2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2014.12.007
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Psychosocial disaster preparedness for school children by teachers

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Cited by 41 publications
(42 citation statements)
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“…aster, Volcano Video Productions, n.d.). Most of these DRR games target preferentially a young audience as children are known to be a vulnerable group (Elangovan and Kasi, 2015;UN/ISDR, n.d.). Once educated about DRR, children are considered to contribute more than adults to a change towards a more proactive preventive approach to disasters (Johnson et al, 2014).…”
Section: Hazagora As a Gamementioning
confidence: 99%
“…aster, Volcano Video Productions, n.d.). Most of these DRR games target preferentially a young audience as children are known to be a vulnerable group (Elangovan and Kasi, 2015;UN/ISDR, n.d.). Once educated about DRR, children are considered to contribute more than adults to a change towards a more proactive preventive approach to disasters (Johnson et al, 2014).…”
Section: Hazagora As a Gamementioning
confidence: 99%
“…A large body of literature (MacNeil and Topping 2009;Zantal-Wiener and Horwood 2010;Momani and Salmi 2012;Brown et al 2014;Elangovan and Kasi 2015;Johnston et al 2016;Shiwaku et al 2016) is available on what schools need to do to cope with disaster risks. But there is a dearth of literature that assesses the nature and levels of emergency preparedness efforts in schools.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…But there is a dearth of literature that assesses the nature and levels of emergency preparedness efforts in schools. The majority of these studies have been conducted in the United States, although other studies from the UK and Europe (MacNeil and Topping 2009; Zantal-Wiener and Horwood 2010), Australia (Brown et al 2014;Johnston et al 2016), the Middle East (Hosseini and Izadkhah 2006;Momani and Salmi 2012), and Asia (Elangovan and Kasi 2015;Shiwaku et al 2016) have developed an international perspective on school emergency readiness. This international concensus shifts the center of attention from school preparedness at the state level towards gathering data from individual schools, which more accurately reflects the actual levels of preparedness Ramirez et al 2009).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Each of these is often discussed at different scales and each involves a variety of methods that seek to provide access to knowledge on safer building. There is a need to integrate theory of these postdisaster educational programs relating to safe shelter construction, building upon complementary work conducted in other sectors, such as psychosocial preparedness (Elangovan and Kasi 2015) and risk communication (Cole and Murphy 2014).…”
Section: Household Knowledge Acquisition After Disastersmentioning
confidence: 99%