Published February 26, 2016
| Version v1
Publication
Adjustment of school-aged children and adolescents growing up in at-risk families: Relationships between family variables and individual, relational and school adjustment
Description
The goal of this study was to examine relationships between several family characteristics and the
adjustment (at individual, relational and school levels) of 63 school-aged children and adolescents growing
up in families that received psychosocial interventions by Social Services of the Seville Council. The second
aim was to explore possible differences in family characteristics between at-risk children non-adapted
to their classroom and adapted children. We compared at-risk children to their classmates (N= 747) and
established the rate of at-risk children non-adapted to their classroom. First, the models tested showed low
to moderate prediction ability, with ecological levels of family variables playing a specific role depending on
the outcome considered. Perceived satisfaction was relevant for internalizing problems, quality of home
environment predicted the externalizing problems and both relational and group-level variables explained
social skills and academic performance. Second, at-risk children non-adapted to their classroom performed
more poorly than adapted ones when several development measures were considered. Taking family
variables into account, only the mother's perceived competence and socio-economic status were statistically
different for adolescents non-adapted to the classroom, compared to the adapted children.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- https://idus.us.es/handle/11441/36615
- URN
- urn:oai:idus.us.es:11441/36615
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- USE