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Student-teacher relationship trajectories and mental health problems in young children CQU.pdf (544.23 kB)

Student-teacher relationship trajectories and mental health problems in young children

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Version 2 2023-01-05, 06:09
Version 1 2021-01-18, 20:12
journal contribution
posted on 2023-01-05, 06:09 authored by Lauren Miller-LewisLauren Miller-Lewis, ACP Sawyer, AK Searle, MN Mittinty, MG Sawyer, JW Lynch
BACKGROUND: This longitudinal study classified groups of children experiencing different trajectories of student-teacher relationship quality over the transition from preschool into school, and determined the strength of the association between different student-teacher relationship trajectories and childhood mental health problems in the second year of primary school. METHODS: A community sample of 460 Australian children were assessed in preschool (age 4), the first school year (age 5), and second school year (age 6). Teachers at all three assessments reported on student-teacher relationship quality with the Student Teacher Relationship Scale. When the children were at preschool and in their second school year, parents and teachers rated children's mental health problems using the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire. RESULTS: Latent-class growth modelling identified two trajectories of student-teacher relationship quality: (1) a stable-high student-teacher relationship quality and (2) a moderate/declining student-teacher relationship quality trajectory. Generalised linear models found that after adjusting for family demographic characteristics, having a stable high quality student-teacher relationship trajectory was associated with fewer parent-rated and teacher-rated total mental health problems, and fewer conduct, hyperactivity, and peer problems, and greater prosocial behaviour at age 6. A stable high quality trajectory was also associated with fewer teacher-rated, but not parent-rated emotional symptoms. These effects remained after adjustment for levels of mental health problems at age 4. CONCLUSIONS: Findings suggest that early intervention and prevention strategies that focus on building stable high quality student-teacher relationships during preschool and children's transition into formal schooling, may help reduce rates of childhood mental health problems during the early school years.

Funding

Category 1 - Australian Competitive Grants (this includes ARC, NHMRC)

History

Volume

2

Start Page

1

End Page

18

eISSN

2050-7283

Publisher

BMC

Additional Rights

CC BY 2.0

Language

eng

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • Yes

Acceptance Date

2014-08-06

External Author Affiliations

University of Adelaide

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Journal

BMC Psychology