Associations of Perceived School and Year Group Climate with Mental Health Among Children Aged 7-to-11 Years.

IF 2 3区 社会学 Q1 SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY
Child Indicators Research Pub Date : 2025-01-01 Epub Date: 2025-01-08 DOI:10.1007/s12187-024-10213-7
Caitlyn Donaldson, Kelly Morgan, Safia Ouerghi, James J Lewis, Graham Moore
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Schools are an important setting for interventions to improve mental health. There is growing evidence that school climate - sometimes expressed as the perceptions that children have about the relationships, safety, values, and beliefs within their school - can impact child mental health. Poor child mental health is associated with feelings of distress as well deficits in functioning. However, while most studies have focused on school climate, climate at lower levels of nesting, including year group, may be important. Cross-sectional data on emotional and behavioural difficulties from 32,606 children in primary schools in Wales (ages 7-11, year groups 3-6) were collected via a school survey, delivered online and within the classroom environment to all children who consented, and analysed using multilevel modelling. Models were then extended to consider how aggregated measures of year group and school climate are associated with mental health outcomes. The unadjusted variance partition coefficients (VPCs) indicated that 2.8% of the variance in emotional difficulties and 3.2% in behavioural difficulties were attributable to differences in the year group, while school-level differences represented 2.4% and 3.5%, respectively. More positive year group and school climate were associated with more positive mental health outcomes. School and year group climate are independently associated with primary school children's mental health. Interventions to support mental health should aim to optimise the whole school climate, as well as climate within year group clusters.

Supplementary information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s12187-024-10213-7.

7- 11岁儿童感知学校和年级气氛与心理健康的关系
学校是采取干预措施改善心理健康的重要场所。越来越多的证据表明,学校氛围——有时表现为儿童对学校内的关系、安全、价值观和信仰的看法——会影响儿童的心理健康。儿童心理健康状况不佳与痛苦感和功能缺陷有关。然而,虽然大多数研究都集中在学校气候上,但筑巢水平较低的气候,包括年级组,可能很重要。通过学校调查收集了威尔士小学32606名儿童(7-11岁,3-6年级)的情感和行为困难的横断面数据,并在网上和课堂环境中提供给所有同意的儿童,并使用多层模型进行分析。然后将模型扩展到考虑年级组和学校气氛的汇总测量如何与心理健康结果相关联。未调整方差分割系数(VPCs)显示,情绪困难和行为困难的差异分别占2.8%和3.2%,而校级差异分别占2.4%和3.5%。更积极的年级组和学校氛围与更积极的心理健康结果相关。学校氛围和年级氛围与小学生心理健康独立相关。支持心理健康的干预措施应着眼于优化整个学校的气氛,以及年级组内的气氛。补充资料:在线版本提供补充资料,网址为10.1007/s12187-024-10213-7。
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来源期刊
Child Indicators Research
Child Indicators Research SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
14.30%
发文量
103
期刊介绍: Child Indicators Research is an international, peer-reviewed quarterly that focuses on measurements and indicators of children''s well-being, and their usage within multiple domains and in diverse cultures. The Journal will present measures and data resources, analysis of the data, exploration of theoretical issues, and information about the status of children, as well as the implementation of this information in policy and practice. It explores how child indicators can be used to improve the development and well-being of children. Child Indicators Research will provide a unique, applied perspective, by presenting a variety of analytical models, different perspectives, and a range of social policy regimes. The Journal will break through the current ‘isolation’ of academicians, researchers and practitioners and serve as a ‘natural habitat’ for anyone interested in child indicators. Unique and exclusive, the Journal will be a source of high quality, policy impact and rigorous scientific papers. Readership: academicians, researchers, government officials, data collectors, providers of funding, practitioners, and journalists who have an interest in children’s well-being issues.
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