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Mental health predicts better academic outcomes: a longitudinal study of elementary school students in Chile

Authors :
Javier Guzmán
Ariela Simonsohn
J. Michael Murphy
Katia M. Canenguez
Erin C. Dunn
Ana María Squicciarini
Myriam George
Lee Baer
Alyssa E. McCarthy
Michael S. Jellinek
Jordan W. Smoller
Source :
Child psychiatry and human development. 46(2)
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

The world's largest school-based mental health program, Habilidades para la Vida (Skills for Life (SFL)), has been operating on a national scale in Chile for 15 years. SFL's activities include using standardized measures to screen elementary school students and pro- viding preventive workshops to students at risk for mental health problems. This paper used SFL's data on 37,397 students who were in first grade in 2009 and third grade in 2011 to ascertain whether first grade mental health pre- dicted subsequent academic achievement and whether remission of mental health problems predicted improved academic outcomes. Results showed that mental health was a significant predictor of future academic performance and that, overall, students whose mental health improved between first and third grade made better academic pro- gress than students whose mental health did not improve or worsened. Our findings suggest that school-based mental health programs like SFL may help improve students' academic outcomes.

Details

ISSN :
15733327
Volume :
46
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Child psychiatry and human development
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....87367041771df5c796e8a719ee061fb2