The kind of student you were in elementary school predicts mortality
Journal article › Research › Peer reviewed
Publication data
| By | Marion Spengler, Brent W. Roberts, Oliver Lüdtke, Romain Martin, Martin Brunner |
| Original language | English |
| Published in | Journal of Personality, 84(4) |
| Pages | 547-553 |
| Editor (Publisher) | Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd |
| ISSN | 0022-3506, 1467-6494 |
| DOI/Link | https://doi.org/10.1111/jopy.12180 |
| Publication status | Published – 08.2016 |
We examined the association of self-reported and teacher-rated student characteristics assessed at the end of primary school with all-cause mortality assessed through age 52. Data stem from a representative sample of students from Luxembourg assessed in 1968 (N = 2,543; M = 11.9 years, SD = 0.6; 49.9% female; N = 166 participants died). Results from logistic regression analyses showed that the self-reported responsible student scale (OR = .81; CI = [.70; .95]) and the teacher rating of studiousness (OR = .80; CI = [.67; .96]) were predictive for all-cause mortality even after controlling for IQ, parental SES, and sex. These findings indicate that both observer–rated and self–reported student behaviors are important life-course predictors for mortality and are perhaps more important than childhood IQ.