Trajectories of teacher-student warmth and conflict at the transition to middle school: Effects on academic engagement and achievement |
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Affiliation: | 1. ServeMinnesota, 120 South Sixth Street, Suite 220, Minneapolis, MN 55402, United States;2. Georgia State University, United States;3. ServeMinnesota, United States;1. University of South Dakota, United States;2. University of Kansas, United States;3. Purdue University, United States;4. Wayne State College, United States;1. University of Illinois at Chicago, United States;2. Elmhurst College, United States;1. Texas A&M University, United States;2. The University of Texas at Austin, United States |
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Abstract: | Using piece-wise longitudinal trajectory analysis, this study investigated trajectories of teacher-reported warmth and conflict in their relationships with students 4 years prior to and 3 years following the transition to middle school in a sample of 550 academically at-risk and ethnically diverse adolescents. At the transition to middle school, teacher reports of warmth showed a significant drop (shift in intercept), above age-related declines. Both warmth and conflict declined across the middle school years. Structural equation modeling (SEM) tested effects of the shifts in intercept and the post-transition slopes on reading and math achievement, teacher-rated engagement, and student-reported school belonging 3 years post-transition, above pre-transition levels of the outcome. For warmth, a drop in intercept predicted lower math scores and engagement, and a more positive slope predicted higher engagement. For conflict, an increase in intercept and a negative slope predicted lower engagement. Implications of findings for reducing normative declines in academic engagement in middle school are discussed. |
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