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Reappraising academic and social adversity improves middle school students’ academic achievement, behavior and well-being.

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Borman, G., Rozek, C., Pyne, J., & Hanselman, P.

Reappraising academic and social adversity improves middle school students’ academic achievement, behavior and well-being.

Borman, G., Rozek, C., Pyne, J., & Hanselman, P.

Learn More
Borman, G., Rozek, C., Pyne, J., & Hanselman, P.

Reappraising academic and social adversity improves middle school students’ academic achievement, behavior and well-being.

Borman, G., Rozek, C., Pyne, J., & Hanselman, P.

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS)

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Preschool

K-3

3 - 6

Middle School

High School

Adult

Without social and emotional support, adolescent students who have recently made the difficult transition to middle school experience decreased social belonging, waning academic performance, and increased risk of dropping out. This randomized field trial, conducted at scale across a Midwestern school district, reveals how a psychologically precise intervention for students supported transitioning sixth graders. Intervention materials taught students that middle school adversity is common, short-lived, and due to external, temporary causes rather than personal inadequacies. As a result, students realized improved social and psychological well-being, fewer absences and disciplinary infractions, and higher grade point averages. Implemented at scale, this intervention holds potential to help to address the widespread academic underperformance by the nation’s transitioning middle school students.

Learn More

Reappraising academic and social adversity improves middle school students’ academic achievement, behavior and well-being.

Borman, G., Rozek, C., Pyne, J., & Hanselman, P.

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS)

Website

Article

Podcast

Book

Research

Video

Preschool

K-3

3 - 6

Middle School

High School

Adult

Without social and emotional support, adolescent students who have recently made the difficult transition to middle school experience decreased social belonging, waning academic performance, and increased risk of dropping out. This randomized field trial, conducted at scale across a Midwestern school district, reveals how a psychologically precise intervention for students supported transitioning sixth graders. Intervention materials taught students that middle school adversity is common, short-lived, and due to external, temporary causes rather than personal inadequacies. As a result, students realized improved social and psychological well-being, fewer absences and disciplinary infractions, and higher grade point averages. Implemented at scale, this intervention holds potential to help to address the widespread academic underperformance by the nation’s transitioning middle school students.

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