The family and residential environments are critical to children’s wellbeing and, hence, residential change can affect children’s developmental outcomes. In this research, we study the associations between residential relocations and academic performance in the Australian context using panel regression methods on longitudinal data of a representative sample of 3,481 children born in the late 1990s from the Longitudinal Study of Australian Children (LSAC). We examine the impact of residential relocations from infancy to middle childhood and pay special attention to the distance, frequency and developmental age-stage of relocations on academic test scores from the National Assessment Program – Literacy and Numeracy (NAPLAN) of third, fifth an...
This study involved undertaking quantitative analysis of a range of established longitudinal data se...
This study involved undertaking quantitative analysis of a range of established longitudinal ...
Using data from Birth to Twenty, a cohort of South African urban children, the current paper investi...
The family and residential environments are critical to children’s wellbeing and, hence, residential...
The family and residential environments are critical to children’s wellbeing and, hence, moving home...
Frequent mobility has been linked to poorer educational attainment. We investigated the association ...
Very little is understood about the influence of housing on children's development in Australia. For...
Frequent mobility has been linked to poorer educational attainment. We investigated the association ...
While residential mobility is common in the United States, residential mobility’s influence in child...
Aim: Residential mobility during childhood has been associated with several adverse health outcomes....
Children’s early years are a time when many families move home. Does residential mobility affect ch...
The impact of residential instability to children's well-being has long been debated. In recent year...
By the time they are five years old, nearly 70% of children in the United States have moved home, wi...
Residential mobility is a normal feature of family life but thought to be a source of disruption to ...
Approximately 50 per cent of children in Scotland move home in their first 10 years of life. Many fa...
This study involved undertaking quantitative analysis of a range of established longitudinal data se...
This study involved undertaking quantitative analysis of a range of established longitudinal ...
Using data from Birth to Twenty, a cohort of South African urban children, the current paper investi...
The family and residential environments are critical to children’s wellbeing and, hence, residential...
The family and residential environments are critical to children’s wellbeing and, hence, moving home...
Frequent mobility has been linked to poorer educational attainment. We investigated the association ...
Very little is understood about the influence of housing on children's development in Australia. For...
Frequent mobility has been linked to poorer educational attainment. We investigated the association ...
While residential mobility is common in the United States, residential mobility’s influence in child...
Aim: Residential mobility during childhood has been associated with several adverse health outcomes....
Children’s early years are a time when many families move home. Does residential mobility affect ch...
The impact of residential instability to children's well-being has long been debated. In recent year...
By the time they are five years old, nearly 70% of children in the United States have moved home, wi...
Residential mobility is a normal feature of family life but thought to be a source of disruption to ...
Approximately 50 per cent of children in Scotland move home in their first 10 years of life. Many fa...
This study involved undertaking quantitative analysis of a range of established longitudinal data se...
This study involved undertaking quantitative analysis of a range of established longitudinal ...
Using data from Birth to Twenty, a cohort of South African urban children, the current paper investi...