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Adolescent social emotional skills, resilience and behavioral problems during the COVID-19 pandemic: A longitudinal study in three European countries

Authors :
Martinsone, B
Stokenberga, I
Damberga, I
Supe, I
Simões, C
Lebre, P
Canha, L
Santos, M
Santos, A
Fonseca, A
Santos, D
Gaspar de Matos, M
Conte, E
Agliati, A
Cavioni, V
Gandellini, S
Grazzani, I
Ornaghi, V
Camilleri, L
Martinsone, Baiba
Stokenberga, Ieva
Damberga, Ilze
Supe, Inga
Simões, Celeste
Lebre, Paula
Canha, Lúcia
Santos, Margarida
Santos, Anabela Caetano
Fonseca, Ana Marta
Santos, Dória
Gaspar de Matos, Margarida
Conte, Elisabetta
Agliati, Alessia
Cavioni, Valeria
Gandellini, Sabina
Grazzani, Ilaria
Ornaghi, Veronica
Camilleri, Liberato
Martinsone, B
Stokenberga, I
Damberga, I
Supe, I
Simões, C
Lebre, P
Canha, L
Santos, M
Santos, A
Fonseca, A
Santos, D
Gaspar de Matos, M
Conte, E
Agliati, A
Cavioni, V
Gandellini, S
Grazzani, I
Ornaghi, V
Camilleri, L
Martinsone, Baiba
Stokenberga, Ieva
Damberga, Ilze
Supe, Inga
Simões, Celeste
Lebre, Paula
Canha, Lúcia
Santos, Margarida
Santos, Anabela Caetano
Fonseca, Ana Marta
Santos, Dória
Gaspar de Matos, Margarida
Conte, Elisabetta
Agliati, Alessia
Cavioni, Valeria
Gandellini, Sabina
Grazzani, Ilaria
Ornaghi, Veronica
Camilleri, Liberato
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Objectives: The consequences of long-lasting restrictions related to the COVID-19 pandemic have become a topical question in the latest research. The present study aims to analyze longitudinal changes in adolescents’ social emotional skills, resilience, and behavioral problems. Moreover, the study addresses the impact of adolescents’ social emotional learning on changes in their resilience and behavioral problems over the course of seven months of the pandemic. Methods: The Time 1 (T1) and Time 2 (T2) measuring points were in October 2020 and May 2021, characterized by high mortality rates and strict restrictions in Europe. For all three countries combined, 512 questionnaires were answered by both adolescents (aged 11-13 and 14-16 years) and their parents. The SSIS-SEL and SDQ student self-report and parent forms were used to evaluate adolescents’ social emotional skills and behavioral problems. The CD-RISC-10 scale was administered to adolescents to measure their self-reported resilience. Several multilevel models were fitted to investigate the changes in adolescents’ social emotional skills, resilience, and behavioral problems, controlling for age and gender. Correlation analysis was carried out to investigate how changes in the adolescents’ social emotional skills were associated with changes in their resilience and mental health adjustment. Results: Comparing T1 and T2 evaluations, adolescents claim they have more behavioral problems, have less social emotional skills, and are less prosocial than perceived by their parents, and this result applies across all countries and age groups. Both informants agree that COVID-19 had a negative impact, reporting an increment in the mean internalizing and externalizing difficulties scores and reductions in social emotional skills, prosocial behavior, and resilience scores. However, these changes are not very conspicuous, and most of them are not significant. Correlation analysis shows that changes in adolescents’ social emo

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
ELETTRONICO, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1343228644
Document Type :
Electronic Resource