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1 od and predict important outcomes, including academic achievement.
2 is associated with better mental health and academic achievement.
3 on between lead changes below 3.5 mug/dL and academic achievement.
4 ce the intergenerational transmission of low academic achievement.
5 tes of substance use disorder independent of academic achievement.
6 dicts important real-world outcomes, such as academic achievement.
7 above age and gender norms for language and academic achievement.
8 t more, which, in turn, reduces learning and academic achievement.
9 ternalizing or externalizing behaviors or to academic achievement.
10 with far-transfer or generalized effects on academic achievement.
11 subjects was used as an outcome measure for academic achievement.
12 kfast on indicators of school engagement and academic achievement.
13 differences had consequences for children's academic achievement.
14 een early transient newborn hypoglycemia and academic achievement.
15 zing problems, intellectual functioning, and academic achievement.
16 ttention/task switching, working memory, and academic achievement.
17 not improve in intellectual functioning and academic achievement.
18 ence higher levels of stress, and have lower academic achievement.
19 en childhood motor function and adolescents' academic achievement.
20 ns for young people's cognitive function and academic achievement.
21 en childhood motor function and adolescents' academic achievement.
22 ubstantially increase the rate of children's academic achievement.
23 view, we examine the role of self-control in academic achievement.
24 might account for income-related deficits in academic achievement.
25 ere seen in global intelligence quotient and academic achievement.
26 ntelligence quotient (IQ) tests and tests of academic achievement.
27 monstrated small but significant deficits in academic achievement.
28 n about the factors that shape early college academic achievement.
29 often underperform on tests of learning and academic achievement.
30 n, related to both cognitive performance and academic achievement.
31 nce may increase school readiness and foster academic achievement.
32 pment across childhood is critical for later academic achievement.
33 social inequality on health, well-being and academic achievement.
34 oss is critical for language development and academic achievement.
35 w lead level and children's and adolescents' academic achievement, a 1-unit increase in lead levels i
37 ere collected prospectively on intelligence, academic achievement, adaptive skills, behavioral functi
39 cored by significant associations with age 7 academic achievement, also associated with age 50 memory
40 asures of cognitive abilities, such as prior academic achievement and being perceived as smart by oth
42 ant downstream implications for learning and academic achievement and could be associated with sex di
43 s of 6 environmental risk factors, including academic achievement and engagement, antisocial and pros
45 efs, and home numeracy activities, and their academic achievement and intelligence were assessed.
48 were born SGA had significant differences in academic achievement and professional attainment compare
49 f contextual and individual-level effects on academic achievement and school attrition reveals patter
51 f high-frequency hearing loss with regard to academic achievement and speech and language development
52 This study examines the relationship between academic achievement and strategic ability to coordinate
54 ed with better school-age performance IQ and academic achievement and with a reduction in ADHD sympto
55 analyze gender differences in parenthood and academic achievements and explore the influence of work-
56 oom emotional and instructional quality, and academic achievement), and adult pathways were mediators
57 late to typical intervention outcomes (e.g., academic achievement), and c) assesses the causal effect
58 mic status), school (e.g., average levels of academic achievement), and neighborhood (e.g., concentra
60 n had complete data on childcare attendance, academic achievement, and maternal education levels.
61 sessed the level of education, cognitive and academic achievement, and rates of chronic illness and r
68 ntelligence (intelligence quotient [IQ]) and academic achievement at either 1 or 3 years after a BMT,
69 evel (kindergarten through sixth grade), and academic achievement at the grade level (second through
70 n tests of full-scale intelligence quotient, academic achievement, attention/concentration, memory, a
71 I, -0.034 to -0.001; P = .06 for trend), and academic achievement (b = -0.001; 95% CI, -0.002 to -0.0
72 the links between non-cognitive genetics and academic achievement became stronger over the school yea
74 icant gender gaps in most of the measures of academic achievement (both objective and subjective) in
75 ies in mental health, cognitive ability, and academic achievement, but efforts to understand underlyi
77 that indirect genetic effects on children's academic achievement cannot be explained by processes th
78 elationship between non-cognitive skills and academic achievement changes over development is unclear
79 ck and Hispanic) reach the highest levels of academic achievement compared with their non-minority (w
80 tudied (including Apgar score, intelligence, academic achievement, conduct problems, and asthma) were
81 icated that non-cognitive genetic effects on academic achievement could not simply be attributed to c
85 We primarily find insignificant impacts on academic achievement due to school closures from other c
88 ory, language, freedom from distractibility, academic achievement, executive functions, and fine-moto
89 mory, procedural memory, executive function, academic achievement, fine motor dexterity, and socioemo
93 and non-cognitive skills are associated with academic achievement from ages 7 to 16 years in a sample
97 g adolescence and young adulthood may affect academic achievement; however, the magnitude of associat
99 ssed literacy, attention, social skills, and academic achievement in 391 of these children at 9 to 11
103 d theMTHFR677C>T polymorphism did not affect academic achievement in any tested model involving choli
106 ademic performance and standardized tests of academic achievement in kindergarten and second grade by
108 mated intelligence quotient greater than 50, academic achievement in the 16(th) percentile or lower f
110 lysed indirect genetic effects on children's academic achievement in their fifth to ninth years of sc
113 significantly and positively associated with academic achievement independent of SES factors (paterna
114 comes were neurodevelopmental assessments of academic achievement, intelligence, fine motor skills, e
116 bodies of empirical research have shown that academic achievement is influenced by structural factors
119 ial effects on executive functions (k = 45), academic achievement (k = 47), or fluid intelligence (k
122 during impact on mental and physical health, academic achievement, lifetime productivity, and the pro
125 on any behavioral outcomes (decision-making, academic achievement, mental health, fluid reasoning and
126 supplement earlier published findings on the academic achievement of the immigrant second generation
131 on problems is an important cause of reduced academic achievement, performance in everyday life and s
133 ment in general intellectual abilities, poor academic achievement, progression to overt stroke, and p
134 tory control, working memory, and updating); academic achievement (reading and mathematics); and gene
135 diagnosis on intelligence quotient (IQ) and academic achievement (reading, spelling, and math) among
136 lds (ROR, 0.67 [95% CI, 0.64-0.69]), and low academic achievement (ROR, 0.83 [95% CI, 0.81-0.85]) wer
137 ts had a lower mean IQ (87 vs. 92) and lower academic achievement scores (P<0.001 for both comparison
138 :4D)-would seem to have ambiguous effects on academic achievement since traits like aggressiveness or
140 groups, regardless of treatment, declined on academic achievement tests, although not to a statistica
142 elationship generalizes to broad measures of academic achievement that are used for important, real-w
143 r, quadratic, relationship between 2D:4D and academic achievement using samples from Moscow and Manil
144 visual perception, general intelligence and academic achievement, using adjustments to visual materi
145 ther childhood motor function predicts later academic achievement via physical activity, fitness, and
146 d a negative indirect effect on adolescents' academic achievement via physical inactivity (B = -0.023
147 , with no group differences in intelligence, academic achievement, visuospatial reasoning, or verbal
152 sler Abbreviated Scale of Intelligence), (2) academic achievement (Wide Range Achievement Test, Fourt
154 I; Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test-Revised); academic achievement (Woodcock-Johnson Tests of Achievem