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Support for Autonomy at School Predicts Immigrant Adolescents’ Psychological Well-being

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Abstract

We investigated the relationship between teacher support at school intended to promote students’ autonomy and immigrant adolescents’ psychological well-being. A structural equation model was tested on 3130 immigrant adolescents who attended a representative sample of 654 Italian high schools. Gender, socioeconomic status, previous school achievement and immigrant generation were included in the analysis as control variables. Results showed that when teachers are perceived as adopting an approach that is supportive of autonomy, immigrant adolescents report significantly higher levels of psychological well-being. Gender appears to be the most relevant background factor, with girls being more at risk than boys as regards mental health. Overall, our findings suggest that interventions of enacted support by teachers at school that aim to foster students’ autonomy would be an effective approach for protecting against mental illness in immigrant adolescents.

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Correspondence to Elisa Cavicchiolo.

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Alivernini, F., Cavicchiolo, E., Manganelli, S. et al. Support for Autonomy at School Predicts Immigrant Adolescents’ Psychological Well-being. J Immigrant Minority Health 21, 761–766 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10903-018-0839-x

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