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Journal Article

Citation

Palmu IR, Närhi VM, Savolainen HK. Emot. Behav. Diffic. 2018; 23(2): 111-126.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/13632752.2017.1376968

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

The current study examined the over-time association between externalizing behaviour problems and academic performance during school transition in a cross-lagged design. The main focus was to reveal whether the externalizing behaviour composite and its components separately, including symptoms of CD and ADHD, differ in their relationship with academic performance; and if controlling child- or family-related covariates altered the strength or direction of the relationship. Externalizing behaviour composite was associated with a decrease in academic performance over a 1-year time lag. Academic performance at Grade 6 was associated with low CD symptoms at Grade 7. The effect remained significant when child-related covariates were controlled, but not after controlling family-related covariates. ADHD symptoms systematically had a negative effect on grade 7 GPA, even after child- and family-related covariates were controlled. The results indicate that during early adolescence and school transition, CD and ADHD symptoms differ in their association with academic performance.


Language: en

Keywords

academic performance; ADHD; conduct disorder; Externalizing behaviour; school transition

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