4.7 Article

Impact of Social Support Ecosystem on Academic Performance of Children From Low-Income Families: A Moderated Mediation Model

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.710441

Keywords

social support; dispositional optimism; grit; academic performance; children from low-income families

Funding

  1. Youth Foundation for Humanities and Social Sciences of Ministry of Education of China [18YJC880089]
  2. Scientific research project of Hunan Education Department, China [17K049]
  3. National Social Science Fund of China [16BSH093]

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This study found that social support has a positive impact on academic performance of children from low-income families, with dispositional optimism playing a mediating role and grit moderating the relationships among social support, optimism, and academic performance.
This study conducted a questionnaire survey involving 513 children from low-income families (mean age = 13.25 +/- 2.19 years) to explore the relationship between social support and academic performance as well as the mediating role of dispositional optimism and the moderating role of grit. A structural equation model analysis showed that: (1) social support has a significant positive predictive effect on academic performance and (2) dispositional optimism has a significant mediating effect on the relationship between social support and academic performance. Further, a moderated mediation effect test showed that grit moderates (3) the direct social support effect on academic performance as well as (4) the direct and indirect pathways among social support, dispositional optimism, and academic performance. The results indicate that social support is conducive to the development of dispositional optimism in children from low-income families, thereby improving their academic performance. At the same time, grit can enhance the positive impact of optimism on the academic performance of children from low-income families. This study has important theoretical and practical implications for effectively improving the academic performance of children from low-income families.

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