Child Social Support Moderates the Association Between Maternal Psychopathology and Child School Engagement

IF 1.7 4区 心理学 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL
Kari N. Thomsen, Kathryn H. Howell, Debra Bartelli
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Abstract

Background

School engagement is a positive, malleable aspect of youth functioning that may be influenced by familial factors. Both risk and protective factors may affect youth’s school engagement.

Objective

Utilizing an intergenerational transmission of risk framework, the current study examined how maternal factors (i.e., maternal psychopathology, maternal trauma history, maternal education) and youth factors (i.e., social support) relate to school engagement.

Methods

Participants were 117 youth of color aged 8–13 years (Mage = 9.96, SD = 1.40), 51% female, 89% Black or African American and their female primary caregivers; all families had experienced adversity. Using a single-group, cross-sectional design, hierarchical linear regression models examined direct and interactive effects. The first block included maternal psychopathology (i.e., anxiety or depression), maternal trauma history, maternal education, and child social support. The second block added the interaction between maternal psychopathology and child social support.

Results

Results revealed a direct, positive relation between child social support and school engagement. Social support also moderated the association between maternal anxiety and school engagement; for individuals with extremely low social support, higher maternal anxiety was related to lower school engagement.

Conclusions

Results illustrate the value of an intergenerational approach to exploring how maternal factors have implications for youth functioning. Findings also highlight the importance of social support among families of color exposed to adversity. Limitations include the cross-sectional design; thus, future research would benefit from longitudinal examination of maternal and child factors related to school engagement to assess temporal and directional effects.

Abstract Image

儿童社会支持可调节母亲心理病理学与儿童学校参与之间的关系
背景学校参与是青少年功能的一个积极、可塑的方面,可能会受到家庭因素的影响。本研究利用风险代际传递框架,考察了母亲因素(即母亲心理病理学、母亲创伤史、母亲教育)和青少年因素(即社会支持)与学校参与的关系、方法参与者为 117 名 8-13 岁的有色人种青少年(平均年龄 = 9.96 岁,标准差 = 1.40 岁),其中 51% 为女性,89% 为黑人或非裔美国人及其女性主要照顾者;所有家庭都经历过逆境。采用单组横截面设计,分层线性回归模型检验了直接和交互效应。第一组包括母亲心理病理学(即焦虑或抑郁)、母亲创伤史、母亲教育程度和儿童社会支持。结果显示,儿童社会支持与学校参与之间存在直接的正相关关系。社会支持也调节了母亲焦虑与学校参与度之间的关系;对于社会支持极低的个体,母亲焦虑程度越高,学校参与度越低。结论结果表明,采用代际方法探讨母亲因素如何影响青少年的功能具有重要价值。研究结果还凸显了社会支持在遭遇逆境的有色人种家庭中的重要性。研究的局限性包括横断面设计;因此,未来的研究将受益于与学校参与度相关的母亲和儿童因素的纵向研究,以评估时间和方向效应。
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来源期刊
Child & Youth Care Forum
Child & Youth Care Forum PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL-
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
5.60%
发文量
54
期刊介绍: Child & Youth Care Forum is a peer-reviewed, multidisciplinary publication that welcomes submissions – original empirical research papers and theoretical reviews as well as invited commentaries – on children, youth, and families. Contributions to Child & Youth Care Forum are submitted by researchers, practitioners, and clinicians across the interrelated disciplines of child psychology, early childhood, education, medical anthropology, pediatrics, pediatric psychology, psychiatry, public policy, school/educational psychology, social work, and sociology as well as government agencies and corporate and nonprofit organizations that seek to advance current knowledge and practice. Child & Youth Care Forum publishes scientifically rigorous, empirical papers and theoretical reviews that have implications for child and adolescent mental health, psychosocial development, assessment, interventions, and services broadly defined. For example, papers may address issues of child and adolescent typical and/or atypical development through effective youth care assessment and intervention practices. In addition, papers may address strategies for helping youth overcome difficulties (e.g., mental health problems) or overcome adversity (e.g., traumatic stress, community violence) as well as all children actualize their potential (e.g., positive psychology goals). Assessment papers that advance knowledge as well as methodological papers with implications for child and youth research and care are also encouraged.
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