
@article{ref1,
title="Intensity of Emotions, Emotional Regulation, and Goal Framing: How are They Related to Adolescents' Choice of Coping Strategies?",
journal="Anxiety, stress, and coping",
year="2002",
author="Boekaerts, Monique",
volume="15",
number="4",
pages="401-412",
abstract="This article examined adolescents' reports of how they cope with a specific social stressor: authority conflict with parents. This situation was presented to 626 adolescents as part of a larger study on coping with stress. Students were requested to report on the intensity of the stress experienced, intensity of emotions, emotion regulation, perceived availability of social support, goal framing, and coping strategies used. Coping strategies split up factor-analytically into two coping patterns, namely fighting the stressor and coming to terms with the stressor. The relations between these two coping modes and various aspects of the students' mental representation of the stressor were examined. It was predicted that the way students frame the coping goal would affect their choice of coping strategies. Direct effects of coping strategy, emotion regulation and social support on intensity of stress were tested as well as moderating effects of the type of coping mode used on the relationship between emotion regulation and experienced stress. It is suggested that some youngsters consider an authority conflict with their parents as a normal aspect of daily functioning, whereas other view it as a developmental challenge.<p />",
language="",
issn="1061-5806",
doi="10.1080/1061580021000056546",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1061580021000056546"
}