We investigated School Dropout Intention (SDI) and the role that educational-context and psychological factors play in shaping it during compulsory education in a cohort of 247 students (57.5% male; Mₐge = 12.11, SDₐge = 1.92) officially recognized as living below the poverty threshold. Data were analyzed by means of latent growth as well as Autoregressive Latent Trajectory (ALT) models. Results showed a gradual increase in SDI across compulsory schooling, which predicted students' subsequent school absences; however, no acceleration emerged as they approached the legal dropout age. Teacher and parental autonomy support reduced SDI over time. Regarding peer relationships at school, victimization predicted higher SDI, whereas peer friendship showed no significant association. Among psychological variables, self-esteem emerged as a stronger protective factor than self-efficacy, and identified motivation was more effective than intrinsic motivation in counteracting the development of SDI. Overall, the findings highlight key contextual and individual processes shaping dropout intention among low-income students.

Deciding to drop out of school during compulsory education: Testing developmental and contextual models in students from low-income families / Cavicchiolo, E.; Manganelli, S.; Lucidi, F.; Alivernini, F.. - In: LEARNING AND INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES. - ISSN 1041-6080. - 127:(2026). [10.1016/j.lindif.2026.102887]

Deciding to drop out of school during compulsory education: Testing developmental and contextual models in students from low-income families

Manganelli S.
Secondo
;
Lucidi F.;Alivernini F.
Ultimo
2026

Abstract

We investigated School Dropout Intention (SDI) and the role that educational-context and psychological factors play in shaping it during compulsory education in a cohort of 247 students (57.5% male; Mₐge = 12.11, SDₐge = 1.92) officially recognized as living below the poverty threshold. Data were analyzed by means of latent growth as well as Autoregressive Latent Trajectory (ALT) models. Results showed a gradual increase in SDI across compulsory schooling, which predicted students' subsequent school absences; however, no acceleration emerged as they approached the legal dropout age. Teacher and parental autonomy support reduced SDI over time. Regarding peer relationships at school, victimization predicted higher SDI, whereas peer friendship showed no significant association. Among psychological variables, self-esteem emerged as a stronger protective factor than self-efficacy, and identified motivation was more effective than intrinsic motivation in counteracting the development of SDI. Overall, the findings highlight key contextual and individual processes shaping dropout intention among low-income students.
2026
low socioeconomic status (SES); motivation; school dropout intention; self-determination theory (SDT); self-efficacy; self-esteem
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Deciding to drop out of school during compulsory education: Testing developmental and contextual models in students from low-income families / Cavicchiolo, E.; Manganelli, S.; Lucidi, F.; Alivernini, F.. - In: LEARNING AND INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES. - ISSN 1041-6080. - 127:(2026). [10.1016/j.lindif.2026.102887]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1761386
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