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Academic Achievement in the High School Years: The Changing Role of School Engagement

NCJ Number
247033
Journal
Journal of Youth and Adolescence Volume: 43 Issue: 6 Dated: June 2014 Pages: 884-896
Author(s)
Paul A. Chase; Lacey J. Hilliard; G. J. Geldhof; Daniel J. A. Warren; Richard M. Lerner
Date Published
June 2014
Length
13 pages
Annotation
This article used a tripartitebehavioral, emotional, and cognitivemodel of school engagement to assess the relationship between school engagement and academic success among high school students, and to determine whether a reciprocal relationship exists between these constructs.
Abstract
School engagement is an important theoretical and practical cornerstone to the promotion of academic accomplishments. This article used a tripartitebehavioral, emotional, and cognitivemodel of school engagement to assess the relationship between school engagement and academic success among high school students, and to determine whether a reciprocal relationship exists between these constructs. Data were derived from 710 youth (69 percent female) who took part in Waves 6 through 8 (Grades 10 through 12) of the 4-H study of positive youth development. Longitudinal confirmatory factor analyses confirmed the invariance of the tripartite model of school engagement. Results of a structural equation model showed that the components of school engagement and academic achievement were mutually predictive and that these predictions varied from grade to grade. Future possibilities for evaluating the relationship between school engagement and academic achievement, as well as the implications for educational policy and practice, are discussed. Abstract published by arrangement with Springer.