The prevalence of problem behaviours among British
adolescents has increased in the past decades. Following Erikson’s psychosocial
developmental theory and Bronfenbrenner’s developmental ecological model, it
was hypothesized that youth problem behaviour is shaped in part by social
environment. The aim of this project was to explore potential protective
factors within the social environment of British youth’s for the presentation
of disruptive behavioural problems.
This study used secondary data from the Longitudinal Study
of Young People in England, a cohort study of secondary school students. These
data were analysed with generalized estimation equations to take the
correlation between the longitudinal observations into account. Three models
were built. The first model determined the effect of family, school, and
extracurricular setting on presentation of disruptive behavioural problems. The
second model expanded the first model by assuming extracurricular activities as
protective factors that moderated the interaction between family and school
factors with disruptive behavioural problems. The third model described the effect
of prior disruptive behaviour on current disruptive behaviour.
Associations were found between school factors, family
factors, involvement in extracurricular activities and presence of disruptive
behavioural problems. Results from the second generalized estimating equation
(GEE) logistic regression models indicated that extracurricular activities
buffered the impact of school and family factors on the presence of disruptive
behavioural problems. For instance, participation in sports activities decreased
the effect of bullying on psychological distress. Results from the third model
indicated that prior acts of disruptive behaviour reinforced current disruptive
behaviour.
This study supports Erikson’s psychosocial developmental
theory and Bronfenbrenner’s developmental ecological model; social environment
did influence the presence of disruptive behavioural problems for British
adolescents. The potential of extracurricular activities to intervention
strategies addressing disruptive behavioural problems of adolescents is
discussed.
Full article at: http://goo.gl/prxvxh
Department of
Social Sciences, University of Southampton, Highfield campus, Southampton, UK
Corine M.E.F. Driessens, Email: ku.ca.notos@snesseird.m.c.

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