Publication | Open Access
Adolescent Behavioral, Emotional, and Cognitive Engagement Trajectories in School and Their Differential Relations to Educational Success
632
Citations
27
References
2011
Year
Educational PsychologyTeacher-student RelationEducationEarly Childhood EducationSchool OrganizationAdolescenceEducational SuccessElementary EducationPsychologyStudent EngagementAdolescent BehavioralDevelopmental TrajectoriesDownward TrajectoriesYouth Well-beingCognitive Engagement TrajectoriesSchool FunctioningBehavioral SciencesSchool PsychologyStudent SuccessAdolescent PsychologyEducational LeadershipAdolescent DevelopmentEducational StatisticsAdolescent LearningChild DevelopmentSchool EngagementAdolescent CognitionSecondary EducationMedicine
The current study used a multidimensional approach to examine developmental trajectories of three dimension of school engagement (school participation, sense of school belonging, and self‐regulated learning) from grades 7 to 11 and their relationships to changes in adolescents’ academic outcomes over time. The sample includes 1,148 African American and European American adolescents (52% females, 56% black, 34% white, and 10% others). As expected, the downward trajectories of change in school participation, sense of belonging to school, and self‐regulated learning differed as did their predictive relationships with academic performance and educational aspiration, with school belonging declining most markedly, but being least predictive of changes in grade point average.
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