Adolescence: Developmental, Clinical, and School Psychology – Lecture summary
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The goal of secondary education is to promote independent thinking and make your own well-informed choices. In the past, the goal was more about socialization and conformity. Secondary education was for the elite and males only before the last century. However, after the last century, a knowledge economy started to develop so secondary education was needed. In developing countries, there is a similar but delayed pattern. This means that secondary education cannot be taken for granted.
There are differences between developed countries when it comes to secondary education. In Europe, children have to decide about their future at an earlier age. The advantage of this is that children will have an early idea of future and this allows for better tailoring of teaching. However, the disadvantage is that there are children who are developing a bit later and those will be disadvantaged.
In the United States, there is a distinction between public and private schools and funding depends on state. In Japan and China, the admission to university is only for the highest performing students. This does not make them more unhappy and they still see and use college as a time of fun and exploration.
There are several factors promoting educational success and engagement:
All factors are interconnected. This makes causality difficult to establish. Teaching should be characterized by a combination of warmth (1), clear communication (2), high standard for behaviour (3) and a moderate level of control (4). However, it may be necessary that students, parents and teachers have the same beliefs as a school which reinforces already existing beliefs could promote outcomes.
Engagement refers to the quality of being psychologically committed to learning. It includes being alert and attentive in the classroom and approaching educational assignments with the aim of learning the material rather than passing. Unstructured socializing is negatively related to school performance whereas organized activities are beneficial as long as they are not longer than 10 hours per week. The immigration paradox refers to the finding that the longer an immigrant family has been in the United States, the worse the children do in school. This may be because they internalize the cultural values.
Absenteeism is predicted by several factors:
Dropping out can be the consequence of prolonged absenteeism. It is predicted by several factors:
People who drop out are more often aggressive (1), active (2) and score high on sensation-seeking (3). Dropping out is more common in larger schools as it is more difficult to maintain a healthy school climate. A solution to dropping out could be using caring teachers (1), small classes (2) and starting intervention early (3). Supplemental academic training and employment-oriented training could also prove to be beneficial. Programmes need to be adapted to individual needs.
Females outperform males academically, potentially because girls tend to enjoy the school environment more (e.g. more positive relationships with teachers). Adolescent girls are also more likely than adolescent boys to feel supported by their parents and have supportive relationships with adults outside of the family.
There are four characteristics of students who are gifted:
Retention refers to maintaining students in college until they graduate. Students’ previous academic background (1), ethnic background (2) and family SES (3) are associated with retention. Retention is higher among students of higher academic ability. People who attend college become less dogmatic (1), less authoritarian (2) and less ethnocentric in their political and social views (3).
People take a gap year for several reasons:
People who take a gap year have higher motivation when they enter tertiary education. They develop life skills (1), social values (2), non-academic skills (3) and qualifications (4). However, it is important to have a plan.
Motivation refers to a willingness to invest one’s capacities. It is an important predictor of school success. The Jenkins Curve holds that the percentage of students who like school decreases with age. This shows that motivation drops with age and grade while motivation is essential for learning as motivated students learn more (1), persist longer (2), produce higher quality work (3) and score higher on tests (4).
Motivation can be measured in a school context by viewing it as a trait using several questionnaires:
Autonomous motivation consists of two parts:
Controlled motivation also consists of two parts:
The disadvantage of using trait indices is that it cannot be used in experimental studies. However, motivation can also be seen as a state rather than a trait. There are several ways to measure motivation when it is viewed as a state:
Motivation seems to depend on performance in a difficult task when it comes to effort discounting. Diligence is domain general. There are several theories about motivation:
Mindset is poorly related to performance and mindset interventions are only slightly effective. Furthermore, they are only effective for low SES and at-risk students. Increasing competence, autonomy or relatedness increases performance. However, this is mainly when extrinsic rewards are not salient.
Having a goal seems to enhance motivation. This can be targeted using a motivational interviewing intervention. Academic goals are among the highest ranked by adolescents. There are two type of achievement goals:
Delay discounting states that the value of a goal is discounted by its delay. This is especially the case in adolescents. This could explain why adolescents value academic goals but do not devote a lot of time to school.
Extrinsic rewards improve performance although it is not clear whether it decreases intrinsic motivation. Extrinsic rewards should be used for tasks that are not intrinsically motivating.
Overall, motivation interventions seem to be effective and are not significantly impacted by moderators. Motivation can be a key process or mechanism for enhancing student learning outcomes
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This bundle contains all the lectures of the course Adolescence: Developmental, Clinical, and School Psychology given at the University of Amsterdam. All the articles are incorporated in the lectures, making it an extensive and full summary for
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