4.5 Article

Children's Life Satisfaction: Developmental Trajectories and Environmental and Personality Predictors

Journal

JOURNAL OF HAPPINESS STUDIES
Volume 23, Issue 6, Pages 2805-2826

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10902-022-00499-1

Keywords

Life satisfaction; Developmental trajectories; Environmental factors; Personality factors; Children

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31971005]
  2. Guangdong Basic and Applied Basic Research Foundation [2021A1515012515]
  3. Major Program of the National Social Science Foundation of China [19ZDA360]

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Life satisfaction is an important indicator of children's healthy development. This study identified the developmental trajectories of life satisfaction during childhood and examined the predictive roles of environmental and personality factors. The results revealed three distinct trajectories of life satisfaction and identified risk and protective factors associated with these trajectories.
Life satisfaction is a key indicator of children's healthy development. Although the developmental changes of life satisfaction during adolescence have been investigated, the developmental trajectories of life satisfaction and related predictors during childhood remain unclear. Thus, the current study aimed to identify the developmental trajectories of life satisfaction covering the period from middle to late childhood as well as to examine the predictive roles of environmental factors (i.e., family dysfunction and basic psychological needs satisfaction at school), personality factors (i.e., neuroticism and extraversion), and their interactions in these developmental trajectories. An accelerated longitudinal design was used with Chinese elementary school students (N = 1069, 45.8% girls, M-age = 9.43, SD = 0.95) of 3 cohorts (grade 3, grade 4, and grade 5) on 4 occasions at 6-month intervals. Growth mixture modeling analyses revealed three distinct trajectories of life satisfaction: High-Stable (88.8%), High-Decreasing (6.8%), and Low-Increasing (4.4%). Multivariate logistic regression analyses revealed that family dysfunction and neuroticism served as risk factors for adverse developmental trajectories of life satisfaction; whereas basic psychological needs satisfaction at school served as a protective factor. Furthermore, the interaction between family dysfunction and extraversion suggested that higher levels of extraversion buffered children against the negative effect of family dysfunction on the development of life satisfaction. The identification of three heterogeneous trajectory groups of children's life satisfaction and key personality and environmental predictors associated with the trajectories suggests that specific interventions need to be tailored to the unique characteristics of the relevant trajectory groups.

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