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TRANSIENCE AND EDUCATION: ACADEMIC AND PSYCHOSOCIAL EFFECTS OF GEOGRAPH IC MOBILITY ON CElILDREN
Susan M. Smith Koschmider
A t hesis submitted in conformity with the requirements for the Degree of Master o f Arts
Depanment o f Human Developrnent and Applied Psychology Ontario Institute for Studies in Education o f the
University o f Toronto
@Copyright by Susan M. Smith Koschmider 1997
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TRANSIENCE AND EDUCATION:
ACADEMIC AND PSYCHOSOCIAL EFFECTS
OF GEOGRAPHIC MOBILITY ON CHILDREN
by
Susan M. Smith Koschmider
Degree of Master of Arts
1997
Departmeut of Human Development and Applied Psychology
Ontario Institute for Studies in Education of the
University of Toronto
ABSTRACT
This review attempts to examine the question: 1s rnobility a risk factor for high risk
school children? Mobility and risk terms are defined, and mobility research is
reviewed and analyzed. The research to date does not provide definitive answers to
the questions posed, mainly for a variety of methodological reasons. The review
concludes with some suggestions for future research directions.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I would like to acknowledge al1 those who helped and supported me in the completion
of my degree requirements:
Dr. Solveiga Miezitis, my Thesis Supervisor, who guided and redirected me throughout
this project, giving outstanding encouragement and support.
Dr. Otto Weininger, m y second Committee Member.
Cecily Jennings and Linda Booty who read the drafts and made helpful suggestions.
Family and friends, near and far, who inspire with their optimism.
My children, Kai and Melissa, who have cheered me on and helped with photocopying,
computer gli tches and household duties.
Horst, partner and friend, who steadfastly and loyally has supported and charnpioned
me throughout many years of education.
Thank-you very much
Home. Home was arbitrary, the place she had designared as home, the house on Tenrh Street, rather than the farm in Connecticut ... odd, how the heort will put down roofs in what was, at the time, only a ternporary shelter.
Madeleine L'Engle, A Severed Wasv
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This thesis is dedicated to Dorot h y Isabel Fraser Smith (1903-1983)
who taught me the importance of investing time in the lives of children.
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TRANSIENCE A N D EDUCATION: ACADEMIC A N D PSYCHOSOCIAL EFFECTS O F GEOGRAPHIC MOBILITY ON CHILDREN
TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND
CRITERIA FOR INCLUSION O F STUDIES
DEFINITIONS OF CRITERIA USED IN MOBILITY RESEARCH Mobility Criteria Risk and Protective Factors
OVERVIEW OF THE LITERATURE REVIEW
CRITIQUE OF MOBILITY STUDIES Reason for Move Pre- and Post-Move Data Mobility and Risk
LIMITATIONS AND DIRECTIONS FOR FUTURE RESEARCH
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LISTS OF TABLES
TABLE 1: Mobility Studies Reviewed in Summary
TABLE 2: Major Characteristics of Studies Reviewed
TABLE 3: Reason for Move
TABLE 4: Research Controls
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TRANSIENCE AND EDUCATION: ACADEMIC A N D PSYCHOSOCIAL EFFECTS
OF GEOGRAPHIC MOBILITY ON CHILDREN
BACKGROUND AND INTRODUCTION
A review of studies on the ef fects of transieace on the educational progress of
the child is vital at this time given the high mobility of school children in the greater
Toronto area, as well as in other parts of Canada and North America. The current
literatu re reveals contradictions regarding the e l fects of transience on children's
academic achievement, social-emotional adaptation and behaviour. Where some studies
show reduced academic achievement, less positive social experiences, and greater
adolescent alienation for mobile groups (Calabrese, 1989; Ingersoll, Scamman and
Eckerling, 1989; Vernberg, 19900, other studies find insignificant effects, positive
effects for bright students, and higher levels of child and social competence among the
mobile groups (Marchant and Medway, 1987; Stroh and Brett, 1990b; Whalen and Fried,
1973). Some of the discrepancy may be due to di fferences in definitions. Words such
as mobility, highly mobile, nonmobile, and transient are used to describe di f ferent
groups i n this literature, but without common criteria of selection. Other problems
noted in this body of literature are poor design, insufficient control, and loosely
defined dependent variables. Studies are performed with a variety of rubjects, often
wi thout controlling for such vital dif ferences as, for example, socioeconomic status
(SES) or reason for move. Other studies assess different aspects of adaptation and
adjustment or lack thereof. Thus arise the contradictions detailed above. Contradictions
lead to confusion on the subject and threaten the legitimacy of transience and mobility
as an important issue relative to other pressing issues in education today. In addition,
this leads to uncertainty about the necessity for interventions appropriate to the
accommodation of new students. It is the purpose of this review to contribute to an
awareness of the complexity of the interaction between transience and education, and
to suggest directions for future research on the subject. It is also the purpose of this
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review to suggest criteria by which to assess potentia1 strengths and risks for
individual children who move.
Life transitions require adaptation. Moving from one school to another is a
challenging transition in which children must adapt. Circumstances surrounding a
move have a bearing on the child's ability to adapt or adjust. For example, a move due
to family breakdown or the death of a parent may be accompanied by symptoms of
stress from the trauma associated with multiple losses, A child in this situation could
exhibit academic difficulties or behavioural problems such as acting out or social
withdrawal (Ribordy, 1989). In al1 transitions, ability of an individual to adjust after
a move is thought to be related to a variety of factors including personality,
adaptability, level of motivation, socioeconomic status (SES), intelligence, age, social
skills, stress levels, amount of input into the decision to move, amount of difference
between the schools' curricula, level of emotional adjustment, and stability of and
support from the family andlor other relationships (AIlan and Bardsley, 1984; Jason,
Weine, Johnson, Warren-Sohlberg, Filippelli, Turner and Lardon, 1992). The current
review will evaluate studies based, in part, on the inclusion of such variables in the
design.
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CRITERIA FOR INCLUSION OF STUDIES
The scope of this review is English-language articles dealing with any aspect of
mobility related to chiIdren. Searches were made using CD Rom software (ERIC and
PsvchLit), manual searches of recent journals, and the reference pages of books and
articles on the subject of mobility and children's education. In addition to peer-
reviewed articles, non-reviewed and unpublished articles have also been included
because there is some evidence suggesting that refereed journals may have a bias
towards publishing mainly statistically significant results, overlooking other research
with statistically insignificant, but possibly valid results (Light & Pillemer, 1984;
White, 1982).
Not included in this paper are studies of adult movers, with the foIlowing
exceptions: 1) where the study includes both adults and children as the subject group;
and 2) a study which retrospectively examined adaptation to university based upon
mobility in childhood.
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DEFINITIONS O F CRITERIA USED IN MOBILITY RESEARCH
MOBILITY CRITERIA
Mobility or being mobile refers to geographic mobility, the change of residence,
school, andlor location. For the purpose of this study mobility refers to changes in
schools with o r without a change of residence, but not changes in residence without a
change in school. While there may be important consequences to changes in residence
without a change of school, these particular types of moves will not be considered at
this time as they tend to go unnoticed both in schools and for research purposes.
In the articles reviewed, specific de finitions of mobility used by researchers
tended to be arbitrary, varying from study to study. Difficulties arise in cornparing
studies because the definitions are sometimes unclear and because the different
definitions don? always concur well enough to compare one with another. Part of the
confusion is due to overlap of conditions. There is a good variety of combinations in
the studies due, for example, to numbers of moves, types of moves and subject groups.
This review will look at several definitions andlor types of definitions of mobility,
describe them, discuss the dif ferences, and highlight the strengths and weaknesses of
each.
a) NUMBER OF MOVES
Several theorists use the number of moves a child has made as a criterion for
definition of mobility. Typically researchers assign subjects to two o r more groups.
WhiIe the number of groups is arbitrary, the simplest would be two groups, one
consisting of students who have not moved, and the other of students who have moved
one or more times (Pinder, 1989; Stroh & Brett, 1990alb; Vernberg, 1990). A variation
of this category is number of schools attended (Morris, Pestaner & Nelson, 1967;
Whalen & Fried, 1973). For example, Harter, Whitesell & Kowalski (1992) defined
transitions for the purpose of their study as changes to a new school. In their study of
student mobili ty and achievement, lngersoll et ai., (1989) described five mobilit y
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groups, based upon student enrolment patterns for the duration of their two year study.
These included three groups of continuing students and two groups of students new to
the system in the second year of the study, divided as follows: 1) no moves; 2) only one
move; 3) more than one move; 4) new entry to the school but no moves dur ing the
course of the study; 5) new entry and with one or more moves and/or exit from system.
This allowed the researchers to compare mobile with nonmobile students and then to
compare the effects of one move versus more than one move.
In some descriptive articles, writers merely note that the subject has moved, or
mention the average number of moves (Shaw, 1987).
b) DISTANCE OF MOVE
Some researchers have defined mobility on the basis of the distance of a move
or the cross from one area to another. Barrett & Noble (1973) studied movers who
relocated a distance of over 50 miles; Johnson & Lindblad (1991) compared intercity
moves, intracity moves and nonmobility; and Vernberg, Ewell, Beery & Abwender
(2994) described an intercommunity move.
Neither the number of moves nor the distance of move fully capture the whole
scope of the impact of a move. For example, a move within Canada can involve a
dif ferent climate, region, culture, and /o r language (Pinder, 1989).
c) MULTIPLE FACTORS
Kroger (1980), in a study of mobility and seIf-concept in adolescents, defined
mobility using a formula calcuiating the "distance" o f a move based upon the sum of
the number of moves multiplied by the weight of a move. The weighting was based
upon a scale developed by Oakay (1972) where the type of move is given numerical
weight (i.e., intracommunity = 1; intrastate = 2; intraregion [contiguous state] = 3;
intraregion [non-contiguous statel = 4; intranation [contiguous state] = 5; intranation
[non-contiguous state] = 6; and international = 7). For the subjects who had moved a t
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least once Kroger used recency of last move and age span of the greatest number of
moves as variables. While it may be possible to improve and refine it, Kroger's formula
nevertheless provides an example of an attempt at the quantification of some of the
dif ferences and complexities inherent in mobility.
d) SCHEDULED VERSUS UNSCHEDULED MOVES
The definition of mobility includes the important distinction of whether a move
is schcduled (Le., a move from elementary to senior school) or unscheduled, such as a
school change due to job transfer, eviction, etc. A key factor involved in these two
types of moves is that with a scheduled move, groups of students usually move
together, w hereas an unscheduled move usually affects an individual student alone or
with siblings (Bogat, Liang, Caldwell, Davidson, Bristor, Phillips & Suu rme yer, 1993;
Jason et al., 1992). As Danner, Jason & Kurasaki (1993) note,
al1 children change schools during their educational careers. Many school transfers are considered routine, such as transferring from middle to high school. Other children experieace unscheduled school transfers, which are due to situations not considered part of the usual educational experience (p. 1).
Scheduled moves, being highly predictable, lend themselves well to research study and,
as will be discussed later, have provided valuable mobility information. The chief
drawback is that research of scheduled transitions does not necessarily generalize well
to the entire mobile population, since scheduled transitions lack the potential
unpredictability, isolation and some of the risk factors inherent in other types of
moves.
SUMMARY
WhiIe researchers have been fairly consistent about some criteria (i.e., change
of school), other criteria are inconsistent ranging from a simple haslhas not moved to
complicated formulae. To be useful for research a basic definition of mobility will
likely need to incIude the number of moves, the rate of moves (number of moves in
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what time span), the distance moved, and whether the move is a normal scheduled
transition as opposed to an individual move outside of the usual school experience.
RlSK AND PROTECTIVE FACTORS
There is a growing interest in establishing the risk and protective factors for
children at different stages and in different circumstances. Some children appear to
bc at greater risk for school failure, underachievement, mental health problems and
psychosocial di f ficulties than others. Discussing risk and protective factors, Garmezy
(1991) States that,
protectiveness is not the obverse of vulnerability ... whereas risk mechanisms tend to lead directly to disordcr, protective processes operate indirectly, their effects partly a function of their interaction with and their modification of the risk variable (p. 428).
Risk and protective factors are important to consider in a study of transient
children because a move requires adaptation, and the circumstances surrounding a
move may have a bearing upon the child's ability to adapt. It is thus hypothesized that
mobility is likely to be a risk factor for certain children.
In order to identify areas that need to be considered when examining mobility
and children, some of the common risk and protective factors for school-age children
will be identified. Following this, the mobility studies will be evaluated in light of
the importance of these risk factors,
a) SOCIOECONOMIC STATUS (SES)
Low socioeconomic status (SES) is cited by researchers as a significant risk
factor af fecting academic achievement, adaptive behaviour, mental health, and future
socioeconomic status. I t is difficuIt to know exactly what is meant by the term low
socioeconomic status, however, because various researchers use dif ferent variables to
describe it. For example, in a meta-analytic review of studies comparing sociometric
status (SES) with academic achievement, White (1982) found that SES measures varied
and also that the relationship between SES and school achievement varied depending
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upon which factors were used to measure SES. White iists types of SES measured in the
studies he reviewed, including: income of family; education o f parents; occupation o f
head of house; home atmosphere (e.g., parents' a t t i tude toward education; parents'
aspirations for their children; cultural and intellectual activities of the family);
dwelling value; school resources; subjective judgement; and a miscellaneous category
(e.g., number of siblings, ethnicity, and mobility of family). He identi fied over seventy
di f ferent variables which were used eitber alone o r in some combination as indicators
of SES.
White (1982) found a positive, but weaker correlation between SES and
academic achievement than is normally assumed. Of the traditional SES indicators,
income was the highest single correlate of academic achievement. He found it
surprising, however, that measures of home atmosphere had a much higher correlation
with academic achievement than any single o r combined group of the traditional
indicators of SES. White recommended that when using SES as a research tool, specific
labels for the variables be used with a precise definition of how the variable was
measu red.
Family income, specifically poverty, was consistently found to be the strongest
predictor of academic failure, stress difficulties, developmental disabilities, emotional
disorder and other types of risk, of several variables studied (Caldas, 1993; Fergusson,
Horwoad, & Lynsky, 1994; Garmezy, 1991; Offord, 1989; Patterson, Vaden &
Kupersmidt, 1991; Reynolds, Weissberg, & Kasprow, 1992; Sameroff, 1975; Walker &
Boyle, unpublished; Wyman, Cowen, Work & Parker, 1991).
While there may be controversy regarding the actual relationship between SES
and factors such as child well-being and academic achievement, i t is an important
variable to include. l n some cases SES is implicit in the research question. For example,
in literature surrounding job transfers of mainly managerial, professional and
technical employees, concerns relate to cost-effectiveness of job transfers, employee
satisfaction, employee change and development, and parents' concerns regarding
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children's happiness, adjustment, and academic achievement (Pinder, 1981; Pinder and
Walter, 1984; Stroh & Brett, 1990a/b). This is contrasted to mobitity studies involving
movers generally considered to be less advantaged when the research question concerns
student success or lack of success in academic subjects or programs (Manaster, Chan &
Safady, 2992).
The role of socioeconomic status i n chitdren's adaptation to transience will best
be evaluated by ideatifying specific variables and defining them precisely. Generally,
while poverty was consistently the strongest predictor of academic and other
difficulties, home atmosphere was also found to play an important role in predicting
academic success.
b) INTELLIGENCE
Intelligence is cited as a risk or protective factor i n a variety of studies
including those of Kandell, Mednick, Kirkegaard-Sorensen, Hutchings, Knop,
Rosenberg, & Schufsinger, (1988), Luthar, (1991) and Whalen & Fried, (1973).
IntelIectual assessment of children, however, is at best a challenging procedure, and is
complicated by factors associated with mobility. Gaps in schooling, inconsistencies in
education, and assessment procedures which discriminate against foreign-born and
other language children (Cummins, 1986), are some complicating factors. It is thus
difficult to establish causality by examining the relationship between intelligence and
risk factors. In addition, parent, teacher, and school expectations of students can be
powerful confounding variables (Weinstein, Soule, Collins, Cone, Mehlhorn and
Simon tacchi, 1991).
Alternatively, the perception that one is of Iower intelligence or has less ability
is fikely in itself to be debilitating, as lngraham (1985) found when he highlighted the
importance of accurate self-concept and logical information processing for self-esteem,
school motivation and achievernent.
I t is also possible that the differences Found in the literature may be related to
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the method used to measure intelligence. Several authors refer to higher IO as a
protective factor (Garmezy, Masten & Tellegen, 1984; Kandel, et ai., 1988; Masten, Best
& Garmezy, 1990; Rutter, 1989; Werner, 1989) while others associate intelligence with
increased risk and vulnerability (Luthar, 1991; Yoshi kawa, f 994). 1 t appears, however,
that the conclusions rnay have been based upon different types of intelligence
measures. Luthar used a nonverbal measure of intelligence, and while not specifying
the type of measure, Yoshikawa points out that low verbal ability is a disadvantage i n
school. I t rnay be that verbal intelligence and language abilities are a protective factor
(Werner, 1989) while non verbal intelligence does not function as a protective factor,
and rnay even increase vulnerability in stressful situations (Luthar, 1991). In iiner-
grained examinations, interactions between a child's abilities and farnily variables rnay
moderate risk factors (Christenson, 1990). Further, stressfui situations, and especially
traumatic events, are known to affect concentration and distractibility, and rnay
confound the predictive value of measures of intelligence for school achievement.
Nevertheless, in spite of these limitations, it is important to consider whether
intelligence is a risk factor in general, and more specifically, in relation to mobility.
Whalen and Fried (1973), found that mobility magnifies existing differences between
children in that those mobile children considered more intelligent showed higher
academic achievement than their non-mobile counterparts, while less intelligent mobile
children showed lower academic achievement than their non-mobile peers. I t rnay be,
as Jason, Betts, Johnson, Weine, Warren-Sohlburg, Shinaver, Neuson, Filipelli and
Lardon, (1990) point out, that difficulty in mastering new skills rnay compound
challenges for weaker students who rnay then choose to give up rather than continue
to experience the humiliation of failure. It woutd appear that some children
transferring schools are a t a greater risk for experiencing school difficulties and that
these high risk kids tend to have fewer interna1 resources, including lower measured
intelligence.
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C) LEARNING DISABILITIES AND LEARNING DIFFICULTIES
Scme researchers bave found that learning d i f ficulties and disabili ties seem
especially noticeable for children who move a great deal. Foreign children were over-
represen ted in special education classes in European countries (Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, 1987). Children in shelters and hostels were
found to score lower on a standardized reading test and on a test of attention span
(Moore & Pepler, unpublished). Jason et al. (1990) found that academic vulnerabilities
add to other stressors, such as mobility, leaving a child more likely to experience
maladjustment and failure. Other researchers, however, have not found that mobile
children di f fer from their less mobile peers in terms of learning di f ficulties (Barrett
& Noble, 1973). One important di fference between these various bodies of work may
be SES. The latter subjects were drawn from families using a major interstate moving
Company, a luxury perhaps not used by some of the other subject groups. Thus, the
relationship between moving and learning difficulties may be mediated by SES or
family income factors,
Risk factors associated with learning difficulties, school failure and/or
underachievement may include high absences, difficulties with concentration and the
inability to solve interpersonal problems (Kellam, Werthamer-Larsson, Dolan, Brown,
Mayer, Rebok, Anthony, Laudolff, Edelsohn & WheeIer, 1991; Leonard & Elias, 1993;
Reyes & Hedeker, 1993).
d) PEER SUPPORT AND ADJUSTMENT
Support of peers &as been examined as a variable in research about emotional
adjustment, academic achievement, behaviour, stress, protection and resiliency. A
further question about the importance of peer support is raised when one asks if peer
support helps protect a mobile child against later persona1 risk and/or contributes to
later personal adjustment. In other words, is peer support a buffer factor in general,
and specifically in transience?
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The support of peers is thought to be related to emotional adjustment. ChiIdren
with pour peer relationships, especially those with low acceptance coupled with
aggressiveness, are at risk for difficulties in adolescence and adulthood including
dropping out of schoul, criminal activity and externalizing di f ficulties (Hyrnel, Rubin,
Rowden & LeMare, 1990; Parker & Asher, 1987; Rubin & Mills, 1988). Further, social
skills and social resources have been found to protect against stress and to influence
well-being (Cohen & Wills, 1985; Luthar, 1991; Hirsch & DuBois, 1992). Some
researchers, however, have not found consistent relationships between peer support and
adjustment (Barone, Aguirre-Deandreis & Trickett, 1991; and Wolchik, Ruehlman,
Braver, and Sandler, 1989). Barone et ai. speculated that this may be due to the
measurement procedures or because the effect of peer support may differ according to
peer group characteristics. For example, support from delinquent peers may have
different consequences for an individual's adaptation than support from nondelinquent
peers, Walker and Greene (1987) found that gender was a factor in whether peer
support was helpful. Their research showed that peer support protected adolescent
males, but not adolescent females from the stress associated with negative l i fe events.
For females, regardless of the frequency or valence of life events, low peer support was
associated with high levels of symptoms.
Other researchers have found that peer support has mixed effects on personal
adjustment. Cauce, Hannan & Sargeant (1992) inferred potential stress-buffering
effects of social support from a study that showed that peer support was positively
related to peer competence and anxiety, but negatively related to school competence.
Asher, Hyrnel & Renshaw (1984) reported a positive correlation between low
peer support and the reporting of loneliness and social dissatisfaction, but also found
that satisfactory home relationships may be a mediating factor. Other researchers
found that those children who were actively rejected were more likely to remain
rejected when they moved into a new group or class, while children who were neglected
were more likely to improve their social status (Coie & Kupersmidt, 1983).
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Academic achievement, often considered a protective factor, is related to social
skills and peer support. Leonard & Elias (1993) found that grade point average (GPA),
is related to the skills needed to solve interpersonal problems. Further, French (1990),
in a study of peer-rejected girls, found a relationship between low self-control, low
academic task orientation and high peer-rated aggression, social withdrawal, overall
behaviour problems, anxiety, hostile isolation, academic disability, and peer rejection.
Vernberg et al. (1994) found that social perspective coordination was helpful in
establishing and maintaining Friendships and, further, that establishment and
maintenance of close friendships is important in both short- and long-term adaptation.
Social perspective coordination refers to the ability to
di f ferentiate and integrate the self's perspective with the perspectives of others. This requires an understanding of the relationships among one's own thoughts, feelings and wishes and those of other people (Selman & Schultz, 1989, p. 6).
Asher (1983), Putallaz (1983) and Crick & Dodge (1994) found that socially competent
children are able to read and understand social situations more accurately and thus to
both initiate and respond positively and relevantly to others. Asher also fouad that
socially competent children reaIize that building relationships takes time and are able
to use indirect as well as direct approaches in goal-attainment. However, the self-
perception that one is socially competent was not necessarily accurate and could not be
viewed as a basis for social or behavioural cornpetence (Patterson, Kupersmidt &
Griesler, 1990).
Cultural or environmental factors, generally outside of the individual (and over
which he o r she may have less direct control) also affect behaviour and peer status.
These may include attractiveness and reputation (Dodge, 1983), cultural characteristics
(Schneider, 1993), high levels of stress, both long-term and acute (Patterson et ai., 1991),
the classroom achievement environment (Werthamer-Larsson, Kellam & Wheeler, 1991),
age (Barrett & Noble, 1973), and mobility (Byrnes, 1985).
Thus, as Sameroff (1975) suggests, mere causality may not be supportable. The
child and his or her environment must be examined in combination because complex
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reciprocal interactions ameliorate or worsen behaviour problems, Requirements of good
peer relationships include intra-personal, inter-personal and cultural/environmental
factors. Although researchers have found that peer support is positively related to an
individual's adjustment, some inconsistency in the literature remains in relation to
peer group factors and to the area of adaptation being examined. Many factors may
contribute to modify the intensity of the relationship between social abiIities and later
persona1 adjustment, but there is generally strong support for this relationship and
thus, it is important to consider the role of peer support in a study of mobile children.
e) ADULT SUPPORT AND ADJUSTMENT
Researchers also need to account for the role of adult support of children in
mobility studies because relationships with aduIts are critical in a child's life. Thus the
interpersonal and intrapersonal factors which affect these relationships, including
availability and type of family support, are essential to an evaluation of risk and
protectiveness.
1) INTRA- AND INTERPERSONAL FACTORS
Among the intrapersonal factors likely to play a part in exacerbating or
ameliorating risk are a child's behaviour or adaptive functioning, which is related to
the child's ability to get along with adults.
Having a temperamental style or coping style that is a poor match for the
caretaking environment increases the challenges that a child must cope with and thus
increases risk of failure or maladjustment (Compas, 1987). For example, a very active
child living in a family that values peace and tranquillity rnay find it diff icult to
conform to the family's standards of quiet and inactivity, and may thus experience a
sense of failure.
Some intrapersonal traits and interpersonal factors are linked with g r m e r stress
and poor relationships with adults. Timko, Moos & Michelson (1993) found a
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relationship between chronic stressors and such intrapersonal factors as an emotional
disposition and low self-worth, as well as environmental and interpersonal factors such
as negative l i fe events and limited social resources. Furthermore, longitudinal studies
show that aggressive behaviour, especially for males, is stable over time and that
aggressive behaviour in young children is highly predictive of serious adult antisocial
behaviour (Huesman, Eron, Lefkowitz & Walder, 1984; Lochman & Lampron, 1985).
Werner (1989) in a 1955 birth cohort s tudy on the island of Kauai, Hawaii
discovered that the relative impact of risk and protective factors changed at various
life phases. For example, Fenzel (1989) suggests that simply being a young adolescent
student brings role strain, while Rutter (1989), found that key patterns of interaction
between d i f ferent mediating factors (i.e., genetic, biological, environmental) exist and
that some of these persist across development whereas others are age specific.
Cauce et al. (1992) found that both family and school support moderated the
relationship between negative events and school com petence. Interactive e f fects were
also detected in that school support buffered a number of negative events best for
those indiv iduah with an interna1 locus of control for success,
Wertlieb, Weigel, & Feldstein (1987) note a distinction between stress associated
with major li fe events and that associated with normal dail y problems. Additionally,
they mention the possible modifying influence of social support. Undesirable life
events had the strongest association with behaviour problems. Ribord y (1989) concurs
that children's reactions to serious l i fe losses and stressors may show themselves as
behaviours a t school and that the form of the manifestation depends upon the type of
loss (i.e., death, separation/divorce).
Again i t appears that while there is a relationship, the influences that affect
resiliency may not be merely causal, but are likely interactional and may need to be
accounted for in mobility studies.
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2) FAMILY SUPPORT AND FAMILY COHESION
The most important adults in a child's l i fe are the parents or caretakers who
make up the child's family. Family support has been found to be a buffer against
negative life situations, and is, in itself a protective factor, while a lack of family
cohesion has been found to be a risk factor.
Family support was consistently found to be helpful and stress-buffering in
several domains related to school adjustment including attitude toward school, anxiety,
and adapting to new school social tasks (Barone et al., 1991; Cauce et al., 1992). In
addition, there is a significan t positive relationship between parental involvement in
schools, especially the perceived quality of the parent involvement, and academic
achievement, social cornpetence and attendance (Haynes, Corner & Hamilton-Lee, 1989;
Reynolds et al., 1992). As well, a strong inverse relationship exists between a family's
social support and child symptomatology, including levels of substance (i.e., cigarette,
alcohol, marijuana) use (WertIieb et al., 1987; Wills, Vaccaro & McNamara, 1992).
Lack of family cohesion was found to be a possible stressor for adolescents
(Walker and Greene, 1987) and is related to adolescent suicidality (Kurtz &
Derevensky, 1993). When family stress increases there is a corresponding increase in
behaviour problems for children and adolescents (Fergusson et al., 1994; Shaw, Vondra,
Hommerding, Keenan & Dunn, 1994).
Some researchers, however, have been unable to find support for the hypothesis
that parental stress or even serious mental ilIness is a predictor of long-term pathology
or incompetence in children (Cohen, Burt & Bjork, 1987; Garmezy et al., 1984).
Nevertheless, research generally supports the notion that strong family support and
good cohesion are beneficial for children's adaptation, academic achievement and Iong-
term outlook. Not only were parental attitudes significantly linked to those of their
children (Stroh & Brett 1990), but in some cases it was found that parents could be
proactive in aiding their children. For example, in a study of mobile children, parents
used friendship facilitation strategies which were beneficial in helping adolescents
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17
develop closer and more intimate friendships after moving (Vernberg, Beery, Ewell, &
Abwender, 1993).
A most extreme and distressing example of disruption of family and consequent
loss of support can occur with the death of a parent. Particularly i f the death was
sudden, unnatural or violent, i t can be considered a traumatic stressor. Ribordy (1989)
notes that children o f al1 ages will usually exhibit changes in behaviour as well as have
some interference in academic progress for at least the short term, and possibly for
several years after the traumatic event. Wolfelt (1996) suggests that children grieve i n
what he refers to as "doses" and that they can be expected to feel and/or express their
grief long after the death of a parent, especially at later developmental milestones such
as graduation, rnarriage, childbearing, etc. In addition, the death of a parent can be
accompanied by several other changes previously discussed as potential risk factors,
including change in family income, less availability of family support, and/or possible
move to another location. Thus, the death of a parent and the accompanying
disruptions create significant change in a child's life and can be considered a
significant stressor or risk for dif ficulties and/or maladjustrnent.
Poor parental support, whether due to poor family cohesion, mismatch of
parent-child temperament style, poor intrapersonal and interpersonal skills, or the
death of a parent can be considered a risk factor in a child's life. Without positive
adult support and strong intrapersonal skills a child is likely to be at greater risk if
subjected to f requent disruptions such as moves.
SUMMARY
Several factors can be considered risk factors for school-aged children. These
include, but are not limited to, socioeconomic status, intelligence, learning dif ficulties,
peer support, and adult support. These risk factors are complex and interactional and
need to be examined in studies of mobility.
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18
OVERVIEW OF THE LITERATURE REVIEW
Thirty-eight studies were chosen according to the criteria for inclusion
described earlier i n this paper. Ideally, to explore the effects of transience and
evaluate the risks invoIved, researchers need to clearly define the type mobility being
studied as well as describe the subject population fully in terms of the risk factors.
The mobility studies reviewed here have been presented in Table 1. A
description of the subjects, the independent and dependent variabIes, and a brief
summary of the findings is provided for each study, Furthermore, the studies have
been grouped according to four major categories: three based upon the major type of
dependent variable (both Academic and Psychosocial Ef fects; Academic Ef fects;
Psychosocial Effects) and a fourth comprises qualitative studies.
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TABLE 1 - MOBILITY STUDIES REVIEWED IN SUMMARY STUDY SUBJECTS INDEPENDENT DEPENDENT FINDINGS
(age, etc) VARIABLE VARIABLE
Mobility and Both Academic & Psychosocial Effects
Filippelli 3-5 years; & Jason n=132 (1992) U.S.
Felner et al. (1982) US.
Pepler & Moore (unpub- lished 1991) Canada
Barone et ai. (1991) U.S.
Reyes & Hedeker
Grade 9; scheduled transition n=172
6-12 years; n=265
Grade 9; scheduled transit ion n=82
Grade 9: high risk
(1993) U.S. inner city n=154
Hatzi- 13-15 years; christou & n=784 Hop f(1992) Greece
Mobility + negative events
Prevention project
Homelessness
Mobility + means-end problem solving skills; l i fe stress; social support
Transition; preventative program
Remigration to Greece from Germany
Sel f-concept; achievement scores; academic grades
Sel f-concept; perceptions of school; grades
Academic achievement; attention; locus of control
Adjustment:
Transfer students with more negative life events had sig. lower w riting grades & self-concept scores, & lower achievement scores.
Project participants had sig. better grades, attendance & more stable sel f-concepts.
Homeless child ren sig. lower on reading & math, more behaviour probiems, and sig. more external in control orientation.
Transition resulted in grades; quality of sig. decrease in GPA life; attendance; & attendance; Females dif ficulty of posttransition tasks; state anxiety
Absence, academic achievement
Achievement, language com petence, adjustment (interpersonal, intrapersonal)
did not decrease GPA's as much as males.
Sig. decrease in GPA, increase in failure rate & drop in rankings for all; higher absenteeism Gr 8 linked to academic di f ficulties & higher absenteeism Gr 9.
Remigrants had di f ficulty in language/learning domains; newer remigrants sig. more dif ficulty in class adaptation & learning than local students; sig. lower achievement language, history & math.
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20
TABLE 1 (continued)
STUDY SUBJECTS INDEPENDENT DEPENDENT FINDINGS (age, etc) VARIABLE VARIABLE
Mobility and Academic Ef fects
Johnson & Grade 6; Mobility Lindblad city; (in tracity, (1991) U.S. n=1686 ext racity,
nonmobile)
Warren- Grades 3-5; Reason for move Sohlberg & n=451 Jason (1992) U.S.
Marchant Grades 2,4,6; Mobility & Medway military; (1987) U S . n=170
Whalen & Grade I l ; Fried n=874 (1973) US.
Morris et Grade 5; al. (1967) n=410 us.
Mobility, IQ, & SES (3-way ANOVA)
MobilityISES; IQ con t rolled
Mancaster 14-20 years; Acculturation; et al. migrant urbanization; (1992) U.S. n=l51 SES
Levine et Grades K-6; Pupil turnover al. (1966) inner city U.S. n=574
fngersoll et Grades 1-12 Mobility al. (1989) n=41,735 (geographic U.S. instability)
Academic achievement
Adjustment to new school; (grades)
Adjust ment; achievement
Achievement scores
Reading/ arithmetic achievement
Intracity mobile groups had sig. lower academic achievement scores than others
Reason for move sig. di f ferentiated academic achievemcnt in reading, spelling and math; Grades dropped for al1 students regardless of reason for move
Sig. correlation betwcen total li fe moves & achievement (more moves = higher achievement)
High mobility1IQ group had sig. higher achievement scores than low mobilityl high IQ or high mobilityllow IQ groups
Mobility af fected reading but not arithmetic scores
Academic success AcculturaIization & urbanization finked with academic success
Academic # of moves sig. performance associated with poorer
academic achievement
Student Achievement levels of achievement stable groups & sig.
higher than mobile groups; Impact of mobility diminishes in higher grades.
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TABLE 1 (continued)
STUDY SUBJECTS INDEPENDENT DEPENDENT FINDINGS (age, etc) VARIABLE VARIABLE
Mobility and Psychosocial Effects
Calabrese Grade 10- Mobility Alienation Early moves no sig. (1989) U.S. 12; urban; (Dean Alienation ef fect on alienation;
n=239 Scale) greater alienation for older adolescents; less alienation for adolescents who plan to go to college; sig. effects for race & alienation.
Goebel sophomores, Mobility SES; sex; Higher mobility (1981) U.S. juniors & patterns: age a t intelligence; 3 during preschool &
seniors; rnove; intra- vs way relationship lower rates during n=586 inter-community adolescence associated
Stroh & Brett (1990a) U .S.
Stroh & Brett (1990b) US.
Fenzel
moves.
6-18 years; Short term & Social, corporation cumulative behavioural & trans fers; ef fects of school n=309 mobility; before adjustment;
after data physical health; sel f-con fidence
6-18 years; Mobility Premove & corporation postmove transfers; attitudes and n=56 activities.
with higher SES, greater intelligence.
No short-term e f fects of moving or negative ef fects o f frequent moves; coping ability linked to previous coping ability.
3 months af ter move fewer best f riends, less time in sports, lessons and reading; no Sig. interactions for age, sexy p removd postmove activities except rank order constant; postmove attitude related to premove at t i tude and mother's well-being.
Grade 6; Scheduled school Role strain Development of Early (1989) U.S. n=120 transition ~ d o l e s c e n t Role
Strain Inventory (EASRI); concept of role strain has merit in studying adolescent stress.
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22
TABLE 1 (continued)
STUDY SUBJECTS INDEPENDENT DEPENDENT FINDINGS (age, etc) VARIABLE VARIABLE
Mobility and Psychosocial Ef fects (continued)
Field 2-5 years; (1984) U.S. n=28
Vernberg Grade 7-8; (1990) U.S. n=73
Mann Under- (1972) U.S. graduates
n=69
Brett 1-18 years; (1982) U.S. n=373
School transfer Separation stress Increased agitated behaviour before the move for movers; post-move, agi tated behaviour diminished but increased in children who stayed.
Mobility Experiences with Fewer contacts with peers friends & less
intimacy with best f riends; Mobile boys had more rejection than peers.
Highllow Adaptation: OP1 High mobile group mobility & scores; anxiety had less anxiety than upward/no social ratings; low mobile group; mobility classroom social but not
pre ferences; residential mobility ANOVA af fected classroom
preferences; mobile males more intellectually oriented, value autonom y, independ. & more adaptive; no dif ferences for fernales.
Rate of mobility Well-being Mobile adolescents (moves/years in had more health work force; problems; mobile boys rnoves/age for less persistent on children) tasks; mobile girls
more frequent behaviour problems; # of moves related to quality of peer relations for children, not adolescents; missing friends & making new friends harder for adolescents than children.
-
TABLE 1 (continued)
STUDY SUBJECTS INDEPENDENT DEPENDENT FINDINGS (age, etc) VARIABLE VARIABLE
Mobility and Psychosocial Ef fects (continued)
Hirsch & Grade 6-8; Peer social Psy chological Sig. cross-sectional DuBois scheduled support symptomology correlates bet ween (1992) U.S. transition; peer support & mental
n=143 health.
Soussignan 5-6 years; Changing school Behavioural & Grade 1's more off - et al. n=17 environment ( K - cardiovascuIar task time than in (1988) U K Grade 1) changes Kindergarten; less
time with peers; no sig. di f f. in heart rate.
Gilchrist Grade 6; Move from Student's Entry to high school et al , middle & elementary to perception of potentially disturbing (1988) US. lower SES; junior high change; beliefs; in normal adolescents;
77% white; school readiness worried more about 23% non- social than academic white; n=606 matters.
Dowling 10-21 years; Trans fer & Adjustmeat (1986) U K scheduled predictor factors (behaviour;
transition; (verbal reason; attitude; n=503 sentence reading; attendance);
personality before & after inventory; da ta behaviour; attendance; gender
Best predictor of secondary adaptation is behaviour in primary; Attitude to school least predictable; Best predictor of secondary attendance was primary attendance .
Kroger 16-17 years; Distance, # & Sel f-concept No sig. correlations (1980) U.S. middle class; recency of between # of moves,
n=242 moves; greatest # recency of last move, of moves from 4 or age of greatest age spans moves & self-concept;
negative correlation between distance of moves & self-concept.
Jason et al. Grades 3-5; Parent-based High-risk (1993) U.S. n=147 intervention children
50% of high-intensity intervention group moved from poor to average/good coping compared with 30% of low-intensi ty group.
-
TABLE 1 (continued)
STUDY SUBJECTS INDEPENDENT DEPENDENT FINDINGS (age, etc) VARIABLE VARIABLE
Mobility and Psychosocial Ef fects (continued)
Walker & 4-16 years; Residential Boyle (un- n=3294 mobility: published) frequency of Chedoke- moves, recency McMaste r of move hospital; Child Health Study 1983 Canada
Gerner et High schoo1; International al. (1992) a=1076 mobility U.S.
Causey & Grade 7; Coping strategies Dubow scheduled & perceptions of (1993) U.S. move; n=162 school
environment
Barone et Grade 12; Mainstream o r al. (1993) scheduled special education U.S. move; n=234 status
Child psychiatric # of moves associated disorders with emotional
disorder; risk (29%) associated with low income; reccncy of move predictor of conduct disorder & hyperactivity (no temporal information) high rate of mobility associated with increase in child psychiatric disorders (not straight forward); single move not same resu l ts.
Interest in travel, Internationally mobile languages; adolescents more ratings of interest in crave1 & cultural learning languages; accep tance; more culturally orientation to accepting & oriented international toward international li festyle lifestyle in future.
Adaptation Approach coping strategies, favourable perceptions of school environment tied to higher levels of perceived coping ef fectiveness & general adaptation; avoidance strategies with lower levels; initial levels of coping strategies predictive of later perceived ef fectiveness.
Education & Spec. ed. group higher employment risk of disengagement; outcornes Respondents relying
on informa1 rather than forma1 resources; sig. changes in social networks 6 months ~ost- transi t ion.
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TABLE 1 (continued)
STUDY SUBJECTS INDEPENDENT DEPENDENT FINDINGS (age, etc) VARIABLE VARIABLE
Mobility and Psychosocial Ef fects (continued)
Vernberg 12-14 years; Ratings of Intimacy & Social perspective et al. new sophistication companionship in coordination (1994) U.S. enrollees;
n=74 close f riendships
Barrett & 3-18 years; Long distance Emotional Noble mobile, non- moves adjustment (1973) U.S. military; (scores on
n=318 questionnaire & LBCL; mot hers' anxieties)
Har tere t Grades7-8; Mobility al. (1992) scheduled US. move; n=463
Academic self- concepts, motivation
important influence on f riendship formation.
No dif ference for Total Disability, Aggression, Inhibition or LD; somewhat more disturbed post-move but still below total population & dissipated quickly; more d i f ficulties making new friends af ter age Il.
Changes in perceived competence (50% felt either more or less competent) related to changes in motivation & to school-related affect & anxiety after transition.
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TABLE 1 (continued)
STUDY SUBJECTS INDEPENDENT DEPENDENT FINDINGS (age, etc) VARIABLE VARIABLE
Qualitative
Brown & 11 years; Transition to Children's Armstrong S.W. London; secondary school worries & (1986) UK n=220 positive feelings
Murdoch 8-12 years; (1986) U K n=42
Transition to Individual and upper school; social meanings reading ages & of t r am fer m a t h scores; events social class; position in family; other schools attended
Wide individual variations & idiosyncratic nominations of worry; real, if transitory fears; general patterning & structure of both positive & negative expectations changes over time; no sig. di f f , bet ween girls' & boys' worries; evidence of degree of mismatch between teachers' assessments & children's reported feelings; 3 distinct types of transfer experience anxicty (transi tory, residual & debilitating).
Social class may have in fluenced expectations of transfer as may have previous school size and # of post-move schools group went to.
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27
Table 2 shows an overview of the subjects in the studies. Of the thirty-eight
studies reviewed, ha1 f targeted adolescents and over ha1 f (t wenty-t wo) studied
subjects in middle school, junior high school or high school. Subjects in twenty-five
of the studies were divided fairly evenly between males and females, although
twelve of the studies failed to specify the gender mix.
TABLE 2 Major Characteristics of Studies Reviewed
n = 38
Study Characteristics # of studies
Age of Subjects c 5 years 6-11 years 12-19 years Mixed Unspeci f ied Total
Grade Range of Subjects Preschool Elementary school Middle school/junior high High school Post-secondary Mixed Unspeci fied Total
Gender % male % female < 40 > 60 40-60 40-60 > 60 c 40
Unspeci fied Total
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CRITIQUE OF MOBILITY STUDIES
REASON FOR MOVE
Of the studies reviewed, most contained serious flaws. One major problem
with much of the mobility literature is failure to differentiate between types of
moves or reasons for moves. Generalization of results of a specific group of movers
(Le., children of military personnel) to the whole population, or failure to
differentiate between reasons and/or types of moves can invalidate results. Jason er
al. (1992) stress the importance of reason for a move as a factor influencing a child's
adjustment to a school transfer. Table 3 shows the studies which controlled for o r
faited to control for reason and type of move.
Of the thirty-eight studies, eighteen presented mixed or unspecified reasons
for moves. Of those, one study (Warren-Sohlberg & Jason, 1992) looked at the
correlation between the reason for a move and academic achievement, and found
that the reason for a move may have a dif ferential ef fect upon academic
achievement in readiog, spelling and math. In this study Warren-Sohlberg and Jason
found that children moving for "household considerations" or "transferring from
public school" experienced a drop in marks, while those chitdren who transferred
because their old school was closing scored consistently highest on al1 subtests. This
important finding indicates that the question is relevant and should be included as
background information in mobility studies.
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TABLE 3 - Reason for Move
STUDY corporate military family scheduled migrant mixed breakupl transition otherjnot financial speci fied hardship
Johnson & X Lindblad (1991)
Calabrese (1989) X
Stroh & Brett X (1990a)
Stroh & Brett X (1990b)
Fenzel (1989)
Field (1984)
Warren-Sohlberg & Jason (1992)
Marchant & Medway (1987)
Filippelli & Jason (1992)
Whalen & Fried (1973)
Felner et al. (1982)
Vernberg (1990)
Mann (1972)
Brett (1982)
Morris et al. (1967)
Hirsch & DuBois (1992)
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TABLE 3 (continued)
STUDY corporate military family scheduled migrant mixed breakupl transition otherfnot f inancial speci f ied hardship
Pepler & Moore (unpublished - 1991)
Levine et al. (1966)
Barone, et al. (1991)
Manaster et al. (1992)
Gerner et al. (1992)
Jason et al. (1993)
Causey & Dubow (1993)
Reyes & Hedeker (1993)
Barone et al. (1993)
Ingetsoll et al. (1989)
Vernberg et al. (1994)
Barrett & Noble (1973)
Hatzichristou & Hop f (1992)
Harter et al. (1992)
Soussignan et al. (1988)
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TABLE 3 (continued)
STUDY corporate military famiiy scheduled migrant mixed breakupl transition o t h e r h o t financial speci fied hardship
Gilchrist et ai. (1988)
Brown & Armstrong (1986)
Murdoch (1986)
Dowling (1986)
K roger (1980)
Walker & Boyle (unpublished - 1983)
TOTAL (n=38)
Of the remaining seventeen studies, three adequately describe reasons for
moving and give arguments for the homogeneity of the population (Barrett & Noble,
1973; Field, 1984; Gerner, Perry, Moselle & Archbold, 1992) while the other fifteen
overlook the question. Why this important factor has been ignored can be speculated
upon. I t may be that researchers do not ask the question or that the school
administration does not gather such information at the time of a move. It may also
be that for some parents, revealing the true reason for a move is embarrassing,
especially if that reason inciudes financial hardship or a family break-up.
Nevertheless, to truly understand how moving exacerbates or ameliorates certain
known risk factors, the information must be more rigorously collected and
examined.
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PRE- A N D POST-MOVE DATA
Another common omission in studies was failure to provide da ta both before
and af ter a move. AI1 studies reported data a f t e r the move but only seventeen of the
reviewed thirty-eight studies included full o r partial da ta from before the move as
Table 4 shows. Neglecting to include data from both before and af ter the move
compromises the validity of results. Without this important compatison, it is
diff icult to ascertain whether results found are effects of the move or are due to
factors present before and possibly unretated to the move. Granted, the mobile
population is diff icult to research well. The unpredictable nature of some moves
because of, for example, short notice for job transfers, and sudden fami1y crises
(marital separation or job loss) make it diff icult to anticipate subject pools and
track mobile groups. While i t is fairly simple to Iocate a sample of children who
have moved into an area, it can be difficult to obtain pre-move data for such a
group. The studies whose authors were successful in overcoming at least some of
these difficulties by including pre- and post-move data as part of their design are
described in the next section. Some of these studies included subjects whose moving
patterns were easier to track than others due to the reason for and nature of the
move, for example, subjects who moved at scheduled transition points.
-
TABLE 4 - Research Controls STUDY pre- & SES IQ learning peer adult
post- problems support support move
Johnson & Lindblad (1991)
Calabrese (1989)
Stroh & Brett X (1990a)
Stroh & Brett X (1990b)
Fenzel (1989) X
Field (1984) X
Warren-Sohlberg X & Jason (1992)
Marchant & Medway (1987)
FilippeIli & Jason (1992)
Whalen & Fried (1973)
Felner et al. (1982)
Vernberg (1990)
Mann (1972)
Brett (1982)
Morris et al. (1967)
Hirsch & DuBois X (1992)
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TABLE 4 (continued)
STUDY pre- & SES IQ Iearning peer adult post- problems support support move
Pepler & Moore (unpublished - 1991)
Levine et al. (1966)
Barone, et al. (199 1)
Manaster et al. (1992)
Gerner et al. (1992)
Jason et al. (1993)
Causey & Dubow (1993)
Reyes & Hedeker (1993)
Barone et al, (1993)
Ingersoll et al. (1989)
Vernberg et al. (1994)
Barrett & Noble (1973)
Hatzichristou & Hop f (1992)
Harter et al. (1992)
Soussignan et al. (1988)
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TABLE 4 (continued)
STUDY pre- & SES IQ learning peer adult post- problems support support move
Gilchrist et ut. (1988)
Brown & X Armstrong (1986)
Murdoch (1986) X
Dowling (1986) X
Kroger (1980)
Walker & Boyle (unpublished - 1983)
TOTAL (n=38)
a) PRE- AND POST- DATA FOR MOVES MADE AT SCHEDULED
TRANSITION POINTS
The groups of researchers most consistently successful in gathering both pre-
and post-move data were those studying subjects at normal transition times (i.e.,
preschool to elementary school; elementary to school; junior to senior high school).
Of the thirteen transition studies twelve include both pre- and post-move data,
providing valuable information about the effects of normal transitions. Studies of
scheduled traasitions allow easier and more standardized collection of pre-and post-
move data because the sampIe group generally moves a t one time from one or more
feeder schoo1s to the next level. The moves are predictable and easy to document
and thus have afforded useful information about students at normal transition
times.
Of these studies, three examined the ef fect of mobility on academic
-
achievement (Barone et al., 1991; Felner, Ginter & Primavera, 1982; Reyes &
Hedeker, 1993). Two of the studies found that when pre-move grade point averages
(GPA) were compared with those post-move, there was a significant decrease in
GPA's af ter the transition. The third study (Felner et al., 1982) examined the
e f ficacy of an intervention project, comparing control subjects wit h the project
subjects. The project subjects had signi ficantly better grades than the control
subjects post-move, even though the subjects were well-matched pre-move. While it
cannot be known from this data whether the third group also had lower post-move
grades, it is interesting to note that in this study extra intervention made a
difference in academic achievement af ter a move. Thus, looking at the general
trends in these three studies there may be some deleterious academic effects even in
normal transitions which may need to be addressed.
These three studies plus the remaining nine addressed issues chat migh t be
loosely grouped under the heading of psychosocial effects and included self-
concept, role strain, worries, peer support, mental health, coping strategies and
absenteeism. Al1 studies found some changes between pre- and post-move measures,
predominantly negative, such as greater distress or worries, higher absenteeism, or
lower perceived effectiveness. Five of the twelve found that while al1 subjects
experienced drops on the dependent variable, there was a link between pre- and
post-move abilities. For example, higher absenteeism pre-move predicted higher
absen teeism rates post-move.
It is indicated in these studies, albeit haphazardly, that even a normal time
of transition may be a stressor for children. For example, in one study Fenzel (1989)
developed an assessrnent tool (Early Adolescent School Role Strain Inventory) for
measuring role strain in young adolescents moving from elementary to middle
school, and analyzed its validity by administering known and normed measures at
one point in t h e before, and two points in time after, the school transition. He
found that the concept of role strain is likely to be useful in "investigating stress
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37
related to the student role in early adolescencen (p.29). His conclusion is that simply
being a student undergoing a transition is likely in itself a stressor.
b) PRE- A N D POST- DATA IN UNSCHEDULED MOVES
Studies of students at scheduled transition periods provide valuable
information about students' reactions to scheduled moves, but can not necessarily be
generalized to unscheduled moves d u e to changes in family circumstances, job
transfer, and so on. It is thus useful to find some studies, albeit iimited in numbers,
which employ pre- and post-move data from studics of mobility at other than
normal scheduIed transition points (Field, 1984; Jason, Johnson, Danner, Taylor &
Kurasaki, 1993; Stroh & Brett, 1990a & 1990b; Warren-Sohlberg and Jason, 1992).
Stroh and Brett (1990a & 1990b) succeeded in gathering pre- and post-move
information by interviewing families of employees of estabtished Fortune 500
corporations at two time periods 18 months apart. The companies' records provided
the information necessary to track the families effectively. The sample of subjects
consisted of those families who were transferred between the two data collection
points. Families of those employees not transferred during this period served as the
control group. Stroh and Brett found that the effects of the move itself were not
significant fo r the children of corporate movers. Rather, they found that an
important predictor in children's adjustment to a move were their pre-move
activities. In addition, the mother's adjustment to the move was found to be
significantly related to children's attitudes to moving, although no causal
relationship was found. Stroh and Brett point out that the results of these corporate
move studies can only be generalized to other corporate moves. While insigni ficant
effects were found in this study, significant results may be found in studies of
other populations with fewer resources.
Warren-Sohlberg and Jason, (1992), obtained partial pre-and post-move data
by using school grades as one of the measures contributing to total adjustment.
-
Report card grades in math and reading were used from the quarter before the
move and from the quarter af ter the move. However, report card grades are not
standardized from teacher to teacher, o r from school to school and thus cannot be
considered reliable sources for comparing pre- and post-move adjustment.
Nevertheless, using the before and af ter grades, Warren-Sohlberg and Jason found
that no rnatter what the reason for moving, grades dropped for al1 the t r am fer
students w hen they changed schools.
Jason et al. (1993) compared the impact of high-intensity and low-intensity
parent-based interventions on groups of high-risk children after a move and found
that the high-intensity interventions helped 50% of the students move from poor to
average or good coping compared with 30% of the low-intensity group. Like the
study by Felner et al., (1982), this study suggests that not only are some students at
risk for academic difficulties, but that some interventions at the time of a move
may help lessen that risk, thus reinforcing the need for better, more complete
examinations of the nature of the interaction between mobility and risk.
In a study using multiple methods of data collection (naturalistic
observation, physiological measures, child interviews and parent and teacher
ratings) Field, (19841, followed two groups of preschoolers as some moved to new
schools, while others remained in the original school. The subjects were preschoolers
attending an all-day nursery school-kindergarten and the moves took place at the
close of a summer school session. Timing of the moves to coincide with the end of
term, and the short distance moved helped to facilitate tracking of the subjects in
this relatively small sample (N = 28). The children who moved were found to have
physioiogical and behavioural symptoms of agitation prior to the move, while the
children who remained in the original school experienced these physiological and
behavioural agitation symptoms after the other children had left. While these
findings cannot be generalized to include movers of al1 ages o r even al1 preschool
moves, they make a worthwhile contribution to the body of preschooler mobility
-
39
literature and point towards coping responses common to at least some preschoolers
in transition.
The studies employing pre- and post-move data provide important
information about the impact of normal transition points, but they represent a
minority among the mobility studies. Twenty-one of the thirty-eight studies
reviewed failed to provide data pre- and post-move. This may explain, in part, the
wide variety of results and some of the contradictions inherent in the body of
literature examining mobility. There is no doubt that serious problems exist in
attempting ta gather pre- and post-move information that is valid and worthwhile,
due to the nature of the subject group, the unpredictability of many moves, and the
difficulty in tracking subjects from one geographical or administrative area to
another. Still, the questions remain and perhaps in an era relying more and more on
computer access to information, there may be some hope that some of these
technical limitations may be overcome by obtaining more precise pre- and post-
move data which provides more exact information. Such information would
facilitate the planning of better, more accurately-targeted interventions.
MOBILITY AND RISK
Studies which examined the interaction between specific potential strengths
and risks for children moving were less evident, as Table 4 shows. Fewer than half
of the studies (eighteen) accounted or controlled for socioeconomic status. Two
unpublished Canadian studies are worth examining in relation to this question
(Pepler & Moore, unpublished 1991; Walker & Boyle, unpublished 1983). Pepler and
Moore compared homeless children residing in shelters with children living a t home
in both one- and two-parent families. The children living in shelters scored
significantly lower on achievement tests of reading and arithmetic, had higher
checklist scores fo r behaviour problems, and exhibited a more external locus of
control than did the children living in the family home. Walker and Boyles' study
-
40
found that for children, moving two or more times was linked with emotional
disorder and that part of the risk (29%) was linked with poverty. While i t woufd be
premature to draw conclusions about causality from either o f these studies, both
raise important questions which have not been adequately addressed by the mobility
literature to date. Both of these studies begin to examine the link between mobiIity
and some aspects of SES.
Even fewer studies cont rolled for intelligence (IQ - fivc), learning probIems
(four), peer support (four), or adult support (four). These omissions present serious
limitations in view of the profound impact that each of these factors has on the
lives of children. Since this type of data appears crucial to an examination of the
risk factors associated with mobility, its omission may account for the genera1 lack
of data useful for practitioners in much of the mobility Iiterature.
-
LIMITATIONS A N D DIRECTIONS FOR F U T U R E RESEARCH
Future studies investigating effects of geographic mobility on children
should provide more precise descriptions of al1 subjects, controls, variables and
measures in order to address some of the major flaws noted in the mobility
literature described above: failure to control for risk variables known to affect
school adjustment, (i.e., SES, IQ, peer relationships, family di f ficulties); failure to
differentiate between types of moves or reasons for moves; and failure to include
both pre- and post-move data. While much has been hypothesized and written about
the effects of geographic mobility on the academic and psychosocial developrnent of
children and adolescents, the findings to date tend to be contradictory. Researchers
have made valiant attempts to document the effects of mobility on children, but
subjects are mobile and therefore diff icult to track effectively. Consequently the
research does not yield the type of information practitioners are looking for.
Research to date is sketchy and has serious gaps. The studies reviewed lack
information which may be predictive of difficulties for children. None commented
upon the amount o f input a child had in the decision to move. Information is
lacking about differences between previous and receiving schools' curricula. Clear,
consistent definitions of socioeconomic status are rare. Information about the
differences due to maturity or developmental stages at the time of a move is also
lacking. The questions still remain: does i t make a dif ference why children move; is
the reason for a move important?
Nevertheless, researchers developing a more disciplined approach to research
in this field rnay more clearly delineate risks for mobile children. As suggested by
Vernberg and Field (1990), the delineation of major tasks or challenges posed by a
transition is a necessary step in understanding how children may be affected by a
move, a change of school and so forth. If we know what is involved in a move for
any particular individual child, we might then be better equipped to help that child
negotiate the move successfully.
-
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