1. Introduction 2. Contextual and Background Story 3. The General Conjectures and Methods 4. Time 1 and 2, Cross-sectional Results 5. Evaluating the Longitudinal Model of Adaptability 6. Dialogue and Discourse 7. Relevance to the Indian Culture 8. Summary and Conclusion
Harry Nejad, Ph.D., MACP (Master of Arts in Counselling Psychology), BA (Liberal Studies) and BA (Arts and Sciences), is a quantitative research analyst and investigator, Professor at Yorkville University in Canada and an online Adjunct Professor at The University of The People in USA, is an educational/psychological researcher and an educator with experience in large-scale nationally representative research projects and collaborations with internationally renowned researchers in Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States of America. He primarily specializes in behavioural sciences, counselling psychology, REBT counselling, research methods, academic as well as non-academic adaptability, learning, motivation, positive psychology, values, resilience, personal bests, the implicit theory of ability, developmental psychology, professional ethics in counselling psychology, educational psychology, a certified Personality Dimensions® Facilitator and Trainer, and a certified TESOL/TEFL educator. He teaches graduate courses in Counselling Psychology, Research Methods, Health Psychology, Social Psychology, Developmental Psychology, Abnormal Psychology and more. He also taught psychology and research and TESOL/TEFL courses in China, India, the USA, Canada, and Africa as part of the UN mission to Mozambique, Africa. In addition, he was a full-time high school teacher, a mental health service provider and counsellor, a research associate, and a college tutor in Toronto, Canada. Moreover, He is the Marketing Director and Strategic Planning Management Officer at Recency e.K. Financial and General Trading in Germany since 2008.
Fara Nejad is an Athabasca University, Canada graduate with a BA in General Studies, minoring in Education. In addition, she has a TESOL certificate from the University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia. She is also a Seneca College, Canada graduate in the Computer Programming associate degree program with honours. She is also a botanist and herbalist.
She primarily specializes in adaptability, learning, motivation, positive psychology, personal bests, implicit theory of ability, and quantitative research methods. She has co-authored several papers on the newly developed adaptability construct measurement. She is skilled in ‘traditional’ multivariate analysis, latent modelling, and multilevel (or hierarchical linear) modelling.