Literature DB >> 24842459

Instability versus quality: residential mobility, neighborhood poverty, and children's self-regulation.

Amanda L Roy1, Dana Charles McCoy2, C Cybele Raver1.   

Abstract

Prior research has found that higher residential mobility is associated with increased risk for children's academic and behavioral difficulty. In contrast, evaluations of experimental housing mobility interventions have shown moving from high poverty to low poverty neighborhoods to be beneficial for children's outcomes. This study merges these disparate bodies of work by considering how poverty levels in origin and destination neighborhoods moderate the influence of residential mobility on 5th graders' self-regulation. Using inverse probability weighting with propensity scores to minimize observable selection bias, this work found that experiencing a move during early or middle childhood was related to negative child outcomes (as indicated by increased behavioral and cognitive dysregulation measured via direct assessment and teacher-report) in 5th grade. However, these relationships were moderated by neighborhood poverty; moves out of low poverty and moves into high poverty neighborhoods were detrimental, while moves out of high poverty and moves into low poverty neighborhoods were beneficial. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2014 APA, all rights reserved).

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Year:  2014        PMID: 24842459      PMCID: PMC4727396          DOI: 10.1037/a0036984

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dev Psychol        ISSN: 0012-1649


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  17 in total

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8.  Positive Parenting Moderates the Association between Temperament and Self-Regulation in Low-Income Toddlers.

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10.  Classifying trajectories of social-emotional difficulties through elementary school: Impacts of the Chicago school readiness project.

Authors:  Dana Charles McCoy; Stephanie Jones; Amanda Roy; C Cybele Raver
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