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Dive into the research topics where Martijn de Goede is active.

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Featured researches published by Martijn de Goede.


Journal of Adolescent Health | 1999

How do vocational and relationship stressors and identity formation affect adolescent mental health

Martijn de Goede; Ed Spruijt; Jurjen Iedema; Wim Meeus

PURPOSE This article examines the effects of stressors in both the vocational and relationship career of youngsters in the formation of their identity; the effects of identity formation on adolescent mental health; the influence of career stressors on mental health, directly or via identity, and differences in these effects on boys and girls. METHODS Data were used from the Dutch national panel study, Utrecht Study of Adolescent Development, a study of developmental processes as they occur in the life course of young people during the 1990s. Using LISREL, we tested hypotheses on two waves of a sample of 1222 respondents between 15 and 24 years of age in Wave 1 (1991). RESULTS The correlation between relationship stressors and relationship identity can be neglected, while vocational stressors lead to a less achieved vocational identity, particularly in boys. Occupational and relationship identity have similar effects on mental health (i.e., the more achieved the identity, the better the persons mental health). Vocational and especially relationship stressors lead to poorer mental health, but did not affect the mental health of boys and girls differently. The same goes for the influence of relationship and vocational identity formation on mental health. CONCLUSIONS Career stressors, especially stressors in the relationship domain, appear to have significant long-term effects on adolescent mental health. Vocational and relationship identity formation are also significant predictors for adolescent mental health.


Journal of Family Issues | 2004

Marital Status, Marital Process, and Parental Resources in Predicting Adolescents’ Emotional Adjustment: A Multilevel Analysis

Inge E. VanderValk; Ed Spruijt; Martijn de Goede; Wim Meeus; Cora J. M. Maas

This study examined the relationship between adolescent emotional adjustment and the family environment (i.e., family status, family process, and parental resources). This was done by way of multilevel analyses, with a sample of 2,636 parent-child couples of both intact and divorced families. The results indicated that adolescent emotional adjustment was clearly based on the family as well as on the individual. We found support for the hypothesis that growing up both in postdivorce families and in intact families with a low marital quality related negatively to adolescent emotional adjustment. Our hypothesis that parental resources, in the form of parental support, parent-adolescent relationship, and parental psychological health, partly mediate the negative association between low marital quality and divorce on one hand and youngsters’ adjustment on the other hand was also confirmed. Growing up in postdivorce families was especially detrimental for the emotional adjustment of girls.


Patient Education and Counseling | 1996

Effects of parental divorce and youth unemployment on adolescent health

Martijn de Goede; Ed Spruijt

The aim of this study is to gain more insight into the effects of two important events on adolescent health in the life course of youngsters, namely parental divorce and being unemployed. We made use of the dataset of the Utrecht Study of Adolescent Development, a longitudinal panel study, based on a representative sample of young people in the Netherlands (12-24 years old). We used the data of non-school-going youngsters who are at least 18 years old. Parental divorce does indeed have negative effects on adolescent health: however, this applies only for girls. Being unemployed or having been unemployed has negative effects on psychological health, especially for boys. But this experience does not have negative effects on physical health, either for boys or girls. Any conclusions on the consequences of parental divorce and youth unemployment for adolescent health have to be specified, at least for sex.


Humor: International Journal of Humor Research | 2010

Measurement of occupational humorous coping.

Sibe Doosje; Martijn de Goede; Lorenz Van Doornen; Jeffrey H. Goldstein

Abstract The aim of this study was to develop and evaluate a Questionnaire of Occupational Humorous Coping (QOHC), partly based on the model of emotion regulation by Gross (Current Directions in Psychological Science 10: 214–219, 2001). Items intended to measure antecedent-focused, response-focused, and affiliative and aggressive-manipulative humorous coping methods were generated. Preliminary studies led to improvements in the questionnaire and to the removal of items controlling for acquiescence bias. Principal axis factoring with oblique rotation on a large sample yielded four stable and reliable factors: an antecedent-focused, a response-focused, an aggressive-manipulative and an affiliative instrumental humorous coping factor. Convergent and discriminant validity with existing humorous coping and other sense of humor measures (the CHS, the MSHS and the HSQ) was satisfactory, but not always in the expected direction. Antecedent-focused and generic humorous coping (CHS) were weakly associated with job-related positive affect and well-being; for the self-enhancing humor style these associations were moderate. Aggressive-manipulative, response-focused and generic humorous coping (CHS) showed weak associations with negative job-related affect. The findings are explained in terms of assessment issues and possible moderating effects of humorous coping.


European Psychologist | 2008

Family Traditionalism and Family Structure

Inge van der Valk; Ed Spruijt; Martijn de Goede; Helle Larsen; Wim Meeus

The present study examined how tolerance toward nontraditional family forms relates to family structure, by examining differences between youngsters and parents from intact and postdivorce families. We also explored whether intergenerational transmission of attitudes toward nontraditional family forms differed between intact and postdivorce families. We made use of three-wave longitudinal data of 959 adolescents and young adults aged 12 years to 24 years at the first wave, and also of one of the parents. Longitudinal multilevel analyses revealed that both youngsters and parents of postdivorce families are more tolerant toward nontraditional family forms and that parental attitude transmission is significantly lower in families after a divorce. Results apply to respondents of a broad age range. Several explanations are suggested for the flawed intergenerational transmission of attitudes in postdivorce families.


Kind En Adolescent | 2004

Gezinsstructuur en internaliserend en externaliserend probleemgedrag van adolescenten en jongvolwassenen

Inge E. VanderValk; Ed Spruijt; Martijn de Goede; Cora J. M. Maas; Wim Meeus

SamenvattingIn dit longitudinale onderzoek op drie meetmomenten bij 1274 adolescenten en jongvolwassenen, van 12 tot 24 jaar op het eerste meetmoment, werden langetermijnverschillen in internaliserend en externaliserend gedrag onderzocht tussen jongeren uit intacte en gescheiden gezinnen. Verder werden mogelijke verschillen tussen de gezinstypen bestudeerd in de groeicurves van internaliserend en externaliserend gedag. Longitudinale multilevel analyses lieten zien dat jongeren uit gezinnen na scheiding gemiddeld meer internaliserende en externaliserende problemen hebben dan jongeren uit intacte gezinnen. De ontwikkeling van de twee typen probleemgedragingen verschilt echter niet aan de hand van gezinsstructuur.


International journal of adolescence and youth | 1992

Intergenerational and Intragenerational Perception of Adolescents and Adults

Gerard H. Maassen; Martijn de Goede

ABSTRACT Research results are presented on how adolescents and adults perceive each other and themselves as groups. The major hypothesis is to the effect that the in-group is viewed more positively than the out-group and is confirmed in part: older people think more favourably of adults than of adolescents and parents are more positive about their own children than about young people in general. Interestingly, we are led to conclude that adolescents think more positively of adults than of their own peer group. The results also show that girls and boys are assessed differently.


Journal of Youth and Adolescence | 2005

Family structure and problem behavior of adolescents and young adults : A growth-curve study

Inge E. VanderValk; Ed Spruijt; Martijn de Goede; Cora J. M. Maas; Wim Meeus


Adolescence | 2003

Incarcerated Adolescent Girls: Personality, Social Competence, and Delinquency.

Jan ter Laak; Martijn de Goede; Liesbeth Aleva; Gerard M. Brugman; Miranda van Leuven; Judith Hussmann


Adolescence | 2000

Family Problems and Youth Unemployment.

Martijn de Goede; Ed Spruijt; Cora J. M. Maas; Vincent Duindam

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