The adaptive problems of female teenage refugees and their behavioral adjustment methods for coping

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Abstract

This study aimed at identifying the levels of adaptive problems among teenage female refugees in the government schools and explored the behavioral methods that were used to cope with the problems. The sample was composed of 220 Syrian female students (seventh to first secondary grades) enrolled at government schools within the Zarqa Directorate and who came to Jordan due to the war conditions in their home country. The study used the scale of adaptive problems that consists of four dimensions (depression, anger and hostility, low self-esteem, and feeling insecure) and a questionnaire of the behavioral adjustment methods for dealing with the problem of asylum. The results indicated that the Syrian teenage female refugees suffer a moderate degree of adaptation problems, and the positive adjustment methods they have used are more than the negatives.

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APA

Mhaidat, F. (2016). The adaptive problems of female teenage refugees and their behavioral adjustment methods for coping. Psychology Research and Behavior Management, 9, 95–103. https://doi.org/10.2147/PRBM.S90718

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