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Journal ArticleDOI

Competence in the context of adversity: pathways to resilience and maladaptation from childhood to late adolescence.

TLDR
Results suggest that IQ and parenting scores are markers of fundamental adaptational systems that protect child development in the context of severe adversity.
Abstract
Competent outcomes in late adolescence were examined in relation to adversity over time, antecedent competence and psychosocial resources, in order to investigate the phenomenon of resilience. An urban community sample of 205 (114 females, 90 males; 27% minority) children were recruited in elementary school and followed over 10 years. Multiple methods and informants were utilized to assess three major domains of competence from childhood through adolescence (academic achievement, conduct, and peer social competence), multiple aspects of adversity, and major psychosocial resources. Both variable-centered and person-centered analyses were conducted to test the hypothesized significance of resources for resilience. Better intellectual functioning and parenting resources were associated with good outcomes across competence domains, even in the context of severe, chronic adversity. IQ and parenting appeared to have a specific protective role with respect to antisocial behavior. Resilient adolescents (high adversity, adequate competence across three domains) had much in common with their low-adversity competent peers, including average or better IQ, parenting, and psychological well-being. Resilient individuals differed markedly from their high adversity, maladaptive peers who had few resources and high negative emotionality. Results suggest that IQ and parenting scores are markers of fundamental adaptational systems that protect child development in the context of severe adversity.

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The Construct of Resilience: A Critical Evaluation and Guidelines for Future Work

TL;DR: A critical appraisal of resilience, a construct connoting the maintenance of positive adaptation by individuals despite experiences of significant adversity, concludes that work on resilience possesses substantial potential for augmenting the understanding of processes affecting at-risk individuals.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ordinary magic. Resilience processes in development.

TL;DR: An examination of converging findings from variable-focused and person-focused investigations of resilience suggests that resilience is common and that it usually arises from the normative functions of human adaptational systems, with the greatest threats to human development being those that compromise these protective systems.
Journal ArticleDOI

The development of competence in favorable and unfavorable environments. Lessons from research on successful children

TL;DR: Signals are drawn from studies of naturally occurring resilience among children at risk because of disadvantage or trauma and also from efforts to deliberately alter the course of competence through early childhood education and preventive interventions.
Journal ArticleDOI

The construct of resilience: Implications for interventions and social policies

TL;DR: The focus of this article is on the interface between research on resilience and the applications of this work to the development of interventions and social policies, and a series of guiding principles are presented along with exemplars of existing programs based on the resilience paradigm.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adolescent Brain Development: A Period of Vulnerabilities and Opportunities. Keynote Address

TL;DR: A conceptual framework for understanding adolescence is provided, which emphasizes how the very nature of this developmental transition requires an interdisciplinary approach—one that focuses on brain/behavior/social‐context interactions during this important maturational period.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

Multiple Regression: Testing and Interpreting Interactions

TL;DR: In this article, multiple regression is used to test and interpret multiple regression interactions in the context of multiple-agent networks. But it is not suitable for single-agent systems, as discussed in this paper.
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