Literature DB >> 1946827

Academic performance in children of divorce: psychological resilience and vulnerability.

D J Mulholland1, N F Watt, A Philpott, N Sarlin.   

Abstract

Parental divorce can be conceptualized as a stressful event for all children, but one must recognize that reactions to divorce can vary widely among children. This investigation was based on two basic ideas: 1) children of divorce as a group would show deficits in academic performance compared to children from intact families, even several years after their parents' separation, and 2) because factors that promote psychological resilience and vulnerability, we expected to find normal heterogeneity within the divorce sample. Among 96 middle-school adolescents from a suburban school district near Denver, children of divorce showed significant performance deficits in academic achievement, as reflected in grade-point average and scholastic motivation in middle school, but not in nationally normed tests of scholastic aptitude and other less direct measures of behavioral conformity. An analysis of GPA over time revealed strikingly disparate patterns of achievement between divorce and control groups. Corresponding patterns of scholastic aptitude scores, absence from school and comportment revealed no systematic differences over time. These results suggest strongly that parental divorce can be a critical event in the academic development of children. Large differences in academic achievement between our divorce group as a whole and the controls cannot be attributed, at least at the time of sampling, to differences in social class or intellectual ability. Despite a similar family background, i.e., marital dissolution, a minority of the children of divorce showed vulnerability in the pattern of academic achievement over time while the majority demonstrated academic careers not unlike that of the controls.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1991        PMID: 1946827     DOI: 10.1080/00332747.1991.11024556

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychiatry        ISSN: 0033-2747            Impact factor:   2.458


  2 in total

1.  The life course of psychological resilience: A phenomenological perspective on deflecting life's slings and arrows.

Authors:  N F Watt; J P David; K L Ladd; S Shamos
Journal:  J Prim Prev       Date:  1995-03

2.  The role of covid-19 anxiety and intolerance of uncertainty in predicting resilience.

Authors:  Yagmur Benian Duru; Vuslat Gunal; Ceyda Yalcin Agaoglu; Cemre Tatlı
Journal:  Scand J Psychol       Date:  2022-04-10
  2 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.