Students' academic and emotional adjustment during the transition from primary to secondary school: A cross-lagged study
- PMID: 31759462
- DOI: 10.1016/j.jsp.2019.07.012
Students' academic and emotional adjustment during the transition from primary to secondary school: A cross-lagged study
Abstract
The current study examined several indicators of students' academic and emotional adjustment during the transition from primary (i.e., grade 6) to secondary school (i.e., grades 7 and 9). Specifically, the study investigated how students' engagement, achievement, and burnout, as well as student-teacher conflict, evolve together over time. A total of 356 adolescents (57.3% boys) filled out questionnaires about their burnout and their behavioral and cognitive engagement. Students' achievement was measured using standardized test scores. Conflict in the teacher-student relationship was assessed using teacher ratings. Cross-lagged models revealed bi-directional associations between behavioral and cognitive engagement. More teacher conflict related to less behavioral engagement, whereas higher achievement predicted more cognitive engagement one and two school years later. The results underscore that, despite the interrelatedness of behavioral and cognitive engagement during the transition from primary to secondary school, both show unique contextual and personal correlates.
Keywords: Achievement; Behavioral engagement; Cognitive engagement; School transition; Student burnout; Teacher-student conflict.
Copyright © 2019 Society for the Study of School Psychology. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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