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Featured researches published by Natasha R. Magson.


Journal of Youth Studies | 2016

It is risky business: can social capital reduce risk-taking behaviours among disadvantaged youth?

Natasha R. Magson; Rhonda Craven; Geoff Munns; Alexander Seeshing Yeung

ABSTRACT This study addresses the gap in the research for sound multidimensional assessment of social capital and its relationship with risk-taking behaviour among youths living in disadvantaged communities. Social capital and adolescent risk-taking outcomes were studied cross-sectionally in 1371 secondary students living in two disadvantaged communities within Australia. First, a multidimensional measure of social capital was developed and tested using confirmatory factor analysis. Then, the associations between social capital and a range of youth risk-taking behaviours were examined using structural equation modelling across five-year groups (Grades 7–12). With a few exceptions, higher levels of social capital and belongingness within the school and community were generally associated with decreases in smoking, alcohol and drug consumption, and physical violence. Some outcomes were more strongly associated with family and peer social capital, while others associated more with neighbour and community social capital, indicating that attempts to build social capital need to be targeted across the whole community. This study supports the notion that social capital can be measured empirically and is beneficial in alleviating many of the detrimental health outcomes commonly associated with risk-taking behaviours during adolescence.


Journal of Youth and Adolescence | 2018

Parental Control of the Time Preadolescents Spend on Social Media: Links with Preadolescents’ Social Media Appearance Comparisons and Mental Health

Jasmine Fardouly; Natasha R. Magson; Carly Johnco; Ella L. Oar; Ronald M. Rapee

Time spent on social media and making online comparisons with others may influence users’ mental health. This study examined links between parental control over the time their child spends on social media, preadolescents’ time spent browsing social media, preadolescents’ appearance comparisons on social media, and preadolescents’ appearance satisfaction, depressive symptoms, and life satisfaction. Preadolescent social media users (N = 284, 49.1% female; aged 10–12) and one of their parents completed online surveys. Preadolescents, whose parents reported greater control over their child’s time on social media, reported better mental health. This relationship was mediated by preadolescents spending less time browsing and making fewer appearance comparisons on social media. Parental control over time spent on social media may be associated with benefits for mental health among preadolescents.


Journal of Youth and Adolescence | 2018

Depression, Anxiety, and Peer Victimization: Bidirectional Relationships and Associated Outcomes Transitioning from Childhood to Adolescence

Miriam K. Forbes; Sally Fitzpatrick; Natasha R. Magson; Ronald M. Rapee

Experiences of depression, anxiety, and peer victimization have each been found to predict one another, and to predict negative outcomes in the domains of school connectedness, social functioning, quality of life, and physical health. However, the common co-occurrence of depression, anxiety, and peer victimization experiences has made it difficult to disentangle their unique roles in these associations. The present study thus sought to characterize the precise nature of the bidirectional relationships between depressive symptoms, anxiety, and victimization over time, and to examine their unique sequelae during the transition from childhood to early adolescence. Longitudinal multi-informant (child-reported, parent-reported, and teacher-reported) data from a nationally representative sample were analyzed using path analysis when the study child was aged 10–11 (n= 4169; Mage = 10.3; 48.8% female) and aged 12–13 (n= 3956; Mage = 12.4; 48.2% female). Depressive symptoms, anxiety, and peer victimization had small but significant unique bidirectional relationships. All three constructs also uniquely and prospectively predicted poorer life functioning across all domains examined. These results demonstrate that current interventions should broaden their scope to simultaneously target depression, anxiety, and peer victimization, as each of these experiences independently act as additive risk factors for subsequent negative outcomes.


Contemporary Educational Psychology | 2016

Toward a positive psychology of indigenous thriving and reciprocal research partnership model

Rhonda Craven; Richard M. Ryan; Janet Mooney; Robert J. Vallerand; Anthony Dillon; Fabri Blacklock; Natasha R. Magson


The Australian journal of Indigenous education | 2014

Motivation Matters: Profiling Indigenous and Non-Indigenous Students' Motivational Goals.

Natasha R. Magson; Rhonda Craven; Genevieve F Nelson; Alexander Seeshing Yeung; Gawaian Bodkin-Andrews; Dennis M. McInerney


Australian Association for Research in Education Conference | 2010

A Critical review of the current cyber bullying research: definitional, theoretical and methodological issues. Where do we go from here?

Katrina Newey; Natasha R. Magson


Australian Journal of Educational and developmental psychology | 2014

Measuring social capital : the development of the social capital and cohesion scale and the associations between social capital and mental health

Natasha R. Magson; Rhonda Craven; Gawaian Bodkin-Andrews


Archive | 2008

Examining the validity of motivational profiles across indigenous and non-indigenous students

Natasha R. Magson; Rhonda Craven; Genevieve F Nelson


6th Annual International Weight Stigma Conference | 2018

The effect of weight stigma on eating and exercise behaviour among adolescents

Natasha R. Magson; Ronald M. Rapee


Enabling Human Potential: the Centrality of Self and Identity: Proceedings of the 5th International SELF Research Conference, Dubai, 2009 | 2009

The relation between emotional self-concept domains and involvement in bullying : a preliminary investigation

Katrina Newey; Linda R Finger; Natasha R. Magson

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Rhonda Craven

Australian Catholic University

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Genevieve F Nelson

University of Western Sydney

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Katrina Newey

University of Western Sydney

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Linda R Finger

University of Western Sydney

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Anthony Dillon

Australian Catholic University

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