The contribution of chronic peer victimization in elementary school to depressive symptoms in adolescence

Author:

Troop‐Gordon Wendy1ORCID,Thomas Jillian2,Brigham Emily F.1,Xu Jianjie3,Rudolph Karen D.4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Auburn University Auburn Alabama USA

2. The Menninger Clinic Houston Texas USA

3. Faculty of Psychology Beijing Normal University Beijing China

4. The University of Illinois at Urbana‐Champaign Champaign Illinois USA

Abstract

AbstractThroughout his career, John Schulenberg challenged us to understand adolescent development as the confluence of distal and proximal experiences along with critical transitions. Heeding this call, we examined whether chronic childhood peer victimization predicted adolescents' depressive symptoms via early‐emerging depression growth trajectories, continued victimization into adolescence, and stress‐amplification at the middle school transition. Self‐reported depressive symptoms and teacher‐reported and self‐reported peer victimization were obtained from 636 youth (338 girls; Mage = 7.96 years, 66.7% White, 21.7% Black, 11.6% other) in the 2nd–9th grades. Latent growth curve analyses revealed that, by 7th grade, chronic childhood peer victimization was associated with depressive symptoms only through an indirect association with peer victimization in adolescence, underscoring how interrelated historical and ongoing interpersonal stressors contribute to adolescent psychopathology.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference101 articles.

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2. Sociodemographic Moderators of Middle School Transition Effects on Academic Achievement

3. Development of a short questionnaire for use in epidemiological studies of depression in children and adolescents;Angold A.;International Journal of Methods in Psychiatric Research,1995

4. Does the timing of transition matter? Comparison of German students’ self-perceptions before and after transition to secondary school

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