Measuring resilience in childhood using data from the Tellus surveys
Measuring resilience in childhood using data from the Tellus surveys
An adequate population measure of the emotional wellbeing of children and young people has long been a gap in the portfolio of outcome measures. This paper considers the potential utility of the concept of resilience. Resilience has been described as the capacity of individuals to negotiate challenges successfully without experiencing long term harm. The concept of resilience was operationalised drawing on existing literature and a scale of resilience was developed from questions in the national Tellus survey. The relevance and utility of the scale was explored using data from Tellus for a case study city. Scores on the resilience scale were compared with factors or behaviours that the literature suggests are likely to be present in resilient children. It was found that children with higher resilience scores were more likely to present with characteristics and behaviours consistent with positive emotional wellbeing
Riches, K.
6e15fb83-851f-4420-b30a-cfae8b3b58cc
Acton, M.
40e57749-2a1f-433e-89b3-e90a1c173a83
Moon, G.
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Ginns, H.
1a296f2b-25df-4fcb-beb6-01429f026bd4
Riches, K.
6e15fb83-851f-4420-b30a-cfae8b3b58cc
Acton, M.
40e57749-2a1f-433e-89b3-e90a1c173a83
Moon, G.
68cffc4d-72c1-41e9-b1fa-1570c5f3a0b4
Ginns, H.
1a296f2b-25df-4fcb-beb6-01429f026bd4
Riches, K., Acton, M., Moon, G. and Ginns, H.
(2010)
Measuring resilience in childhood using data from the Tellus surveys.
Research, Policy and Planning.
(In Press)
Abstract
An adequate population measure of the emotional wellbeing of children and young people has long been a gap in the portfolio of outcome measures. This paper considers the potential utility of the concept of resilience. Resilience has been described as the capacity of individuals to negotiate challenges successfully without experiencing long term harm. The concept of resilience was operationalised drawing on existing literature and a scale of resilience was developed from questions in the national Tellus survey. The relevance and utility of the scale was explored using data from Tellus for a case study city. Scores on the resilience scale were compared with factors or behaviours that the literature suggests are likely to be present in resilient children. It was found that children with higher resilience scores were more likely to present with characteristics and behaviours consistent with positive emotional wellbeing
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Submitted date: January 2010
Accepted/In Press date: January 2010
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Local EPrints ID: 72572
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/72572
PURE UUID: 6dbd928b-783e-478c-b1c4-a08e6fd2531b
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Date deposited: 18 Feb 2010
Last modified: 11 Dec 2021 04:12
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Author:
K. Riches
Author:
M. Acton
Author:
H. Ginns
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