The Roles of Resilience, Peer Relationship, Teacher-Student Relationship on Student Mental Health Difficulties During COVID-19

The present cross-sectional study aimed to (a) expand our understanding of the role of risk and resilience factors for adolescent adjustment during coronavirus disease (COVID-19) and (b) examine personal resilience, peer and teacher-student relationships as protective factors against mental health d...

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Veröffentlicht in:School psychology 2022-01, Vol.37 (1), p.62-74
Hauptverfasser: Zhu, Qianyu, Cheong, Yeram, Wang, Cixin, Sun, Cuiying
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The present cross-sectional study aimed to (a) expand our understanding of the role of risk and resilience factors for adolescent adjustment during coronavirus disease (COVID-19) and (b) examine personal resilience, peer and teacher-student relationships as protective factors against mental health difficulties. A total of 3,662 students from 4th to 11th grades in Urumchi, China completed a survey in June 2020. Urumchi is an ethnically diverse city, with nearly 40% of the population in this school district being ethnic minority students. The schools of Urumchi closed in February 2020 and reopened in April 2020. The results of latent moderated structural equation modeling suggested that peer victimization was associated with greater mental health difficulties in students. Personal resilience and teacher-student relationships were promotive factors for better mental health and also served as a buffer from the negative effect of peer victimization on mental health. The results also showed divergent patterns for elementary versus secondary school students as well as gender differences. Implications for how schools can support students during COVID-19 were discussed. Impact and Implications Findings highlight the protective roles of personal resilience and teacher-student relationships in students' mental health during COVID-19 and emphasize the importance of monitoring peer victimization and mental health when reopening schools.
ISSN:2578-4218
2578-4226
DOI:10.1037/spq0000492