| Literature DB >> 35756299 |
Pierpaolo Limone1, Giusi Antonia Toto1.
Abstract
Physical, socio-economic, cultural and mental challenges faced by students have been associated with adverse impacts on school wellbeing, resulting in increased school dropout and deviant behaviour. This systematic review has analysed the present knowledge on factors associated with school dropouts to identify psychological interventions for promoting school wellbeing. A systematic search was done of the ScienceDirect, APA PsycINFO, Emerald and Google Scholar electronic databases. A hand-search was also done of the reference list of the included studies. The initial search resulted in 448 studies, and the search of the references list of the considered studies resulted in 28 more articles. The application of the eligibility criteria resulted in the inclusion of 38 studies in the review. The study established several factors associated with school dropouts and social deviance, such as school climate, school structure, and those defining social interaction among students. Mental and emotional health was identified as the main factor influencing school dropout and social deviance. A positive school climate should be the primary consideration for promoting school wellbeing. School administrations, teachers, and parents should collaborate to positively improve conditions in schools.Entities:
Keywords: addiction; deviance; dropout; school; wellbeing
Year: 2022 PMID: 35756299 PMCID: PMC9218469 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.914063
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Study descriptor table.
| Author and year | Study design | Region | Number of students |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Longitudinal study | Quebec, Canada | 11,827 high school students |
|
| Case study | Quebec, Canada | 2,360 secondary school students |
|
| Case study | Kentucky, United States | 196 high schools |
|
| Retrospective study | Norway | 2,015 upper secondary students |
|
| Retrospective study | United States | 254 public secondary schools |
|
| Retrospective study | United States | 3,840 students |
|
| Exploratory case study | Quebec, Canada | 4,312 high school students (2,227 girls and 2,085 boys) |
|
| Longitudinal study | United States | 1,400 students |
|
| Retrospective study | United States | 4,640 middle school students |
|
| Longitudinal study | United States | 7,779 students |
|
| Case study | United States | 92 students |
|
| Case study | Florida, United States | 109 students |
|
| Retrospective study | United States | 476 adolescent students |
|
| Retrospective study | United States | 489 students |
| Longitudinal study | Central Texas, United States | 476 adolescent students | |
| Randomised control study | United States | 48 African–American students | |
| Longitudinal study | United States | 233 students | |
| Prospective study | Chicago, United States | 1,159 African–American and Hispanic students | |
| Review | European countries, United States and United Kingdom | 10,357 students aged 7–18 | |
| Symposium | Chicago | 40 experts bringing in the needs of schools and families | |
| Review | Canada, United States, Northern Israel, New Zealand, Croatia and Southern Brazil | 297,994 secondary school students | |
| Review | United Kingdom, Australia, USA, Sweden, Denmark, Germany, Ireland | 9,700 students aged 5–19 | |
| Cross-sectional study | Australia | 1,392 students aged 12.7–16.24 | |
| Case study | Wales | 22 secondary school students | |
| Case study | Wales and United Kingdom | About 3,800 school students | |
| Longitudinal study | United states | 1,010 primary to second grade school students | |
| Case study | California | 55,383 first and second grade students | |
| Case study | |||
| United States | 440 students university students | ||
| Longitudinal study | United States | 294 secondary school students | |
| Interview | United States | 75 students with an average age of 11.6 years | |
| Interview | South Africa | 22 students of the age group 10–15 | |
| Case study | China | 496 teachers from special education schools | |
| Focus group | Spain | 13 Teenagers age group 15–18 | |
| Ethnography | Japan | 500 primary and first grade students | |
| Book chapter—review | Europe | Children in age preschool | |
| Review | Various Afferents | Not specified | |
| Review | Varies Afferents | Not specified | |
| Experimental study | Colorado | 18 junior high school teenagers |
Study descriptor table.
| Author and year | Objective statement | Wellbeing factor | Theme |
|---|---|---|---|
| To assess the contribution of student engagement to school dropout | Students engagement and its specific dimensions | School dropout | |
| To examine the association between STR and achievement motivation with a student’s intention to dropout | Teacher–student relationship (STR) | Student’s intention to drop out of school | |
| To examine the relationship between school characteristics and dropout rates | School size, student body, student’s ethnicity, academic achievement, attendance rate, suspension rate, school-law violation rate | School dropout | |
| To assess the relationship between social participation and motivation to leave school | Social participation | School dropout | |
| To explore the association between school climate characteristics and school crime and disorder | School’s organisational characteristics | School crime and disorder | |
| To explore the relationship between a school’s structure and organisation and a student’s decision to dropout | Learning curriculum, sector and size, and STR. | Student’s intention to drop out of school | |
| To analyse the relationship between students’ school wellbeing and intention to dropout | Commitment, achievement, satisfaction | Student’s intention to drop out of school | |
| To investigate the relationship between STR and adolescent depression and misconduct | STR | Behavioural problems in students | |
| To explore the effects of school climate and student characteristics on school disorder | School climate and student characteristics | Behavioural problems in students | |
| To investigate associations between teacher evaluation and reward policies, and student performance and dropout | STR climate | Effects of teacher evaluation and reward policies | |
| To investigate the relationship between coping strategies for stress and rates of finishing school. | Stress-coping strategies | Dropout rate | |
| To investigate the efficacy of psycho-spiritual education on school wellbeing and school climate | Mentoring program teaching psycho-spiritual principles | School wellbeing and perceived school climate | |
| To examine the implications of a respectful school climate on student drug use and depression | School climate (support from teachers) | Student drug use and depressive traits | |
| To examine if the school climate is associated to adolescent conduct problems through school connectedness | School climate (interaction and competition among students and satisfaction with classes) | Student conduct problems | |
| To examine the contributions of early school connectedness to adolescent behaviour problems | School connectedness (social relations) | Student conduct problems | |
| To examine the effects of increasing adolescent–teacher relationship | STR | Effects of improved STR | |
| To investigate the relation between school social environment and students’ motivation and engagement in school | Class social environment | Student motivation and engagement | |
| To investigate the effects of participation in the Chicago Child–Parent Centre and Expansion Program on school dropout | Early childhood intervention | Problematic behaviour and dropout rates | |
| To analyse interventions for the improvement of psychological wellbeing at school | Activities physics | Wellbeing school | |
| To discuss the findings of the Symposium on Protective Factors for LGBTQ Students | School climate, supporting educators, student identity | Protective factors for LGBTQ students | |
| To evaluate the effects of postponing the start of lessons to support health, education and wellbeing in secondary school students | Postponing the beginning of lessons | Start time of lessons and hours of sleep for increased wellbeing | |
| To identify those interventions that can support the promotion of students’ mental health | Internal cooperation of the school community | School interventions for wellbeing at school | |
| To improve wellbeing literacy to increase wellbeing | Literacy on welfare | Literacy and wellbeing at school | |
| For formative and pragmatic evaluations of the educational process to promote school wellbeing | Mapping of the socio-cultural and political contest | Promoting wellbeing through a restorative practice approach | |
| For understanding the social interactions of school staff to foster student wellbeing | Interactions mediated by social networks | Role of school staff and social network on student welfare | |
| To propose coping strategies to reduce the malaise resulting from discriminatory treatment in educational disparities | Coping strategies | Discriminations in educational disparities | |
| To assess the support students receive and the perceived degree of wellbeing | Family, peer and school support | Support and wellbeing in school | |
| To assess the protective effect of racial-ethnic socialisation on ethnicity-related stress | Ethnic-racial socialisation | Ethnic-racial socialisation to reduce the negative effects of stress related to ethnic differences | |
| To test a longitudinal model of promoting confidence in adults and psychological wellbeing among adolescents | Positive expectations from adults | Promotion of student welfare through adult support | |
| To evaluate the relationship between racial-ethnic connectedness and behavioural and emotional problems | Racial-ethnic connectedness | Effects of racial-ethnic connectedness on the wellbeing of African-American students | |
| To evaluate the usefulness of mental health programs for reducing symptoms of anxiety and depression | Mental health programmes | Positive effects of mental health programs on symptoms of anxiety and depression in students | |
| To study the relationship between social support, self-efficacy and the perceived wellbeing of teachers | Social support | Positive effects of social support on well being | |
| To analyse the effects of a Dialogic Literary Gatherings intervention on well-being and school performance | Meetings literary dialogical | Dialogic Literary Gatherings intervention to promote wellbeing and academic achievement | |
| To assess the type of humour that has positive effects on students’ mental health | Teachers’ humour | The effect of teachers’ humour on student wellbeing | |
| To allow the revision work carried out to identify the positive effect of psychomotor intervention on multiple areas of development | Psychomotor intervention | The positive effect of psychomotor intervention on movement, cognition and emotions | |
| To investigate the effects of teachers’ optimism and effectiveness on student wellbeing | Optimism and effectiveness of teachers | The effect of teachers’ optimism and effectiveness on student wellbeing | |
| To assess the importance of teacher support on student wellbeing | Quality of the STR | The importance of teacher support on student wellbeing | |
| To assess the effects of culturally rooted afterschool programmes on students’ self-esteem, resilience and cultural identity | Cultural rootedness of planned afterschool programmes | The effect of culturally rooted afterschool programmes on students’ self-esteem, resilience and cultural identity |
Show of associations between school climate, student characteristics and behaviour problems.
| School climate and student characteristics | Behaviour problems | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Offending | Misconduct | Victimisation | Avoidance | Feelings of safety | |
| Respect for students | NA | NA | NA | NA | PA |
| School planning and action | NE | NE | NA | NE | PA |
| Fairness of rules | NA | NA | NA | NA | PA |
| Clarity of rules | NA | NA | NA | NA | PA |
| Student influence: | NA | NA | NE | PA | PA |
| Age | PA | NE | NA | NA | PA |
| Race (majority of students are non-white) | PA | PA | NA | NE | NE |
| Gender (majority of students are female) | NE | NA | NA | NA | PA |
| Involvement in school activities | PA | PA | PA | PA | NA |
| Positive peer associations | NA | NA | NA | NA | PA |
| Belief in school rules | NA | NA | NA | NA | PA |
PA, positive association; NA, negative association; NE, no effect.
Show of associations between school climate and school disorders.
| School climate | School disorders | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Teacher victimisation | Student victimisation | Student delinquency | |
| School size | PA | PA | PA |
| Gender (majority of students are male) | PA | PA | PA |
| Race (majority of students are African–American) | PA | PA | PA |
| Fairness in school rules | NE | NA | NA |
| Clarity of rules | NE | NA | NA |
| Psychosocial climate | NA | NE | NE |
PA, positive association; NA, negative association; NE, no effect.