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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2011 Feb 1.
Published in final edited form as: J Educ Psychol. 2010 Feb 1;102(1):197–211. doi: 10.1037/a0017487

Table 4.

Younger sibling’s perceptions of older sibling characteristics and sex composition of dyad as predictors of younger sibling’s academic adjustment following the 8th grade.

Younger Sibling’s Academic Adjustment
Importance of School
Academic Self-Concept
GPA
Construct/Variables β
Δ R2
R2Adj
pR2
β
Δ R2
R2Adj
pR2
β
Δ R2
R2Adj
pR2
Step 1. Control Variables (7th grade)
 YS Gender .23*** −.01 .21**
 YS Ethnicity .13* .06 −.19**
 Parental Education .15* .21** .31***
 Parental Support .17** .26*** .07
.10 .10 .18
Step 2. Stability Coefficient (7th grade) .24*** .05*** .15 .41*** .16*** .26 .42*** .15*** .33
Step 3. Predictors (7th grade)
 Support from OS −.16* −.14* −.08
 Image of OS .06 .02 .02
 Sex Composition of Dyad −.02 .02+ .16 .09 .02+ .27 −.03 .01 .33
Step 4. Interaction Term
 Support × Sex Composition .14* .16** .05
 Image × Sex Composition .09 .04 .18***
 Support × Image −.18** .05** .20 .08 −.10 .03* .29 .07 −.07 .03* .35 .05

Note. YS = younger sib, OS = older sib. β’s are standardized coefficients at variable’s entry into the equation. R2Adj = adjusted R-square. pR2 = proportion of residual variance after Step 2 accounted for by next statistically significant step (see Cohen et al., 2003).

***

p < .001,

**

p < .01,

*

p ≤ .05,

+

p < .10