/ Research in everyday life / Educational pathways in emerging adulthood
Research report

Educational pathways in emerging adulthood

The transition to adulthood is a developmental period involving significant contextual changes that call on young people's adaptive potential as never before throughout their lives. The challenges associated with this period are magnified when the youth negotiating this transition are dealing with adjustment difficulties, such as antisocial behaviours, that hamper their capacity to cope with change.

What about the adjustment of young adults who displayed externalized behaviour problems in secondary school?

Longitudinal studies of antisocial and deviant behaviours have greatly improved our knowledge of their developmental sequences and our ability to identify youth who are most likely to maintain these behaviours into adulthood. However, the majority of such studies have focused on the development of severe antisocial behaviours in a clinical, psychopathological or criminological context. The study of antisocial behaviour pathways in an educational context, which most often take the form of externalized behaviour problems (opposition, fighting, intimidation, etc.), is much more recent.

What about the adjustment of young adults who displayed externalized behaviour problems in secondary school? Do they experience different personal and educational situations than those without behaviour problems? Do young men and women with this type of problem adjust to adulthood in a similar manner? These are some of the questions that are addressed by the present research.

 

Main researcher: Julie Marcotte, Université de Sherbrooke

Original title: Les différentes trajectoires éducationnelles empruntées à l'émergence à la vie adulte : identifier les facteurs personnels, sociaux et scolaires dans une perspective développementale pour mieux comprendre et intervenir

Read more