The role of social and emotional skills on adolescents’ life satisfaction and academic performance

ABSTRACT The COVID-19 pandemic, which emerged in 2019, has had a significant impact on the mental health of adolescents, leading to symptoms such as anxiety and depression, and a decrease in their overall life satisfaction. In the educational context, social and emotional competencies have gained increasing importance due to their potential to enhance various aspects of academic, personal, and professional life. This study aimed to assess the socioemotional competencies of 1,270 secondary school students and explore their connection with life satisfaction and academic achievement. For this purpose, the Social and Emotional Learning Scale, the Spanish adaptation of the Life Satisfaction Scale, and an ad-hoc questionnaire that collected the sociodemographic variables of gender, age, and academic performance, were administered. The Mann-Whitney U test for two independent samples, the Kruskal-Wallis H test for independent samples, and the Spearman’s correlation analysis were conducted to examine the relationships between the variables. In summary, the study revealed statistically significant differences social and emotional competencies based on gender, but there were no discernible differences based on age. Furthermore, the results indicated a positive relationship between life satisfaction, social and emotional competencies, and academic performance. The findings of this study hold significant importance as they contribute to our understanding of the factors impacting the well-being of adolescents. Hence, in the current post-pandemic era, there is an even greater urgency to design and implement high-quality interventions centered around social and emotional learning in education, particularly from an early age.

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Main Authors: Ayllón-Salas,Patricia, Fernández-Martín,Francisco D
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Universidad de Córdoba 2024
Online Access:https://scielo.isciii.es/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1989-709X2024000100006
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spelling oai:scielo:S1989-709X20240001000062024-09-16The role of social and emotional skills on adolescents’ life satisfaction and academic performanceAyllón-Salas,PatriciaFernández-Martín,Francisco D Socioemotional competencies Life satisfaction Adolescents Academic performance High school ABSTRACT The COVID-19 pandemic, which emerged in 2019, has had a significant impact on the mental health of adolescents, leading to symptoms such as anxiety and depression, and a decrease in their overall life satisfaction. In the educational context, social and emotional competencies have gained increasing importance due to their potential to enhance various aspects of academic, personal, and professional life. This study aimed to assess the socioemotional competencies of 1,270 secondary school students and explore their connection with life satisfaction and academic achievement. For this purpose, the Social and Emotional Learning Scale, the Spanish adaptation of the Life Satisfaction Scale, and an ad-hoc questionnaire that collected the sociodemographic variables of gender, age, and academic performance, were administered. The Mann-Whitney U test for two independent samples, the Kruskal-Wallis H test for independent samples, and the Spearman’s correlation analysis were conducted to examine the relationships between the variables. In summary, the study revealed statistically significant differences social and emotional competencies based on gender, but there were no discernible differences based on age. Furthermore, the results indicated a positive relationship between life satisfaction, social and emotional competencies, and academic performance. The findings of this study hold significant importance as they contribute to our understanding of the factors impacting the well-being of adolescents. Hence, in the current post-pandemic era, there is an even greater urgency to design and implement high-quality interventions centered around social and emotional learning in education, particularly from an early age.Universidad de CórdobaPsychology, Society & Education v.16 n.1 20242024-04-01journal articletext/htmlhttps://scielo.isciii.es/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1989-709X2024000100006en
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language English
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author Ayllón-Salas,Patricia
Fernández-Martín,Francisco D
spellingShingle Ayllón-Salas,Patricia
Fernández-Martín,Francisco D
The role of social and emotional skills on adolescents’ life satisfaction and academic performance
author_facet Ayllón-Salas,Patricia
Fernández-Martín,Francisco D
author_sort Ayllón-Salas,Patricia
title The role of social and emotional skills on adolescents’ life satisfaction and academic performance
title_short The role of social and emotional skills on adolescents’ life satisfaction and academic performance
title_full The role of social and emotional skills on adolescents’ life satisfaction and academic performance
title_fullStr The role of social and emotional skills on adolescents’ life satisfaction and academic performance
title_full_unstemmed The role of social and emotional skills on adolescents’ life satisfaction and academic performance
title_sort role of social and emotional skills on adolescents’ life satisfaction and academic performance
description ABSTRACT The COVID-19 pandemic, which emerged in 2019, has had a significant impact on the mental health of adolescents, leading to symptoms such as anxiety and depression, and a decrease in their overall life satisfaction. In the educational context, social and emotional competencies have gained increasing importance due to their potential to enhance various aspects of academic, personal, and professional life. This study aimed to assess the socioemotional competencies of 1,270 secondary school students and explore their connection with life satisfaction and academic achievement. For this purpose, the Social and Emotional Learning Scale, the Spanish adaptation of the Life Satisfaction Scale, and an ad-hoc questionnaire that collected the sociodemographic variables of gender, age, and academic performance, were administered. The Mann-Whitney U test for two independent samples, the Kruskal-Wallis H test for independent samples, and the Spearman’s correlation analysis were conducted to examine the relationships between the variables. In summary, the study revealed statistically significant differences social and emotional competencies based on gender, but there were no discernible differences based on age. Furthermore, the results indicated a positive relationship between life satisfaction, social and emotional competencies, and academic performance. The findings of this study hold significant importance as they contribute to our understanding of the factors impacting the well-being of adolescents. Hence, in the current post-pandemic era, there is an even greater urgency to design and implement high-quality interventions centered around social and emotional learning in education, particularly from an early age.
publisher Universidad de Córdoba
publishDate 2024
url https://scielo.isciii.es/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1989-709X2024000100006
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