Academic achievement despite child maltreatment: a longitudinal study.
2011
Abstract Purpose Although researchers have concluded that child maltreatment has a negative effect on children's learning and academic achievement, not all children are negatively affected by maltreatment, and some children seem to succeed academically despite being maltreated. Drawing on risk and resilience theory, we examined a broad range of potential risk, promotive, and protective factors within children and their environments along with characteristics of the maltreatment to account for variability in test scores. Methods A national longitudinal probability sample of 702 maltreated school-aged children, ages 6–10, and their caregivers was used to predict reading and math scores among maltreated children over three years. Results We found that chronic maltreatment, poorer daily living skills, and lower intelligence explained a substantial proportion of the variance in maltreated children's math scores (39%), whereas type of maltreatment, poorer daily living skills and lower intelligence explained a substantial proportion of the variance in reading scores (54%) over time. Contrary to our prediction, having a behavior problem seemed to protect chronically maltreated children from poorer performance in math over time. Conclusions To increase academic achievement among maltreated children, it is imperative that we prevent chronic maltreatment and help children increase their competency on daily living skills.
Keywords:
- Social psychology
- Psychiatry
- Physical abuse
- Psychological resilience
- Psychology
- Suicide prevention
- Academic achievement
- Activities of daily living
- Competence (human resources)
- Longitudinal study
- Protective factor
- child abuse
- Injury prevention
- Clinical psychology
- Human factors and ergonomics
- poison control
- Developmental psychology
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