The contribution of internal and external resources to emotional adjustment: A comparison of at risk and normative adolescents

R Lipschitz-Elhawi, H. Itzhaky

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The article discusses the differences between normative and at-risk adolescents with regard to the contribution of background variables (gender and age), internal resources (mastery and emotional maturity), and external resources (parental support and peer support) to their emotional adjustment. The results indicate lower levels of mastery, emotional maturity, parental, and peer support among the at-risk adolescents, than the normative adolescents, and the former display more emotional symptoms. The findings also show that gender does not contribute to emotional adjustment in either research group. In the normative group, the age of the adolescent was found to have a small contribution. With regard to internal resources, while both mastery and emotional maturity were found to contribute significantly in the at-risk group, only the emotional maturity of the adolescent was found to contribute in the normative group. Of the external resources, contrary to the research hypotheses, the contribution of peer support was not found to be higher in the normative group. In both groups, and particularly the normative one, parental support contributed to emotional adjustment. The discussion suggests explanations for the research findings and their implications, as well as recommendations for further research.
Original languageAmerican English
Pages (from-to)385-396
JournalThe Child and Adolescent Social Work Journal
Volume25
Issue number5
StatePublished - 2008

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'The contribution of internal and external resources to emotional adjustment: A comparison of at risk and normative adolescents'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this