2020
DOI: 10.1098/rsos.191433
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Internalizing symptoms and working memory as predictors of mathematical attainment trajectories across the primary–secondary education transition

Abstract: The transition from primary to secondary education is a critical period in early adolescence which is related to increased anxiety and stress, increased prevalence of mental health issues, and decreased maths performance, suggesting it is an important period to investigate maths attainment. Previous research has focused on anxiety and working memory as predictors of maths, without investigating any long-term effects around the education transition. This study examined working memory and internalizing symptoms … Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(24 citation statements)
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References 116 publications
(167 reference statements)
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“…Although, there were no significant differences in maths attainment at age 11 and the rate of change over time between children to parents with a CSE (and below), and children to parents with vocational qualifications. Unsurprisingly, parental education was found to be the strongest predictor of maths attainment at age 11, and of the rate in change over time, although, the effect sizes were slightly smaller in this study compared to previous analyses [62]. One of the aims of this study was to help identify the underlying mechanisms in which greater parental education contributes to higher maths attainment, i.e.…”
Section: Summary Of Results: Parental Predictorscontrasting
confidence: 52%
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“…Although, there were no significant differences in maths attainment at age 11 and the rate of change over time between children to parents with a CSE (and below), and children to parents with vocational qualifications. Unsurprisingly, parental education was found to be the strongest predictor of maths attainment at age 11, and of the rate in change over time, although, the effect sizes were slightly smaller in this study compared to previous analyses [62]. One of the aims of this study was to help identify the underlying mechanisms in which greater parental education contributes to higher maths attainment, i.e.…”
Section: Summary Of Results: Parental Predictorscontrasting
confidence: 52%
“…As expected, internalizing symptoms and working memory predicted maths attainment trajectories, with a very small effect. These results are not discussed here in depth as they were included solely to adjust for them; see Evans et al [62] for further discussion of these findings.…”
Section: Summary Of Results: Contextual Predictorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Increased internalizing symptoms predicted lower attainment, and higher SES, IQ, working memory, parental school involvement and increased parent-child harmony all predicted higher maths attainment at age 11 (table 4). For a detailed discussion of these findings, see Evans et al [70] and Evans & Field [69]. Table 5 shows the model parameters for the slope of the primary education model (i.e.…”
Section: Secondary Education Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%