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Dive into the research topics where Amy K. Syvertsen is active.

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Featured researches published by Amy K. Syvertsen.


Youth & Society | 2011

Exploring the Changing Meaning of Work for American High School Seniors from 1976 to 2005

Laura Wray-Lake; Amy K. Syvertsen; Laine Briddell; D. Wayne Osgood; Constance A. Flanagan

Using data from the Monitoring the Future study, this article presents historical trends in U.S. high school seniors’ work values across 30 years (1976-2005). Adolescents across three decades highly valued most aspects of work examined. Recent cohorts showed declines in the importance of work, values for job security, and various potential intrinsic rewards of work. After increasing until 1990, adolescents remained stable in their values for extrinsic and materialistic aspects of work until 2005. The value of work that allows for leisure time has steadily increased. Stable level differences in work values emerged for adolescents by gender, race, parents’ education, and college aspirations. Findings have implications for understanding the changing meaning of work for the future workforce.


American Journal of Education | 2009

Using Elections as Teachable Moments: A Randomized Evaluation of the Student Voices Civic Education Program

Amy K. Syvertsen; Michael Stout; Constance A. Flanagan; Dana Mitra; Mary Beth Oliver; Shyam Sundar

The recommitment of public education to its civic roots has revived discussion on how to engage younger generations of citizens in electoral politics and civic life. This randomized trial of 1,670 high school students in 80 social studies classrooms evaluates the impact of an election‐based civics program on students’ civic knowledge, skills, and dispositions over the course of a semester. Analyses of these data reveal significant effects of the program on students’ self‐reported ability to cast an informed vote, knowledge of the voter registration process, belief that their vote matters, communication with others at school about politics, sense of civic obligation, and media use and analysis.


Prevention Science | 2010

Profiles of Protection from Substance Use among Adolescents

Amy K. Syvertsen; Michael J. Cleveland; Jochebed G. Gayles; Melissa Tibbits; Monique T. Faulk

The purpose of this study was to explore whether adolescents (N = 10,287) could be classified into homogeneous subgroups based on their protective factors and, if so, whether these constellations of protection differentially relate to adolescents’ lifetime and 30-day alcohol and tobacco use. Latent class analysis with eight protective factors—four internal and four external—were used to identify the underlying latent class structure. Five profiles of protection emerged: Adequate Protection (54%), Adequate External Protection (9%), Adequate Protection with Low Adult Communication (16%), Adequate Protection with Risky Friends (9%), and Inadequate Protection (12%). Lifetime alcohol use was associated with only a modest increase in odds of belonging to the Adequate External or Low Adult Communication latent classes, but an enormous increase in odds of having Inadequate Protection or Risky Friends. Similar effects were found for past month alcohol use. Unlike alcohol use, which was related most strongly with membership in the Risky Friends latent class (relative to Adequate Protection), cigarette use was most strongly related to membership in the Inadequate Protection latent class. Findings can be used to inform prevention programs as they illustrate the relationships that exist between adolescents’ profiles of protection and substance use.


Applied Developmental Science | 2017

Testing multidimensional models of youth civic engagement: Model comparisons, measurement invariance, and age differences

Laura Wray-Lake; Aaron Metzger; Amy K. Syvertsen

ABSTRACT Despite recognition that youth civic engagement is multidimensional, different modeling approaches are rarely compared or tested for measurement invariance. Using a diverse sample of 2,467 elementary, middle, and high school-aged youth, we measured eight dimensions of civic engagement: social responsibility values, informal helping, political beliefs, civic skills, environmental behavior, volunteering, voting intentions, and news consumption. We compared correlated unidimensional factors, higher-order factor, and bifactor models and tested for measurement invariance and latent mean differences by age. The correlated unidimensional factors model best fit the data, yet higher-order and bifactor models fit adequately. Metric and scalar invariance was found across models. Latent means varied depending on the dimension of civic engagement and the multidimensional model examined. Findings favored the correlated unidimensional factors model; implications of each model are discussed. This study informs future research on youth civic engagement and has broad relevance for any developmental scientist studying a multidimensional construct.


Journal of Adolescent Research | 2016

How Children Understand Civic Actions A Mixed Methods Perspective

Aaron Metzger; Amy K. Syvertsen; Benjamin Oosterhoff; Elizabeth Babskie; Laura Wray-Lake

The development of civically engaged citizens is vital for democratic societies. Although several studies have explored children and adolescents’ conceptualizations of civic engagement, less is known about youths’ understanding of the individual skills and attributes best suited for civic action. The current study utilized a Q-sort methodology to explore the types of character strengths children and adolescents (n = 87; Mage = 13, 9-19, 52% female) assigned to people who engage in different types of civic activities. Participants sorted 12 character strengths (amazed, creative, forgiving, future-minded, generous, grateful, humble, joyful, leader, purposeful, responsible, and thrifty) into five categories ranging from “most like” to “least like” based on their perceptions of individuals engaged in four distinct civic activities: volunteering, voting, protesting, and engaging in environmental or conservation behaviors. Youth not only differentially applied certain character strengths to individuals engaged in distinct civic activities but also identified a set of character strengths (future-minded, leader, purposeful, and responsible) as core to multiple forms of civic engagement. Results provide new insights into youths’ budding conceptualization of the individual characteristics, attributes, and motivations, which undergird different forms of civic action. Qualitative analysis of youths’ justifications for their rankings provided additional nuance into their developing understanding of civic actions.


Journal of Early Adolescence | 2013

The Timing of School Transitions and Early Adolescent Problem Behavior

Melissa A. Lippold; Christopher J. Powers; Amy K. Syvertsen; Mark E. Feinberg; Mark T. Greenberg

This longitudinal study investigates whether rural adolescents who transition to a new school in sixth grade have higher levels of risky behavior than adolescents who transition in seventh grade. Our findings indicate that later school transitions had little effect on problem behavior between sixth and ninth grades. Cross-sectional analyses found a small number of temporary effects of transition timing on problem behavior: Spending an additional year in elementary school was associated with higher levels of deviant behavior in the Fall of Grade 6 and higher levels of antisocial peer associations in Grade 8. However, transition effects were not consistent across waves and latent growth curve models found no effects of transition timing on the trajectory of problem behavior. We discuss policy implications and compare our findings with other research on transition timing.


Youth & Society | 2016

Thriving in School: The Role of Sixth-Grade Adolescent–Parent–School Relationships in Predicting Eighth-Grade Academic Outcomes

Daniel F. Perkins; Amy K. Syvertsen; Claudia C. Mincemoyer; Sarah M. Chilenski; Jonathan R. Olson; Elaine Berrena; Mark T. Greenberg; Richard Spoth

The present study uses an ecological systems perspective to examine how parental involvement in school-related activities in sixth grade influences early adolescents’ school bonding and academic achievement in eighth grade. Results of multilevel models of multiple data sources (i.e., adolescents, parents, and principals) suggested that parents’ involvement in school, as reported by the adolescent in sixth grade, was a significant predictor of school bonding and academic grades in eighth grade. Furthermore, parent reports of guidance, support, and involvement in school and non-school activities were unrelated to their adolescents’ grades and school bonding. Finally, schools’ efforts to engage parents did not consistently predict an association between parental involvement and adolescent outcomes.


Journal of Youth and Adolescence | 2018

The Intersection of Emotional and Sociocognitive Competencies with Civic Engagement in Middle Childhood and Adolescence

Aaron Metzger; Lauren M. Alvis; Benjamin Oosterhoff; Elizabeth Babskie; Amy K. Syvertsen; Laura Wray-Lake

Civic developmental theory anticipates connections between normative developmental competencies and civic engagement, but little previous research has directly studied such links. The current study sought to contribute to civic development theory by examining associations between emotional and sociocognitive competencies (empathy, emotion regulation, prosocial moral reasoning, future-orientation) and civic engagement (volunteering, informal helping, political behaviors and beliefs, environmental behaviors, social responsibility values, civic skills). Data came from a geographically and racially diverse sample of 2467 youth (Mage = 13.4, Range: 8–20 years, 56% female). The results indicated that empathy and future-orientation significantly predicted nearly all forms of civic engagement, whereas emotion regulation and prosocial moral reasoning were uniquely associated with specific forms of civic engagement. Exploratory multi-group models indicated that empathy and emotion regulation were more strongly associated with civic engagement among younger youth and prosocial moral reasoning and future-orientation were more strongly related to civic engagement among older youth. The findings help to advance developmental theory of youth civic engagement.


Journal of Adolescent Research | 2018

Conservation Leadership: A Developmental Model:

Theresa K. Sullivan; Amy K. Syvertsen

Dealing with environmental issues requires citizens who adopt conservation behaviors, influence those around them to follow suit, and lead local and global policy initiatives. The purpose of this study is to advance our understanding of the developmental processes that undergird young people’s emergence as conservation leaders with the capacity to take on these roles. A qualitative, grounded theory analysis of transcripts from focus groups and interviews with 76 adolescent and young adult participants of a national conservation leadership program provided the empirical foundation for a developmental model of conservation leadership. The model has four phases: seed, sprout, bloom, and propagate. Within each phase, there are three qualitatively distinct and integrated domains: action, motivation, and understanding. Data in this study indicate that conservation leadership development is ongoing and cumulative, with subsequent developmental experiences promoting new capacities and propensities that expand young people’s conservation repertoires within each domain. The emergent developmental model of conservation leadership proposed in this article puts forth a comprehensive theory about how conservation leadership unfolds in adolescence and young adulthood. This model serves both to instigate further research and provide insights on how youth programs might intentionally promote the development of conservation-oriented action, motivation, and understanding.


Child Development | 2018

Examining Character Structure and Function Across Childhood and Adolescence

Jennifer Shubert; Laura Wray-Lake; Amy K. Syvertsen; Aaron Metzger

Character strengths are an integral component of positive youth development that can promote flourishing. Developmental principles posit constructs become increasingly complex with age, yet this process has not been examined with character. Using a socioeconomically and ethnically diverse sample of 2,467 youth ages 9-19, bifactor models were estimated across elementary, middle, and high school-age groups to examine age differences in character structure and function. With successive age, a greater number of specific character strength factors were identified, suggesting character structure becomes more differentiated across adolescence. Results linking character bifactor models to indicators of positive functioning also supported differentiation in character function across ages. Findings point to the need for theoretical and empirical considerations of character structure and function across development.

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Constance A. Flanagan

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Aaron Metzger

West Virginia University

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Michael Stout

Missouri State University

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Benjamin Oosterhoff

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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D. Wayne Osgood

Pennsylvania State University

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