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dc.contributor.authorGODEFROID, Julie
dc.date.accessioned2023-10-31T19:19:00Z
dc.date.available2023-10-31T19:19:00Z
dc.date.issued2019
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12648/13243
dc.description.abstractThis study used archival data from a study that was conducted to evaluate a school-based social emotional learning intervention. The sample included 532 adolescents in sixth and seventh grades and their teachers from 18 public schools in New York City?. The associations between internalizing symptoms and (a) academic performance and (b) student-teacher relationship quality were investigated as well as the potential mediating role of student-teacher relationship quality between internalizing symptoms and academic performance. The results did not support the mediating role. However, a regression analysis seemed to indicate that student-teacher relationship quality and internalizing symptoms had a major impact on academic grades. Boys seemed to have a better student-teacher relationship quality while girls showed more internalizing symptoms. However, the negative correlation between depression and grades was significant for both genders. Because this sample came from an understudied population, more research with children from minorities is essential to understand the interplay between different factors in an urban school setting and their impacts on students’ academic success.    
dc.subjectFirst Reader Paul Siegel
dc.subjectSenior Project
dc.subjectSemester Fall 2019
dc.titleEXAMINING THE ASSOCIATION BETWEEN INTERNALIZING SYMPTOMS, STUDENT-TEACHER RELATIONSHIP QUALITY, AND ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT        
dc.typeSenior Project
refterms.dateFOA2023-10-31T19:19:00Z
dc.description.institutionPurchase College SUNY
dc.description.departmentPsychology
dc.description.degreelevelBachelor of Arts
dc.description.advisorSiegel, Paul
dc.date.semesterFall 2019
dc.accessibility.statementPurchase College - State University of New York (PC) is committed to ensuring that people with disabilities have an opportunity equal to that of their nondisabled peers to participate in the College's programs, benefits, and services, including those delivered through electronic and information technology. If you encounter an access barrier with a specific item and have a remediation request, please contact lib.ir@purchase.edu.


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