We systematically mapped and analyzed the longitudinal research on adolescent student engagement published during 2010–2020. A total of 104 studies of 104,304 adolescents met inclusion criteria. Studies were mainly conducted in North America (43%) or Europe (34%). Over half studied engagement across one or more years. Most studies (93%) focused on antecedents of engagement rather than outcomes of engagement (38%). Data were commonly collected using self-report questionnaires (87%) and analyzed using path, growth, and cross-lagged models. Studies mainly examined engagement in classroom activities, school, or schoolwork; and focused on behavioral engagement (70%), followed by emotional (61%), then cognitive engagement (35%). No studies used a specific theory of engagement development, but instead referred to self-determination, ecological systems, and stage-environment fit theories.
CITATION STYLE
Salmela-Aro, K., Tang, X., Symonds, J., & Upadyaya, K. (2021, June 1). Student Engagement in Adolescence: A Scoping Review of Longitudinal Studies 2010–2020. Journal of Research on Adolescence. Blackwell Publishing Inc. https://doi.org/10.1111/jora.12619
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