robust and positive effect on school staff's coping abilities and hence may be considered a protective factor for the risk group we identified, namely school staff who had previous experience of someone close who attempted suicide or died by suicide.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Developmental and Educational Psychology,Education

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