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Life Satisfaction in Russian Primary Schoolchildren : Links with Personality and Family Environment. / Leto, Irina V.; Petrenko, Evgeniya N.; Slobodskaya, Helena R.

In: Journal of Happiness Studies, Vol. 20, No. 6, 15.08.2019, p. 1893-1912.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Harvard

Leto, IV, Petrenko, EN & Slobodskaya, HR 2019, 'Life Satisfaction in Russian Primary Schoolchildren: Links with Personality and Family Environment', Journal of Happiness Studies, vol. 20, no. 6, pp. 1893-1912. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10902-018-0036-6

APA

Leto, I. V., Petrenko, E. N., & Slobodskaya, H. R. (2019). Life Satisfaction in Russian Primary Schoolchildren: Links with Personality and Family Environment. Journal of Happiness Studies, 20(6), 1893-1912. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10902-018-0036-6

Vancouver

Leto IV, Petrenko EN, Slobodskaya HR. Life Satisfaction in Russian Primary Schoolchildren: Links with Personality and Family Environment. Journal of Happiness Studies. 2019 Aug 15;20(6):1893-1912. doi: 10.1007/s10902-018-0036-6

Author

Leto, Irina V. ; Petrenko, Evgeniya N. ; Slobodskaya, Helena R. / Life Satisfaction in Russian Primary Schoolchildren : Links with Personality and Family Environment. In: Journal of Happiness Studies. 2019 ; Vol. 20, No. 6. pp. 1893-1912.

BibTeX

@article{03c7a00e6ee04bfb9202167534b2d5c0,
title = "Life Satisfaction in Russian Primary Schoolchildren: Links with Personality and Family Environment",
abstract = "The present study aimed to investigate life satisfaction and its relations to family environment and child personality in a large community sample of Russian primary schoolchildren aged 7–10 years (N = 705, 51% female). Children completed Huebner{\textquoteright}s Student{\textquoteright}s Life Satisfaction scale; parents reported about family background and completed the Alabama Parenting Questionnaire-Brief Form, the Self Reporting Questionnaire measuring parental stress and the Inventory of Child Individual Differences-Short version measuring the Big Five and fifteen lower-order personality traits. Gender accounted for less than 2% of the variance in life satisfaction, with girls scoring higher than boys, the effect of age was not significant. Child life satisfaction was positively related to parental education, income and family cohesion, and was negatively related to domestic violence, parental stress, corporal punishment and poor supervision. It was associated with all Big Five personality traits; correlations with the extraversion, conscientiousness, agreeableness and openness domains were positive, whereas correlation with the neuroticism domain was negative. Correlations with lower-order traits were generally smaller; those with sociability and openness to experience were not significant. Multiple regression analysis indicated that family income, low parental stress and supervision together with low neuroticism and conscientiousness were significantly and independently associated with child life satisfaction, accounting for 14–15% of the total variance.",
keywords = "Family, Life satisfaction, Parenting, Personality, Primary schoolchildren, Subjective well-being, VALIDATION, MODEL, INDIVIDUAL-DIFFERENCES, INVENTORY, CHILD MENTAL-HEALTH, ADOLESCENTS, VERSION, TRAITS",
author = "Leto, {Irina V.} and Petrenko, {Evgeniya N.} and Slobodskaya, {Helena R.}",
year = "2019",
month = aug,
day = "15",
doi = "10.1007/s10902-018-0036-6",
language = "English",
volume = "20",
pages = "1893--1912",
journal = "Journal of Happiness Studies",
issn = "1389-4978",
publisher = "Springer Netherlands",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Life Satisfaction in Russian Primary Schoolchildren

T2 - Links with Personality and Family Environment

AU - Leto, Irina V.

AU - Petrenko, Evgeniya N.

AU - Slobodskaya, Helena R.

PY - 2019/8/15

Y1 - 2019/8/15

N2 - The present study aimed to investigate life satisfaction and its relations to family environment and child personality in a large community sample of Russian primary schoolchildren aged 7–10 years (N = 705, 51% female). Children completed Huebner’s Student’s Life Satisfaction scale; parents reported about family background and completed the Alabama Parenting Questionnaire-Brief Form, the Self Reporting Questionnaire measuring parental stress and the Inventory of Child Individual Differences-Short version measuring the Big Five and fifteen lower-order personality traits. Gender accounted for less than 2% of the variance in life satisfaction, with girls scoring higher than boys, the effect of age was not significant. Child life satisfaction was positively related to parental education, income and family cohesion, and was negatively related to domestic violence, parental stress, corporal punishment and poor supervision. It was associated with all Big Five personality traits; correlations with the extraversion, conscientiousness, agreeableness and openness domains were positive, whereas correlation with the neuroticism domain was negative. Correlations with lower-order traits were generally smaller; those with sociability and openness to experience were not significant. Multiple regression analysis indicated that family income, low parental stress and supervision together with low neuroticism and conscientiousness were significantly and independently associated with child life satisfaction, accounting for 14–15% of the total variance.

AB - The present study aimed to investigate life satisfaction and its relations to family environment and child personality in a large community sample of Russian primary schoolchildren aged 7–10 years (N = 705, 51% female). Children completed Huebner’s Student’s Life Satisfaction scale; parents reported about family background and completed the Alabama Parenting Questionnaire-Brief Form, the Self Reporting Questionnaire measuring parental stress and the Inventory of Child Individual Differences-Short version measuring the Big Five and fifteen lower-order personality traits. Gender accounted for less than 2% of the variance in life satisfaction, with girls scoring higher than boys, the effect of age was not significant. Child life satisfaction was positively related to parental education, income and family cohesion, and was negatively related to domestic violence, parental stress, corporal punishment and poor supervision. It was associated with all Big Five personality traits; correlations with the extraversion, conscientiousness, agreeableness and openness domains were positive, whereas correlation with the neuroticism domain was negative. Correlations with lower-order traits were generally smaller; those with sociability and openness to experience were not significant. Multiple regression analysis indicated that family income, low parental stress and supervision together with low neuroticism and conscientiousness were significantly and independently associated with child life satisfaction, accounting for 14–15% of the total variance.

KW - Family

KW - Life satisfaction

KW - Parenting

KW - Personality

KW - Primary schoolchildren

KW - Subjective well-being

KW - VALIDATION

KW - MODEL

KW - INDIVIDUAL-DIFFERENCES

KW - INVENTORY

KW - CHILD MENTAL-HEALTH

KW - ADOLESCENTS

KW - VERSION

KW - TRAITS

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85054309609&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1007/s10902-018-0036-6

DO - 10.1007/s10902-018-0036-6

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:85054309609

VL - 20

SP - 1893

EP - 1912

JO - Journal of Happiness Studies

JF - Journal of Happiness Studies

SN - 1389-4978

IS - 6

ER -

ID: 17088565