Follow-up study of young stress-affected and stress-resilient urban children
Reports follow-up study of 181 young highly stressed urban children, classified as stress-resilient (SR) and stress-affected (SA) 1½–2 years earlier. At follow-up (T2), children were retested on five initial (T1) test measures: self-rated adjustment, perceived competence, social problem solving, rea...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Development and psychopathology 1997-09, Vol.9 (3), p.565-577 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Reports follow-up study of 181 young highly stressed urban children, classified as
stress-resilient (SR) and stress-affected (SA) 1½–2 years earlier. At follow-up
(T2), children were retested on five initial (T1) test measures:
self-rated adjustment, perceived competence, social problem solving, realistic control
attributions, and empathy; parents and teachers did new child adjustment ratings, and parents
participated in a phone interview focusing on the T1–T2
interval. Child test and adjustment measures and parent interview responses at T2
sensitively differentiated children classified as SR and SA at T1. Test and
interview variables used at T1 and T2 correlated moderately across
time periods. At T2, four child test indicators (i.e., rule conformity, global
self-worth, social problem solving, and realistic control attributions) and four parent interview
variables (positive future expectations for the child, absence of predelinquency indicators, good
parent mental health in the past year, and adaptive parent coping strategies) sensitively
differentiated children classified as SR and SA at T1. No relationship was found
between family stress experienced in the T1–T2 interval
and changes in children's adjustment during that period. |
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ISSN: | 0954-5794 1469-2198 |
DOI: | 10.1017/S0954579497001326 |