69 results on '"Nurmi JE"'
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2. Experience of the threat of war among Finnish adolescents: Effects on thinking about the future, and comparison of methods
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Nurmi Je
- Subjects
Male ,Warfare ,Adolescent ,Writing ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Psychology, Adolescent ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Developmental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Future orientation ,media_common ,Mass media ,business.industry ,4. Education ,Adolescent psychology ,05 social sciences ,Fear ,General Medicine ,Female ,Worry ,Psychology ,business ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
In the first of the three studies presented here, 148 Finnish adolescents of 11, 15 and 18 years of age were interviewed in 1982 about their fears for the future. For the second study, 296 adolescents between the ages of 15 and 20 wrote an essay in 1984 about the future. In the third study, the procedure of the first study was repeated in 1987 on 11‐and 15‐year‐old adolescents. In all the studies, about half of the adolescents expressed a fear of war and the percentage did not change between 1982 and 1987. The mass media were the most important source of information about the issue of nuclear war, and personal communication with teachers and parents had only a marginal role. Adolescents experiencing the threat of war were more interested in their personal future compared with adolescents expressing no fear. The differences between the methods used and their influence on the results are discussed.
- Published
- 1988
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3. A Comparison of Dyadic and Social Network Assessments of Peer Influence.
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DeLay D, Laursen B, Kiuru N, Rogers A, Kindermann T, and Nurmi JE
- Abstract
The present study compares two methods for assessing peer influence: the longitudinal Actor-Partner-Interdependence-Model (L-APIM) and the longitudinal Social Network Analysis Model (L-SNA). The data were drawn from 1,995 (49% girls; 51 % boys) 3
rd grade students (Mage =9.68 years). From this sample, L-APIM ( n = 206 indistinguishable dyads; n = 187 distinguishable dyads) and L-SNA ( n = 1,024 total network members) subsamples were created. Students completed peer nominations and objective assessments of mathematical reasoning in the spring of the 3rd and 4th grades. Patterns of statistical significance differed across analyses. Stable distinguishable and indistinguishable L-APIM dyadic analyses identified reciprocated friend influence such that friends with similar levels of mathematical reasoning influenced one another and friends with higher math reasoning influenced friends with lower math reasoning. L-SNA models with an influence parameter (i.e., average reciprocated alter) comparable to that assessed in L-APIM analyses failed to detect influence effects. Influence effects did emerge, however, with the addition of another, different social network influence parameter (i.e., average alter influence effect). The diverging results may be attributed to differences in the sensitivity of the analyses, their ability to account for structural confounds with selection and influence, the samples included in the analyses, and the relative strength of influence in reciprocated best as opposed to other friendships.- Published
- 2021
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4. Early Cognitive Precursors of Children's Mathematics Learning Disability and Persistent Low Achievement: A 5-Year Longitudinal Study.
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Zhang X, Räsänen P, Koponen T, Aunola K, Lerkkanen MK, and Nurmi JE
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- Child, Female, Finland, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Academic Success, Child Development physiology, Dyscalculia physiopathology
- Abstract
Mathematical difficulties have been distinguished as mathematics learning disability (MLD) and persistent low achievement (LA). Based on 1,880 Finnish children who were followed from kindergarten (age 6) to fourth grade, this study examined the early risk factors for MLD and LA. Distinct groups of MLD (6.0% of the sample) and LA (25.7%) children were identified on the basis of their mathematics performance between first and fourth grades with latent class growth modeling. Impairment in the same set of cognitive skills, including language, spatial, and counting skills, was found to underlie MLD and LA. The finding highlights the importance of monitoring mathematical development across the early grades and identifying early cognitive precursors of MLD and LA for screening and intervention efforts., (© 2018 Society for Research in Child Development.)
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- 2020
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5. Teacher-student interaction and lower secondary school students' situational engagement.
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Pöysä S, Vasalampi K, Muotka J, Lerkkanen MK, Poikkeus AM, and Nurmi JE
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- Adolescent, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Schools, Adolescent Behavior psychology, Interpersonal Relations, School Teachers, Social Support, Students psychology
- Abstract
Background: Prior research has shown that engagement plays a significant role in students' academic learning., Aims: The present study sought to expand the current understanding of students' engagement by examining how situational engagement during a particular lesson is associated with the observed teacher-student classroom interactions (i.e., emotional support, instructional support, and classroom organization) in the same lesson., Sample: The participants were 709 Grade 7 students (47.7% girls) from 59 classrooms in 26 lower secondary schools and 51 teachers., Methods: The data consisted of 155 video-recorded lessons (90 language arts and 65 mathematics lessons) coded using the Classroom Assessment Scoring System - Secondary (CLASS-S) observational instrument. Students' self-ratings of their situation-specific engagement were collected using the mobile-based In Situations (InSitu) Instrument at the end of each lesson. The data were analyzed with cross-classified two-level hierarchical modelling., Results and Conclusions: The results indicated that emotional support in the classroom was positively associated with students' emotional engagement and help-seeking, whereas classroom organization was associated with students' behavioural and cognitive engagement. Overall, the findings provide novel evidence suggesting that students' engagement can be fostered by supportive teacher-student interactions., (© 2018 The British Psychological Society.)
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- 2019
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6. Parent contributions to friendship stability during the primary school years.
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Dickson DJ, Huey M, Laursen B, Kiuru N, and Nurmi JE
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- Adult, Child, Female, Finland, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Male, Peer Group, Schools, Surveys and Questionnaires, Depressive Disorder psychology, Friends psychology, Parent-Child Relations, Parenting psychology, Parents psychology
- Abstract
The present study examines whether characteristics of parents predict the stability of a child's best friendships across the primary school years. Participants included 1,523 Finnish children (766 boys) who reported involvement in a total of 1,326 reciprocated friendship dyads in the 1st grade (M = 7.16 years old). At the onset of the study, mothers and fathers completed questionnaires describing their own parenting (i.e., behavioral control, psychological control, and affection toward the child) and depressive symptoms. Child scores for peer status (i.e., acceptance and rejection) were derived from 1st grade peer nomination data. Discrete-time survival analyses predicted the occurrence and timing of friendship dissolution, across 1st to 6th grades, for friendships that began in 1st grade. Parent depression and parent psychological control uniquely predicted subsequent child friendship dissolution, above and beyond the contribution of peer status variables. (PsycINFO Database Record, ((c) 2018 APA, all rights reserved).)
- Published
- 2018
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7. Knowing, applying, and reasoning about arithmetic: Roles of domain-general and numerical skills in multiple domains of arithmetic learning.
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Zhang X, Räsänen P, Koponen T, Aunola K, Lerkkanen MK, and Nurmi JE
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- Child, Female, Humans, Language, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Memory, Short-Term, Psychological Tests, Space Perception, Mathematical Concepts, Problem Solving
- Abstract
The longitudinal relations of domain-general and numerical skills at ages 6-7 years to 3 cognitive domains of arithmetic learning, namely knowing (written computation), applying (arithmetic word problems), and reasoning (arithmetic reasoning) at age 11, were examined for a representative sample of 378 Finnish children. The results showed that domain-general skills, including spatial visualization, language, rapid automatized naming, and working memory, contributed independently to arithmetic learning. These relations were mostly mediated via basic number competence (i.e., counting sequence and number system knowledge), although spatial visualization remained predictive of arithmetic outcomes. The findings underscore a similar developmental course of arithmetic learning across different cognitive domains where domain-general skills build a launchpad for advanced arithmetic via enhancing basic number competence. (PsycINFO Database Record, ((c) 2017 APA, all rights reserved).)
- Published
- 2017
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8. Cross-lagged relations between teacher and parent ratings of children's task avoidance and different literacy skills.
- Author
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Georgiou GK, Hirvonen R, Manolitsis G, and Nurmi JE
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- Child, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Academic Performance psychology, Child Behavior psychology, Literacy psychology, Parents, School Teachers
- Abstract
Background: Task avoidance is a significant predictor of literacy skills. However, it remains unclear whether the relation between the two is reciprocal and whether it is affected by the type of literacy outcome, who is rating children's task avoidance, and the children's gender., Aim: The purpose of this longitudinal study was to examine the cross-lagged relations between teacher and parent ratings of children's task avoidance and different literacy skills., Sample: One hundred and seventy-two Greek children (91 girls, 81 boys) were followed from Grade 1 to Grade 3., Methods: Children were assessed on reading accuracy, reading fluency, and spelling to dictation. Parents and teachers rated the children's task-avoidant behaviour., Results: Results of structural equation modelling showed that the cross-lagged relations varied as a function of the literacy outcome, who rated the children's task avoidance, and children's gender. Earlier reading and spelling performance predicted subsequent parent-rated task avoidance, but parent-rated task avoidance did not predict subsequent reading and spelling performance (with the exception of spelling in Grade 3). Teacher-rated task avoidance and reading fluency/spelling had a reciprocal relationship over time. In addition, the effects of teacher-rated task avoidance on future spelling were significantly stronger in boys than in girls., Conclusions: This suggests that poor reading and spelling performance can lead to subsequent task avoidance in both classroom and home situations. The fact that task avoidance permeates across different learning environments is alarming and calls for joint action from both parents and teachers to mitigate its negative impact on learning., (© 2017 The British Psychological Society.)
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- 2017
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9. Stable same-sex friendships with higher achieving partners promote mathematical reasoning in lower achieving primary school children.
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DeLay D, Laursen B, Kiuru N, Poikkeus AM, Aunola K, and Nurmi JE
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- Child, Female, Friends, Humans, Male, Peer Group, Achievement, Child Development physiology, Interpersonal Relations, Mathematical Concepts, Thinking physiology
- Abstract
This study was designed to investigate friend influence over mathematical reasoning in a sample of 374 children in 187 same-sex friend dyads (184 girls in 92 friendships; 190 boys in 95 friendships). Participants completed surveys that measured mathematical reasoning in the 3rd grade (approximately 9 years old) and 1 year later in the 4th grade (approximately 10 years old). Analyses designed for dyadic data (i.e., longitudinal actor-partner interdependence model) indicated that higher achieving friends influenced the mathematical reasoning of lower achieving friends, but not the reverse. Specifically, greater initial levels of mathematical reasoning among higher achieving partners in the 3rd grade predicted greater increases in mathematical reasoning from 3rd grade to 4th grade among lower achieving partners. These effects held after controlling for peer acceptance and rejection, task avoidance, interest in mathematics, maternal support for homework, parental education, length of the friendship, and friendship group norms on mathematical reasoning., (© 2015 The British Psychological Society.)
- Published
- 2015
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10. Parental causal attributions and emotions in daily learning situations with the child.
- Author
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Enlund E, Aunola K, Tolvanen A, and Nurmi JE
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- Adult, Child, Fathers psychology, Female, Humans, Male, Mothers psychology, Social Perception, Surveys and Questionnaires, Achievement, Emotions, Learning, Parents psychology
- Abstract
This study investigated the dynamics between the causal attributions parents reported daily for their children's success in learning situations and parental positive emotions. The sample consisted of 159 mothers and 147 fathers of 162 first graders (83 girls, 79 boys; aged from 6 to 7 years, M = 7.5 years, SD = 3.6 months). Parents filled in a structured diary questionnaire concerning their causal attributions and emotions over 7 successive days in the fall semester and again over 7 successive days in the spring semester. Multilevel analyses showed that both parental causal attributions and positive emotions varied more within parents (between days over the week) than between parents. Furthermore, mothers' positive emotions on a certain day predicted their causal attributions on that same day rather than vice versa. The higher the level of positive emotions parents reported in a specific day, the more they used effort and ability as causal attributions for their offspring's success on that same day., ((c) 2015 APA, all rights reserved).)
- Published
- 2015
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11. Children's Temperament and Academic Skill Development During First Grade: Teachers' Interaction Styles as Mediators.
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Viljaranta J, Aunola K, Mullola S, Virkkala J, Hirvonen R, Pakarinen E, and Nurmi JE
- Abstract
The present study followed 156 Finnish children (M
age = 7.25 years) during the first grade of primary school to examine to what extent parent- and teacher-rated temperament impacts children's math and reading skill development during the first grade, and the extent to which this impact would be mediated by teachers' interaction styles with the children. The results showed that the impact of children's low task orientation and negative emotionality on their math skill development was mediated via teachers' behavioral control and, among girls, also by psychological control. The negative impact of children's inhibition on math skill development, in turn, was not mediated via teachers' interaction styles. Temperament did not predict the children's reading skill development during first grade., (© 2015 The Authors. Child Development © 2015 Society for Research in Child Development, Inc.)- Published
- 2015
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12. How university students with reading difficulties are supported in achieving their goals.
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Stack-Cutler HL, Parrila RK, Jokisaari M, and Nurmi JE
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- Adolescent, Adult, Canada, Dyslexia rehabilitation, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Universities, Young Adult, Achievement, Dyslexia psychology, Goals, Social Capital, Students psychology
- Abstract
We examine (a) what social ties university students with a history of reading difficulty (RD) report assisting them to achieve their goals, (b) outlets available for developing social ties, (c) resources mobilized within these relationships, and (d) the impact of social ties' status on academic achievement. Participants were 107 university students with RD who were currently completing or had recently completed a university degree. Results showed that university students with RD named friends, parents, and significant others (e.g., boy/girlfriend, spouse) as social ties most often. Personal social ties were developed through social media networking sites and within close relationships, and institutional social ties through academic centers and university general services, among others. Resources mobilized among personal and institutional social ties included emotional and social support, advice and planning, writing and studying help, and goal setting. Institutional social ties also afforded job search assistance, accommodations, skill development, financial support, and mental health services. Finally, the status of employed, but not student, social ties explained academic achievement., (© Hammill Institute on Disabilities 2013.)
- Published
- 2015
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13. Positive teacher and peer relations combine to predict primary school students' academic skill development.
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Kiuru N, Aunola K, Lerkkanen MK, Pakarinen E, Poskiparta E, Ahonen T, Poikkeus AM, and Nurmi JE
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- Child, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Mathematics education, Reading, Social Support, Faculty, Interpersonal Relations, Learning, Peer Group
- Abstract
This study examined cross-lagged associations between positive teacher and peer relations and academic skill development. Reading and math skills were tested among 625 students in kindergarten and Grade 4. Teacher reports of positive affect toward each student and classmate reports of peer acceptance were gathered in Grades 1-3. The results showed, first, that positive teacher affect toward the student and peer acceptance were reciprocally associated: Positive teacher affect predicted higher peer acceptance, and higher peer acceptance predicted a higher level of positive teacher affect. Second, the effect of positive teacher affect on academic skill development was partly mediated via peer acceptance, while the effect of early academic skills on peer acceptance was partly mediated via positive teacher affect. The results suggest that a warm and supportive teacher can increase a student's peer acceptance, which, in turn, is positively associated with learning outcomes., ((c) 2015 APA, all rights reserved).)
- Published
- 2015
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14. The developmental dynamics of children's academic performance and mothers' homework-related affect and practices.
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Silinskas G, Kiuru N, Aunola K, Lerkkanen MK, and Nurmi JE
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- Adult, Affect, Analysis of Variance, Child, Female, Humans, Learning, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Mathematics education, Reading, Self Concept, Aptitude, Child Development, Educational Status, Mother-Child Relations, Mothers psychology
- Abstract
This study investigated the longitudinal associations between children's academic performance and their mothers' affect, practices, and perceptions of their children in homework situations. The children's (n = 2,261) performance in reading and math was tested in Grade 1 and Grade 4, and the mothers (n = 1,476) filled out questionnaires on their affect, practices, and perceptions while their children were in Grades 2, 3, and 4. The results showed, first, that the more help in homework the mothers reported, the slower was the development of their children's academic performance from Grade 1 to Grade 4. This negative association was true especially if mothers perceived their children not to be able to work autonomously. Second, children's good academic performance in Grade 1 predicted mothers' perception of child's ability to be autonomous and positive affect in homework situations later on, whereas poor performance predicted mothers' negative affect, help, and monitoring. Finally, mothers' negative affect mediated the association between children's poor performance, maternal practices, and perceptions of their children., ((c) 2015 APA, all rights reserved).)
- Published
- 2015
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15. Typologies and precursors of career adaptability patterns among emerging adults: a seven-year longitudinal study.
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Shulman S, Vasalampi K, Barr T, Livne Y, Nurmi JE, and Pratt MW
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- Adaptation, Psychological, Adult, Emotions, Employment psychology, Female, Humans, Interviews as Topic, Israel, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Motivation, Parent-Child Relations, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, Career Choice, Human Development
- Abstract
The present study examined career adaptability in 100 Israeli emerging adults who were followed from ages 22 to 29. Participants were given an in depth interview and were asked to talk about their current work, difficulties they might have had in the past and how they coped with them. In addition they were asked to elaborate on the extent to which their job fits their interests and is meaningful to them. Analyses of interviews yielded three distinctive career adaptability patterns that were associated with different levels of concurrent wellbeing: Integrated, Compromised, and Vague. A lower level of identified motivation measured seven years earlier predicted membership in the Compromised pattern. A higher level of extrinsic motivation combined with decreased parental support predicted membership in the Vague pattern. Findings are discussed within the framework of the occupational adaptations and compromises that young people must make when approaching the age of 30., (Copyright © 2014 The Foundation for Professionals in Services for Adolescents. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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16. Social withdrawal in children moderates the association between parenting styles and the children's own socioemotional development.
- Author
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Zarra-Nezhad M, Kiuru N, Aunola K, Zarra-Nezhad M, Ahonen T, Poikkeus AM, Lerkkanen MK, and Nurmi JE
- Subjects
- Child, Female, Humans, Male, Child Behavior psychology, Child Development physiology, Father-Child Relations, Mother-Child Relations psychology, Parenting psychology, Social Skills
- Abstract
Background: Social withdrawal in early childhood is a risk factor for later socioemotional difficulties. This study examined the joint effects of children's social withdrawal and mothers' and fathers' parenting styles on children's socioemotional development. Based on diatheses-stress, vantage sensitivity, and differential susceptibility models, socially withdrawn children were assumed to be more prone to parental influences than others., Methods: Teachers rated 314 children on prosocial skills, and internalizing and externalizing behaviors at three points in time between grades 1-3. Mothers (n = 279) and fathers (n = 182) filled in questionnaires measuring their affection, and their behavioral and psychological control at the same points in time. Teacher reports on children's level of social withdrawal were obtained at the end of kindergarten., Results: Panel analysis showed that particularly those children who showed signs of social withdrawal were vulnerable to the negative effects of low maternal affection in terms of externalizing behavior. Moreover, among these children, mothers' and fathers' psychological control predicted high levels of internalizing problem but, at the same time, mothers' psychological control predicted also a high level of prosocial behavior and low levels of externalizing problem., Conclusions: The results supported the diathesis-stress model more than the differential susceptibility model. For example, socially withdrawn children were found to be particularly vulnerable to the negative effects of low maternal affection. Although maternal psychological control had positive effects on the prosocial skills of socially withdrawn children, and reduced the amount of externalizing problems, it was at the same time associated with an increase in their internalizing problems. In this way, socially withdrawn children seem to be at risk of pleasing their mothers at the cost of their own well-being., (© 2014 The Authors. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry. © 2014 Association for Child and Adolescent Mental Health.)
- Published
- 2014
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17. Parents and their children's school lives--commentary on the special issue, 'Parents' role in children's school lives'.
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Nurmi JE and Silinskas G
- Subjects
- Adult, Child, Humans, Achievement, Child Development physiology, Parent-Child Relations, Parenting psychology, Schools, Students psychology
- Published
- 2014
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18. Linguistic and spatial skills predict early arithmetic development via counting sequence knowledge.
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Zhang X, Koponen T, Räsänen P, Aunola K, Lerkkanen MK, and Nurmi JE
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- Child, Female, Humans, Language Development, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Child Development physiology, Mathematical Concepts, Reading, Space Perception physiology
- Abstract
Utilizing a longitudinal sample of Finnish children (ages 6-10), two studies examined how early linguistic (spoken vs. written) and spatial skills predict later development of arithmetic, and whether counting sequence knowledge mediates these associations. In Study 1 (N = 1,880), letter knowledge and spatial visualization, measured in kindergarten, predicted the level of arithmetic in first grade, and later growth through third grade. Study 2 (n = 378) further showed that these associations were mediated by counting sequence knowledge measured in first grade. These studies add to the literature by demonstrating the importance of written language for arithmetic development. The findings are consistent with the hypothesis that linguistic and spatial skills can improve arithmetic development by enhancing children's number-related knowledge., (© 2013 The Authors. Child Development © 2013 Society for Research in Child Development, Inc.)
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- 2014
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19. Task-focused behavior mediates the associations between supportive interpersonal environments and students' academic performance.
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Kiuru N, Pakarinen E, Vasalampi K, Silinskas G, Aunola K, Poikkeus AM, Metsäpelto RL, Lerkkanen MK, and Nurmi JE
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- Attention, Child, Female, Goals, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Parent-Child Relations, Parenting, Peer Group, Psychological Distance, Achievement, Social Environment, Social Support, Students
- Abstract
In the longitudinal study presented here, we tested the theoretical assumption that children's task-focused behavior in learning situations mediates the associations between supportive interpersonal environments and academic performance. The sample consisted of 2,137 Finnish-speaking children. Data on supportive interpersonal environments (characterized by authoritative parenting, positive teacher affect toward the child, and peer acceptance) were gathered in Grade 1. The children's task-focused behavior was measured in Grades 2 and 3, and academic performance was measured in Grades 1 and 4. The results supported our assumption by showing that all three supportive environments were positively associated with children's subsequent academic performance via increased task-focused behavior in learning situations. These findings suggest that students' academic performance can be promoted by increasing the support they receive from peers, parents, and teachers because such increased support leads to better task focus in learning tasks.
- Published
- 2014
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20. Maternal affection moderates friend influence on schoolwork engagement.
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Marion D, Laursen B, Kiuru N, Nurmi JE, and Salmela-Aro K
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- Adolescent, Adolescent Behavior, Age Factors, Female, Finland, Humans, Male, Mood Disorders epidemiology, Personal Satisfaction, Affect physiology, Friends psychology, Mood Disorders psychology, Mother-Child Relations, Schools, Students psychology
- Abstract
This study investigated friend influence over adolescent schoolwork engagement in 160 same-sex friend dyads (94 female dyads and 66 male dyads). Participants were approximately 16 years of age at the outset. Each friend described his or her own schoolwork engagement, school burnout, and perceptions of maternal affection. The results revealed that maternal affection moderated the influence that the higher burnout friend exerted over the subsequent schoolwork engagement of the lower burnout friend. The schoolwork engagement of the friend reporting higher levels of school burnout predicted a decline in the schoolwork engagement of the friend reporting lower school burnout, but only if the latter perceived below-average maternal affection., (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2014 APA, all rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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21. Bullies, victims, and antipathy: the feeling is mutual.
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Hafen CA, Laursen B, Nurmi JE, and Salmela-Aro K
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- Adolescent, Female, Finland, Hierarchy, Social, Humans, Male, Peer Group, Bullying psychology, Crime Victims psychology, Emotions, Interpersonal Relations, Rejection, Psychology, Sociometric Techniques
- Abstract
In this study we consider whether bullies and victims are disliked by most of their classmates, or whether antipathy is concentrated among the occupants of these roles. Antipathy nominations were collected from a community sample of 699 Finnish adolescents (14 to 17 years of age), who described their own bullying and victimization, as well as problem behaviors and school engagement. Victimization was associated with antipathy, but the strength of the association differed according to characteristics of the nominator. Victimization was related to antipathy when the nominator was high on bullying but not low. Similarly, bullying was related to antipathy when the nominator was high on victimization, but not low. The findings indicate that although bullies and victims have elevated mean levels of rejection, they are not disliked by most peers but rather by those who report themselves to be high on these attributes.
- Published
- 2013
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22. Psychological control in daily parent-child interactions increases children's negative emotions.
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Aunola K, Tolvanen A, Viljaranta J, and Nurmi JE
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- Adult, Child, Female, Finland, Humans, Male, Emotions physiology, Parent-Child Relations, Parenting psychology, Parents psychology
- Abstract
The aim of the present study was to investigate the temporal dynamics between parental behaviors in daily interactions with their offspring, that is, affection and psychological control, and children's negative emotions. The participants were 152 Finnish families with a 6- to 7-year-old child. Children's negative emotions and parental affection and psychological control in interactions with their child were measured daily using diary questionnaires filled in by the mothers and fathers over 7 successive days. The results of multilevel modeling showed that psychological control applied by mothers and fathers in daily interactions with their child leads to an increase in negative emotions in the child. Parental affection in daily interactions with their child was not associated with the child's negative emotions., (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2013 APA, all rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
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23. The role of parenting styles and teacher interactional styles in children's reading and spelling development.
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Kiuru N, Aunola K, Torppa M, Lerkkanen MK, Poikkeus AM, Niemi P, Viljaranta J, Lyyra AL, Leskinen E, Tolvanen A, and Nurmi JE
- Subjects
- Child, Educational Status, Female, Humans, Male, Parent-Child Relations, Parents, Schools, Child Development, Faculty, Interpersonal Relations, Learning, Parenting psychology, Reading
- Abstract
This study examined the associations between parenting styles, teacher interactional styles, and children's reading and spelling skills. The sample consisted of 864 Finnish-speaking children and their parents (864 mothers, 864 fathers) and teachers (N=123). Children's risk for reading disabilities and reader status were assessed in kindergarten. Children were also tested on reading and spelling skills in Grades 1 and 2. Parenting styles and teacher interactional styles were measured using parents' and teachers' self-reports in Grade 1. First, the results indicated that both an authoritative parenting style and authoritative teacher interactional style positively predicted children's spelling skill development. Second, authoritative parenting was particularly beneficial for the spelling skill development of children who were at risk for reading disabilities. Third, authoritative teaching promoted spelling skill development particularly among children who were nonreaders in kindergarten but had no risk for reading disabilities. Finally, some evidence was found that authoritative teaching could compensate for the negative impact of nonauthoritative parenting on reading development among kindergarten nonreaders., (Copyright © 2012 Society for the Study of School Psychology. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2012
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24. Personal goals and personality traits among young adults: Genetic and environmental effects.
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Salmela-Aro K, Read S, Nurmi JE, Vuoksimaa E, Siltala M, Dick DM, Pulkkinen L, Kaprio J, and Rose RJ
- Abstract
To assess genetic and environmental contributions to personal goals, 1279 twins aged 20-26 filled in Personal Project Analysis and NEO-FFI inventories. Personal goals relating to education, the respondent's own family, friends, property, travel and self showed primarily genetic and unique environmental effects, whereas goals related to parents and relatives showed both shared and unique environmental effects. The variation in goals related to health, work, hobbies and life philosophy was attributable to non-shared environmental effects. Openness to experience and personal goals related to family, education and property shared a significant amount of genetic influence. The same was true for extraversion and self-related goals, and agreeableness and goals related to property.
- Published
- 2012
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25. Early language and behavioral regulation skills as predictors of social outcomes.
- Author
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Aro T, Eklund K, Nurmi JE, and Poikkeus AM
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Psychological, Adolescent, Adult, Child, Preschool, Dyslexia psychology, Family Health statistics & numerical data, Female, Humans, Language Development Disorders psychology, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Models, Psychological, Parents psychology, Predictive Value of Tests, Risk Factors, Social Behavior, Young Adult, Child Behavior, Child Language, Dyslexia epidemiology, Language Development, Language Development Disorders epidemiology
- Abstract
Purpose: In the present study, the authors examined the prospective associations among early language skills, behavioral regulation skills, and 2 aspects of school-age social functioning (adaptability and social skills)., Method: The study sample consisted of children with and without a familial risk for dyslexia. The authors analyzed the relations among children's language (at age 2;6 [years;months] and age 5;0), behavioral regulation skills (at age 5;0), and social functioning (at age 8;0) using structural equation modeling. Subgroups of children with respect to language and behavioral regulation skills (at age 5;0) were identified through the use of mixture modeling., Results: Among at-risk children, behavioral regulation skills mediated the association between early language skills and social outcomes. A subgroup of children with poor regulatory and weak language skills scored lower in adaptability, whereas a subgroup having only poor language skills (with normal behavioral regulation) did not differ from a group with age-appropriate skills., Conclusions: The present findings indicate that behavioral regulation skills play an important role in predicting social outcomes among children at risk for language difficulties. Furthermore, it is suggested that various aspects of social functioning may be influenced differently by self-regulation skills and that predictive relationships vary with the degree of language development deficits and accompanying risks.
- Published
- 2012
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26. Is depression contagious? A test of alternative peer socialization mechanisms of depressive symptoms in adolescent peer networks.
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Kiuru N, Burk WJ, Laursen B, Nurmi JE, and Salmela-Aro K
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Female, Humans, Male, Depression psychology, Peer Group, Socialization
- Abstract
Purpose: This study examined the role of two different types of peer socialization (convergence, contagion) in adolescents' depression, adjusting for the effects of peer selection and deselection., Methods: The sample used in this study comprised 949 Finnish adolescents (56% females; mean age: 16 years at the outset) attending classrooms in eight secondary schools. Participants identified three school peers and reported depressive symptoms twice, 1 year apart. Sociometric and behavioral data were analyzed using dynamic social network analysis., Results: Adolescents initiated relationships with peers who reported similar levels of depression before initiation of the relationship, and dissolved relationships with peers who became dissimilar in depression from time 1 (T1) to time 2 (T2). The average score of peers' depressive symptoms at T1 predicted changes in adolescent depression at T2 (convergence), but adolescents with peers who reported relatively higher initial levels of depression did not report an increase in depression (contagion)., Conclusions: Over time, adolescents' depressive symptoms increasingly converged toward the average levels of their peers, but this convergence was not primarily because of contagion effects. The findings suggest that socialization processes can lead to both increases and decreases in adolescent depression, depending on peers' average level of depression., (Copyright © 2012 Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2012
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27. Students with reading and spelling disabilities: peer groups and educational attainment in secondary education.
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Kiuru N, Haverinen K, Salmela-Aro K, Nurmi JE, Savolainen H, and Holopainen L
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Dyslexia psychology, Educational Status, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Time Factors, Young Adult, Learning Disabilities psychology, Peer Group, Reading, Students psychology, Verbal Learning
- Abstract
The present study investigated whether the members of adolescents' peer groups are similar in reading and spelling disabilities and whether this similarity contributes to subsequent school achievement and educational attainment. The sample consisted of 375 Finnish adolescents whose reading and spelling disabilities were assessed at age 16 with the Finnish dyslexia screening test. The students also completed a sociometric nomination measure that was used to identify their peer groups. Register information on participants' school grades also was available, and educational attainment in secondary education was recorded 5 years after completion of the 9 years of basic education. The results revealed that the members of adolescent peer groups resembled each other in reading disabilities but not in those of spelling. Reading disabilities and academic achievement shared within the peer group also contributed to educational attainment in secondary education. Finally, reading disabilities played a larger role in educational attainment among males than among females.
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- 2011
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28. Task avoidance, number skills and parental learning difficulties as predictors of poor response to instruction.
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Niemi P, Nurmi JE, Lyyra AL, Lerkkanen MK, Lepola J, Poskiparta E, and Poikkeus AM
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- Child, Education, Educational Measurement, Female, Finland, Humans, Learning Disabilities psychology, Male, Mathematics, Motivation, Psychological Tests, Reading, Risk Factors, Surveys and Questionnaires, Educational Status, Learning Disabilities etiology, Parents psychology
- Abstract
Altogether 1,285 Finnish children were followed up from the end of kindergarten through Grade 1. All were nonreaders at school entrance. The aim was to delineate predictors of resistance to treatment that are evidenced as little or no reading progress during Grade 1. On the basis of reading achievement in Grade 1 spring, four subgroups were formed. These were fast, average, and slow reading acquisition and slow progress in both reading and math. Kindergarten spring scores in phonological awareness, letter knowledge, rapid naming, and number skills differentiated well among the groups, the latter two being more robust predictors. Task avoidance added to the prediction over and above cognitive skills. Its effect disappeared when parental history of reading and math difficulties was included in the equation. The present results depict poor response to instruction as a general learning problem rather than a specific reading difficulty. Poor response to instruction differs from dyslexia also in that treatment resisters start school with cognitive prerequisites that do not indicate severe reading and math problems.
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- 2011
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29. Pressure to drink but not to smoke: disentangling selection and socialization in adolescent peer networks and peer groups.
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Kiuru N, Burk WJ, Laursen B, Salmela-Aro K, and Nurmi JE
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- Adolescent, Adolescent Behavior psychology, Female, Finland, Humans, Male, Surveys and Questionnaires, Alcohol Drinking psychology, Peer Group, Smoking psychology, Social Control, Informal, Socialization
- Abstract
This paper examined the relative influence of selection and socialization on alcohol and tobacco use in adolescent peer networks and peer groups. The sample included 1419 Finnish secondary education students (690 males and 729 females, mean age 16 years at the outset) from nine schools. Participants identified three school friends and described their alcohol and tobacco use on two occasions one year apart. Actor-based models simultaneously examined changes in peer network ties and changes in individual behaviors for all participants within each school. Multi-level analyses examined changes in individual behaviors for adolescents entering new peer groups and adolescents in stable peer groups, both of which were embedded within the school-based peer networks. Similar results emerged from both analytic methods: Selection and socialization contributed to similarity of alcohol use, but only selection was a factor in tobacco use., (Copyright © 2010 The Association for Professionals in Services for Adolescents. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2010
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30. Dynamics of goal pursuit and personality make-up among emerging adults: typology, change over time, and adaptation.
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Shulman S and Nurmi JE
- Subjects
- Adult, Educational Status, Female, Humans, Israel, Life Change Events, Love, Male, Psychometrics, Work psychology, Young Adult, Adaptation, Psychological, Goals, Human Development, Personal Autonomy, Personality Development
- Abstract
In recent years young people's lives have been characterized by postponement of developmental timetables, inconsistencies of transitions, and loss of direction in life. Data from a longitudinal study of Israeli young adults show that the capacity for setting realistic work and love goals reflects inner strengths and is associated with adaptive outcomes. Less-articulated love and work goals are associated with underlying personality difficulties and are predictive of less stable and less adaptive outcomes. The interplay of goal constellations and personality constructs, and its association with adaptive and less adaptive outcomes is presented and discussed., (© Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
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- 2010
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31. Understanding emerging adulthood from a goal-setting perspective.
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Shulman S and Nurmi JE
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Aspirations, Psychological, Humans, Life Change Events, Social Behavior, Socialization, Adolescent Development, Goals, Personality Development, Social Identification
- Abstract
The chapter first introduces the concept of emerging adulthood as a period of life that is characterized by instabilities and fluctuations. Then, the role of goal setting and aspirations in individual development during this stage of life is discussed. Following this, seven chapters of the present special issue are introduced, and the ways in which goal processes affect individual trajectories and outcomes are discussed. The chapter concludes with a discussion of future perspectives in the field, such as the need to investigate the relationships between goals and goal adjustment, the need to carry out cross-cultural comparisons, as well as the need to develop intervention based on goal and aspiration framework., (© Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2010
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32. Opposites detract: middle school peer group antipathies.
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Laursen B, Bukowski WM, Nurmi JE, Marion D, Salmela-Aro K, and Kiuru N
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Educational Status, Female, Finland, Humans, Linear Models, Male, Social Alienation, Social Behavior Disorders psychology, Sociometric Techniques, Sports, Adolescent Behavior, Agonistic Behavior, Peer Group
- Abstract
This study examines variability in patterns of peer group antipathy. Same-grade adolescent peer groups were identified from sociometric nominations of preferred affiliates in a community sample of 600 Finnish ninth-grade middle school students (mean age=15.0 years). Hierarchical linear modeling determined characteristics of youths in actor groups (nominators) that predicted antipathy for youths in target groups (nominatees) on the basis of target group characteristics. Most antipathies were based on dissimilarity between groups representing the mainstream culture and groups opposed to it. The higher a peer group's school burnout, the more its members disliked students in peer groups with higher school grades and students in peer groups with higher sports participation. Conversely, the higher a peer group's school grades, the more its members disliked students in peer groups with higher school burnout. Students in peer groups with less problem behavior disliked students in peer groups with more problem behavior. There was some evidence of rivalry within the mainstream culture: The higher a group's school grades, the more its members disliked groups whose members participated in sports., (Copyright 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2010
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33. Effects of multidomain risk accumulation on cognitive, academic, and behavioural outcomes.
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Aro T, Poikkeus AM, Eklund K, Tolvanen A, Laakso ML, Viholainen H, Lyytinen H, Nurmi JE, and Ahonen T
- Subjects
- Child, Child Behavior Disorders psychology, Child Language, Cognition Disorders psychology, Depressive Disorder epidemiology, Depressive Disorder psychology, Female, Humans, Male, Mothers psychology, Mothers statistics & numerical data, Neuropsychological Tests, Risk Factors, Severity of Illness Index, Social Adjustment, Achievement, Child Behavior Disorders diagnosis, Cognition Disorders diagnosis
- Abstract
This longitudinal study examined the predictive associations between cumulative multidomain risk factors and cognitive (IQ), academic (reading fluency), and social adaptive outcomes at 8 to 9 years among 190 children with or without familial risk for dyslexia. Other risk factors included parental and neurocognitive risks assessed when the children were 1 to 6 years of age. Risks accumulated more among children with familial risk for dyslexia than among children without familial risk. A higher number of risks was associated with poorer performance in all outcome measures as postulated by the cumulative risk model. However, when the effects of individual risk variables were controlled for at the outset, the cumulative risk indices did not have incremental effects beyond those of individual risks. This suggests that the detrimental effect of several risks was due to the content-specific effect of individual risks. Children with familial risk were not differentially affected by the number of risks.
- Published
- 2009
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34. Relationships between physical education students' motivational profiles, enjoyment, state anxiety, and self-reported physical activity.
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Yli-Piipari S, Watt A, Jaakkola T, Liukkonen J, and Nurmi JE
- Abstract
The purpose of this study was to analyze motivational profiles based on the self-determination theory (Deci and Ryan, 2000) and how these profiles are related to physical education students' enjoyment, state anxiety, and physical activity. The participants, 429 sixth grade students (girls = 216; boys = 213) completed SMS, Sport Enjoyment Scale, PESAS, and Physical Activity Scale. Cluster analyses identified two motivational profiles: 1) the "High motivation profile", in which the students had high intrinsic and extrinsic motivation, and low levels of amotivation, and 2) the "Low motivation profile", in which the students had low intrinsic and extrinsic motivation, and low levels of amotivation. The students in the first cluster enjoyed physical education more and were physically more active. The results revealed that students may be motivated towards physical education lessons both intrinsically and extrinsically, and still experience enjoyment in physical education. Key pointsTWO MOTIVATIONAL PROFILES WERE REVEALED: 1) the "High motivation profile", in which the students had high intrinsic and extrinsic motivation, and low levels of amotivation, and 2) the "Low motivation profile", in which the students had low intrinsic and extrinsic motivation, and low levels of amotivation.The students in the first profile enjoyed physical education more and were physically more active than the students in the second profile.Moreover, the representatives of the "High motivation profile "experienced greater anxiety toward physical education than the representatives of the "Low motivation profile"These findings raised an interesting question whether students engaging in physical education benefit more from the presence of both self-determined and non-self-determined forms of motivation, or are the benefits higher if students are primarily self-determined?
- Published
- 2009
35. Changes in stress perception and coping during adolescence: the role of situational and personal factors.
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Seiffge-Krenke I, Aunola K, and Nurmi JE
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Age Factors, Defense Mechanisms, Female, Humans, Internal-External Control, Male, Models, Psychological, Parent-Child Relations, Peer Group, Personality Development, Personality Inventory statistics & numerical data, Problem Solving, Psychometrics, Puberty psychology, Sex Factors, Stress, Psychological complications, Adaptation, Psychological, Arousal, Psychology, Adolescent, Social Environment, Stress, Psychological psychology
- Abstract
The present study investigated the interplay between developmental changes in stress and coping during early and late adolescence. Using a longitudinal design, stress perception and coping styles of 200 adolescents in 7 different stressful situations were investigated. Multilevel piecewise latent growth curve models showed that stress perception decreased during late adolescence, whereas active and internal coping increased continuously from ages 12 to 19. Adolescents' high levels of perceived stress in a particular situation were associated with a high level of active coping but a low level of internal coping in that same situation. Withdrawal was associated with high levels of perceived stress, independent of situation. Developmental changes in individual adolescents' stress perception and coping were in most cases situation specific.
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- 2009
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36. The role of educational track in adolescents' school burnout: a longitudinal study.
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Salmela-Aro K, Kiuru N, and Nurmi JE
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Achievement, Attitude, Schools, Stress, Psychological psychology, Students psychology
- Abstract
Background: Transition from comprehensive school to later educational tracks is challenging for many adolescents. The present three-wave longitudinal study conducted in Finland considers this issue from the perspective of school burnout., Aims: The study investigated the extent to which school-related burnout (exhaustion, cynicism, and feelings of inadequacy) changes during the transition from comprehensive school to an academic or vocational track., Sample: The participants of the present study were 658 ninth graders, who filled in questionnaires twice during their final term of comprehensive school and once after the transition to post-comprehensive schooling., Methods: The participants filled in the school burnout inventory and supplied background information on gender and academic achievement. The data have analysed by latent growth curve modelling., Results: The results showed that adolescents on an academic track experienced more exhaustion at school than those on a vocational track. Moreover, among adolescents on an academic track both the level of cynicism and inadequacy at school increased across time. In turn, among adolescents on a vocational track inadequacy at school decreased across time while cynicism increased before the school transition and decreased thereafter. Girls experienced more overall school burnout than boys, and adolescents whose academic achievement was lower experienced a higher level of burnout than adolescents who did better at school., Conclusions: The results support the stage-environment fit theory according to which the nature of the environments in academic and vocational education are more important than the transition per se for changes in how adolescents think and feel about school (see Eccles & Midgley, 1989).
- Published
- 2008
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37. Longitudinal study on the predictors of parental stress in mothers and fathers of toddlers.
- Author
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Saisto T, Salmela-Aro K, Nurmi JE, and Halmesmaki E
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Preschool, Demography, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Middle Aged, Parent-Child Relations, Prospective Studies, Surveys and Questionnaires, Fathers psychology, Fathers statistics & numerical data, Mothers psychology, Mothers statistics & numerical data, Parents psychology, Stress, Psychological epidemiology, Stress, Psychological psychology
- Abstract
Aim: Longitudinal study on the predictors of parental stress in mothers and fathers of toddlers., Background: To study whether anxiety, depression, or marital problems increase the parenting stress in parents of toddlers., Methods: At early pregnancy, 2 - 3 months, and 2 - 3 years after delivery, 214 low-risk couples filled in questionnaires on their marital relationship, social support, child's temperament, and self-evaluated competence in routine care-taking. In hierarchical regression analyses, they were used as predictors of parental stress., Results: Those mothers who in early pregnancy had adequate social support, adaptive social strategies, and high self-esteem, and who had given birth vaginally, enjoyed breastfeeding, and whose spouse supported breastfeeding reported less stress 2 - 3 years later. Pregnancy-related anxiety, depression, general anxiety, neuroticism, and vulnerability in early pregnancy, as well as child's temperament and low self-estimated competence in routine care-taking measured at both 2 - 3 months and 2 - 3 years after childbirth predicted parental stress. Depression and living alone in early pregnancy, and the child-related variables (temperament and care-taking, measured both at 2 - 3 months and 2 - 3 years after childbirth) predicted high parenting stress in fathers of toddlers., Conclusions: Parental stress in toddlers' parents was predicted both by the temperament of the child, and by the parents' depression, self-esteem, and anxiety, as well as by lack of support and low self-evaluated competence in routine care-taking.
- Published
- 2008
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38. Mothers' causal attributions concerning the reading achievement of their children with and without familial risk for dyslexia.
- Author
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Natale K, Aunola K, Nurmi JE, Poikkeus AM, Lyytinen P, and Lyytinen H
- Subjects
- Child, Female, Humans, Male, Verbal Behavior, Achievement, Attitude, Dyslexia genetics, Mothers, Reading
- Abstract
The present study analyzed data from the Jyväskylä Longitudinal Study of Dyslexia to investigate the factors to which mothers of children with and without familial risk for dyslexia attribute the causes of their first-grade children's reading achievement. Mothers' causal attributions were assessed three times during their children's first school year. Children's verbal intelligence was assessed at 5 years and their word and nonword reading skills at 6.5 years. The results showed that the higher the word reading skills the children had, the more their mothers attributed their success to ability than to effort. However, if children had familial risk for dyslexia, their mothers' attribution of success to ability decreased during the first grade as compared with the ability attributions of mothers whose children were in the control group.
- Published
- 2008
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39. Cognitive predictors of single-digit and procedural calculation skills and their covariation with reading skill.
- Author
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Koponen T, Aunola K, Ahonen T, and Nurmi JE
- Subjects
- Attention, Child, Humans, Surveys and Questionnaires, Visual Perception, Cognition, Learning, Mathematics, Reading
- Abstract
This study examined the extent to which children's cognitive abilities in kindergarten and their mothers' education predict their single-digit and procedural calculation skills and the covariance of these with reading skill in Grade 4. In kindergarten, we assessed children's (N=178) basic number skills, linguistic skills, and visual attention. In Grade 4, we assessed their calculation and reading skills. Data on children's cognitive ability at 5 years of age and their mothers' level of education were also collected. The results showed that both of the core components of calculation, single-digit and procedural calculation, as well as their covariance with reading, were predicted by unique cognitive factors. Fluency in single-digit calculation and text reading shared an underlying cognitive process, that is, the ability to fluently retrieve verbal or visual-verbal associations from long-term memory. In contrast, procedural calculation was predicted not only by single-digit calculation but also by mother's education and conceptual knowledge of numbers. Overall, the results suggest that a multicomponential approach, including a hierarchical relation among various components, is fruitful when trying to understand the development of mathematical skill and its covariation with reading.
- Published
- 2007
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40. Friendship moderates prospective associations between social isolation and adjustment problems in young children.
- Author
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Laursen B, Bukowski WM, Aunola K, and Nurmi JE
- Subjects
- Adjustment Disorders diagnosis, Child, Female, Humans, Internal-External Control, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Personality Assessment, Prospective Studies, Social Behavior, Sociometric Techniques, Adjustment Disorders psychology, Friends psychology, Social Isolation
- Abstract
This longitudinal study investigated prospective links between social isolation and adjustment problems among 166 (77 girls, 89 boys) Finnish children ages 7 to 9. Peer nominations for social engagement and self-reports of internalizing and externalizing problems were collected in the spring of the 1st and 2nd grade. Friendship moderated prospective associations between peer and adjustment variables. Among friended children, there were no prospective associations between social isolation and either internalizing or externalizing problems. Among unfriended children, initial social isolation was positively linked to subsequent increases in internalizing and externalizing problems, and initial internalizing and externalizing problems predicted subsequent increases in social isolation. The findings suggest that friendship buffers against the adverse consequences associated with being isolated and presenting adjustment difficulties.
- Published
- 2007
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41. The role of learning to read in the development of problem behaviour: a cross-lagged longitudinal study.
- Author
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Halonen A, Aunola K, Ahonen T, and Nurmi JE
- Subjects
- Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Finland, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Phonetics, Child Behavior Disorders psychology, Child Language, Reading, Verbal Learning
- Abstract
Background: This study investigates the posited relationship between learning to read, and internalizing and externalizing problem behaviours, during the transition from preschool to primary school., Methods: A total of 196 (104 boys, 92 girls) children participating in the Jyväskylä Entrance into Primary School (JEPS) study were followed up six times during their transition from preschool to primary school. At each measurement, the children's reading performance was tested. Moreover, their internalizing and externalizing problem behaviour was examined by means of structured interviews., Results: The results showed that problems in reading acquisition predicted an increase in internalizing problem behaviour during the preschool year and first grade, whereas during the second grade they were associated with an increase in subsequent externalizing problem behaviour. Moreover, from preschool to the beginning of the primary school internalizing problem behaviour predicted subsequent externalizing problem behaviour. Later on during the first and the second primary school years, it was externalizing problem behaviour that predicted an increase in internalizing problem behaviour., Conclusions: The results of this study suggested that difficulties in learning to read, and internalizing and externalizing problem behaviours are developmentally linked in a cumulative manner.
- Published
- 2006
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42. Achievement strategies in peer groups and adolescents' school adjustment and norm-breaking behavior.
- Author
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Määttä S, Stattin H, and Nurmi JE
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Female, Humans, Male, Schools, Surveys and Questionnaires, Achievement, Peer Group, Social Adjustment, Social Behavior Disorders psychology, Students psychology
- Abstract
The present study examined the extent to which the achievement strategies deployed by adolescents, and those used by their peers would predict adolescents' school adjustment, academic achievement and problem behavior. The participants were 287 14-15-year-old comprehensive school students (121 boys and 165 girls) from a middle-sized town in central Sweden. The results showed that not only the maladaptive strategies used by adolescents, but also those reported by their peers predicted adolescents' norm-breaking behavior, low school adjustment and low level of achievement: high levels of failure expectations and task-avoidance among adolescents' peers were positively associated with adolescents' own norm-breaking behavior, and indirectly via this, also with their maladjustment at school and low grades. These associations were found after controlling for the impact of adolescents' own achievement strategies.
- Published
- 2006
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43. Developmental dynamics between mathematical performance, task motivation, and teachers' goals during the transition to primary school.
- Author
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Aunola K, Leskinen E, and Nurmi JE
- Subjects
- Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Male, Faculty, Goals, Mathematics, Motivation, Schools
- Abstract
Background: It has been suggested that children's learning motivation and interest in a particular subject play an important role in their school performance, particularly in mathematics. However, few cross-lagged longitudinal studies have been carried out to investigate the prospective relationships between academic achievement and task motivation. Moreover, the role that the classroom context plays in this development is largely unknown., Aims: The aim of the study was to investigate the developmental dynamics of maths-related motivation and mathematical performance during children's transition to primary school. The role of teachers' pedagogical goals and classroom characteristics on this development was also investigated., Sample: A total of 196 Finnish children were examined four times: (0) in October during their preschool year; (1) in October and (2) April during their first grade of primary school; and (3) in October during their second grade., Method: Children's mathematical performance was tested at each measurement point. Task motivation was examined at measurement points 2, 3, and 4 using the Task-value scale for children. First-grade teachers were interviewed in November about their pedagogical goals and classroom characteristics., Results and Conclusions: The results showed that children's mathematical performance and related task motivation formed a cumulative developmental cycle: a high level of maths performance at the beginning of the first grade increased subsequent task motivation towards mathematics, which further predicted a high level of maths performance at the beginning of the second grade. The level of maths-related task motivation increased in those classrooms where the teachers emphasized motivation or self-concept development as their most important pedagogical goal.
- Published
- 2006
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44. The role of parenting styles in children's problem behavior.
- Author
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Aunola K and Nurmi JE
- Subjects
- Affect, Child, Child, Preschool, Father-Child Relations, Female, Humans, Male, Mother-Child Relations, Child Behavior Disorders prevention & control, Child Behavior Disorders psychology, Fathers psychology, Mothers psychology, Parenting, Role
- Abstract
This study investigated the combination of mothers' and fathers' parenting styles (affection, behavioral control, and psychological control) that would be most influential in predicting their children's internal and external problem behaviors. A total of 196 children (aged 5-6 years) were followed up six times from kindergarten to the second grade to measure their problem behaviors. Mothers and fathers filled in a questionnaire measuring their parenting styles once every year. The results showed that a high level of psychological control exercised by mothers combined with high affection predicted increases in the levels of both internal and external problem behaviors among children. Behavioral control exercised by mothers decreased children's external problem behavior but only when combined with a low level of psychological control.
- Published
- 2005
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45. Maternal affection moderates the impact of psychological control on a child's mathematical performance.
- Author
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Aunola K and Nurmi JE
- Subjects
- Adult, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Internal-External Control, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Parenting, Affect, Cognition, Mathematics, Mother-Child Relations
- Abstract
This study investigated the extent to which mothers' psychological control predicts their children's mathematical performance during the children's transition from preschool to primary school over and above the impact of maternal affection and behavioral control. Also investigated was the extent to which maternal affection and behavioral control moderate the impact of mothers' psychological control. Children 5-6 years old at baseline (N=196) were followed up 6 times to measure their performance in mathematics over a 3-year period from preschool to 2nd grade. Mothers were asked to fill in a questionnaire measuring their parenting styles once every year over the 3-year period. A high level of psychological control exercised by mothers predicted their children's slow progress in mathematics. However, this impact was particularly evident among those children whose mothers reported a high level of affection. No evidence was found that children's mathematical performance had any effect on their mothers' parenting styles., ((c) 2004 APA, all rights reserved)
- Published
- 2004
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46. Three methods for studying developmental change: a case of reading skills and self-concept.
- Author
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Aunola K, Leskinen E, Onatsu-Arvilommi T, and Nurmi JE
- Subjects
- Child, Cluster Analysis, Female, Humans, Male, Models, Psychological, Child Development, Reading, Self Concept
- Abstract
Aims: First, to introduce and compare three statistical methods for investigating development as a cumulative process: a simplex model, latent growth curve analysis, and clustering by cases. Second, to investigate the developmental dynamics of reading skills, and self-concept of reading ability, across the first year of primary school., Sample: One hundred and five (61 boys, 44 girls) 6- to 7-year-old children from four first-grade classes in two primary schools participated in the study., Method: Children were studied three times during their first school year using an identical set of measurements: a Reading Skills Test and the Self-Concept of Ability scale., Results: A uni-construct 'Matthew' effect was found for the development of self-concept, but not for the reading skills. However, the results showed that there was a multi-construct cumulative cycle between children's reading skills and their self-concept., Conclusions: Simultaneous use of variable- and person-oriented methods in developmental research seems to be a valuable approach, which not only provides a proper way to investigate the cumulative developmental cycles but also an option to examine how large a proportion of the sample follows the positive and negative pattern found in variable-oriented analyses.
- Published
- 2002
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47. Goal construction, reconstruction and depressive symptoms in a life-span context: the transition from school to work.
- Author
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Nurmi JE and Salmela-Aro K
- Subjects
- Adult, Depression diagnosis, Employment, Female, Humans, Male, Schools, Surveys and Questionnaires, Depression psychology, Goals, Life Change Events
- Abstract
This study focused on investigating the kinds of personal goals young adults have when they are faced with the transition from school to work; the extent to which they reconstruct these goals as a consequence of their success in dealing with this transition; and how their goals influence their depressive symptoms. In order to investigate these research questions, 250 young adults who were facing a transition from school to work were studied at three points of the transition process: while they were still at school; 8 months after their graduation; and 1.5 years after it. At each measurement point, they were asked to complete the Personal Project Analysis, a revised form of Beck's Depression Inventory, and the Work Status Questionnaire. The results revealed that the outcomes of young adults' efforts to deal with the transition from school to work had consequences for the ways in which they reconstructed their goals: Those who were successful in this transition showed a decline in the number of personal goals that did not relate to the next stages of this particular developmental trajectory, whereas those who had problems turned to goals that concerned other life domains, as an alternative, compensatory control strategy. The results also revealed that the impact of personal goals on depressive symptomatology was moderated by individuals' life situations following the transition: Work-related goals reduced individuals' depressive symptoms only among those who had been able to find a job, whereas self-related goals decreased it in a moratorium-type of life situation.
- Published
- 2002
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48. Sense of coherence as a mediator between hostility and health: seven-year prospective study on female employees.
- Author
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Kivimäki M, Elovainio M, Vahtera J, Nurmi JE, Feldt T, Keltikangas-Järvinen L, and Pentti J
- Subjects
- Adult, Depression, Female, Humans, Models, Psychological, Prospective Studies, Self-Assessment, Sick Leave, Health, Hostility, Negotiating psychology
- Abstract
Objective: We proposed and tested a model in which low sense of coherence (SOC) was hypothesized to underlie the association between hostility and health problems., Methods: Structural equation modeling was based on cross-lagged 7-year follow-up data, relating to five measurement points in 433 female municipal employees., Results: The mediated model fitted well with the data. After adjustment for baseline characteristics, hostility was associated with increased risk of health problems, as indicated by records of sickness absences and poor self-rated health. Incorporating SOC into the model attenuated this association by 33-50%, depending on the indicator of health. The mediated effect of SOC was stronger than that of an alternative mediator, depressive symptoms., Conclusion: Low SOC may be a psychological background factor partially underlying the adverse effect of hostility on ill health.
- Published
- 2002
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49. Personal agency and personality in adolescence: silent voices and findings.
- Author
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Meeus W, Silbereisen RK, and Nurmi JE
- Subjects
- Achievement, Adolescent, Humans, Motivation, Parenting, Peer Group, Psychological Theory, Personality, Psychology, Adolescent, Self Efficacy
- Abstract
We discuss the studies reported in this special issue on the basis of a descriptive framework. We conclude that implicit assumptions-silent voices, as we call them-concerning the transactional influence between person and environment, and concerning the primacy of personal agency exist side by side. We find in the studies both a variable-centred and a person-centred approach, and show that the person-centred approach can complement the variable-centred approach in a fruitful manner. On the other hand, both approaches seem to lead to similar results in the studies reported in this special issue. As a rule, the approaches lead to characterization of categories of adolescents, and moreover they can both be seen as exemplifying transactional thinking in the psychology of adolescence. Personal agency and personality are systematically correlated with developmental outcomes, but there are no strong indications that personal agency and personality are important predictors of later developmental outcomes. Such indications are found to a greater extent as regards the influence of parenting and the quality of the parent-adolescent relationship. Finally, there is evidence that peers have their own specific significance in the exploration of developmental options., (Copyright 2002 The Association for Professionals in Services for Adolescents. Published by Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2002
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50. Achievement strategies at school: types and correlates.
- Author
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Määttä S, Stattin H, and Nurmi JE
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Psychological, Adolescent, Cluster Analysis, Female, Humans, Male, Multivariate Analysis, Sweden, Achievement, Psychology, Adolescent, Students psychology
- Abstract
In this study we made an effort to identify the kinds of strategies adolescents deploy in achievement context in an unselected sample of Swedish adolescents. The participants were 880 14-15-year-old comprehensive school students (399 boys and 481 girls) from a middle-sized town in central Sweden. Six groups of adolescents were identified according to the strategies they deployed. Four of them, i.e. optimistic, defensive pessimistic, self-handicapping and learned helplessness strategies, were similar to those described previously in the literature. The results showed that membership in the functional strategy groups, such as in mastery-oriented and defensive pessimist groups, was associated with well-being, school adjustment and achievement, and low levels of norm-breaking behaviour. By contrast, membership in the dysfunctional, for example self-handicapping and learned helplessness strategy groups, was associated with low levels of well-being, and of school adjustment, and a higher level of norm-breaking behaviour., (Copyright 2002 The Association for Professionals in Services for Adolescents. Published by Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2002
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