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10.1037-spq0000245 |
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|a 10453830 (ISSN)
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|a Sluggish cognitive tempo and student-teacher relationship quality: Short-term longitudinal and concurrent associations
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|b American Psychological Association Inc.
|c 2018
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|z View Fulltext in Publisher
|u https://doi.org/10.1037/spq0000245
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|a Although sluggish cognitive tempo (SCT) is associated with poorer peer functioning, no study has examined SCT in relation to student-teacher relationship quality. The current study examined whether SCT, as rated by both teachers and children, was uniquely associated with poorer student-teacher relationship quality above and beyond child demographics and other mental health symptoms (i.e., attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder [ADHD], oppositional defiant disorder/conduct disorder [ODD/ CD], anxiety/depression). Gender was examined as a possible moderator of the association between SCT and student-teacher relationship quality. Participants were 176 children in 1st- 6th grades and their teachers. Teachers rated children's SCT and other mental health symptoms in the fall semester (T1) and the student-teacher relationship (conflict and closeness) 6 months later (T2). Children provided selfratings of SCT at T2. Above and beyond age, gender, and other mental health symptoms, teacher-rated SCT at T1 was associated with greater student-teacher conflict at T2. This association was qualified by a SCT × Gender interaction, with SCT associated with greater conflict for girls but not boys. Further, child-rated SCT was also associated with greater teacher-rated conflict, above and beyond covariates. In addition, teacher-rated SCT at T1 was the only mental health dimension to be significantly associated with less student-teacher closeness at T2. Findings extend the social difficulties associated with SCT to the student-teacher relationship, an important relationship associated with children's academic and socioemotional outcomes. © 2018 American Psychological Association.
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|a ADHD
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|a adolescent
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|a Adolescent
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|a attention deficit disorder
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|a Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity
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|a Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder
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|a child
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|a Child
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|a cognition
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|a Cognition
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|a female
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|a Female
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|a Gender differences
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|a human
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|a human relation
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|a Humans
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|a Interpersonal Relations
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|a male
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|a Male
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|a peer group
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|a Peer Group
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|a physiology
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|a psychology
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|a school teacher
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|a School Teachers
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|a sex factor
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|a Sex Factors
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|a Sluggish cognitive tempo
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|a student
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|a Students
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|a Teacher-student relationship
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|a Becker, S.P.
|e author
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|a Holdaway, A.S.
|e author
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|t School Psychology Quarterly
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