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Lower Secondary Students’ Well-Being Profiles: Stability, Transitions, and Connections with Teacher–Student, and Student–Student Relationships

Saxer, Katja; Tuominen, Heta; Schnell, Jakob; Mori, Julia; Niemivirta, Markku (2025). Lower Secondary Students’ Well-Being Profiles: Stability, Transitions, and Connections with Teacher–Student, and Student–Student Relationships. Child & Youth Care Forum, 54 (4). 10.1007/s10566-025-09886-0

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Background: Classroom relationships are known to be one of the most important yet complex predictors of student well-being. However, this complexity is frequently not considered, and it remains unclear whether students with different well-being profiles and their transitions are impacted differently by teacher-student and student–student relationships.
Objective: This study aims to examine secondary school students’ well-being profiles, their transitions over time, and their connection to teacher-student and student–student relationships.
Methods: Participants included 757 Swiss secondary school students from grade 7 (47.8% female; Mage = 13.12, SDage =.60) to grade 8 (44.6% female; Mage = 13.92, SDage =.81). Latent profile analysis was conducted to classify students based on a multidimensional construct of student well-being, encompassing positive and negative emotions and cognitions toward school. To examine profile stability and transitions over time, latent transition analysis was used, and relationships with teacher-student closeness and conflict as well as student–student cohesion were analyzed.
Results: Four well-being profiles emerged: flourishing, perfectionist, worried, and ambivalent. Profiles varied in the composition of well-being dimensions, with school worries prevalent across all profiles. Students with high positive emotions transitioned to profiles with lower well-being, while those with high negative emotions remained in less favorable profiles. Teacher-student closeness and student–student cohesion supported favorable transitions, whereas teacher-student conflict hindered positive changes.
Conclusions: The identification of four distinct well-being profiles highlights individual differences in well-being and the interplay of positive and negative emotions. Teachers may play a pivotal role in preventing transitions to less favorable profiles, emphasizing the importance of fostering supportive classroom relationships.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

PHBern Contributor:

Saxer, Katja, Schnell, Jakob

Language:

English

Submitter:

Katja Saxer

Date Deposited:

25 Aug 2025 11:19

Last Modified:

25 Aug 2025 11:19

Publisher DOI:

10.1007/s10566-025-09886-0

Uncontrolled Keywords:

Student well-being, Teacher–student relationships, Student–student relationships, Longitudinal, Latent transition analysis, Secondary school

PHBern DOI:

10.57694/7821

URI:

https://phrepo.phbern.ch/id/eprint/7821

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