Nina P. Bartell’s research while affiliated with University of Wisconsin–Madison and other places

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Publications (2)


Depression and self-esteem in academically gifted and nongifted children: A comparison study
  • Article

March 1986

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135 Reads

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74 Citations

Journal of School Psychology

Nina P. Bartell

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The present investigation examined depression and self-esteem in a sample of 145 gifted and nongifted fourth and fifth grade children. Self-esteem was assessed by the Coopersmith Self-Esteem Inventory. Depression was measured by Kovacs' Children's Depression Inventory, the Reynolds' Child Depression Scale, and teachers' global ratings of depression. As a group, gifted children did not differ on levels of self-esteem or depression from their nongifted peers. However, when grade and gender differences were examined, it was found that gifted boys tended to report lower levels of self-esteem and more depression than gifted girls. Teachers also judged boys to be more depressed than girls. Furthermore, fifth-graders were rated by teachers to be more depressed than fourth-graders. Overall, this investigation did not find major differences in affective characteristics between gifted and nongifted children.


Measuring depression in children: A multimethod assessment investigation. Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 13, 513-526
  • Article
  • Full-text available

January 1986

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765 Reads

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137 Citations

Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology

The present investigation examined measures for the assessment of depressive symptomatology in children, as well as two related constructs (self-esteem and anxiety). The sample consisted of 166 elementary school children from grades 3 through 6. Two self-report depression measures, the Children's Depression Inventory (Kovacs, 1979) and the Child Depression Scale (Reynolds, in press), as well as anxiety and self-esteem scales, were completed by the children. Parents (mothers and fathers) evaluated their children on the depression and anxiety scales from the Personality Inventory for Children (Wirt, Lachar, Klinedinst, & Seat, 1977), and teachers provided global ratings of depression and academic performance. The results support the reliability and validity of both self-report children depression measures. Data obtained on the parent report measure do not recommend its use at this time for assessing depression in children, while results on teachers' global ratings of depression provide some evidence that teachers may be a good source of information regarding depression in children.

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Citations (2)


... Gifted youth experience unique challenges such as asynchronous development (Silverman, 1997), and overexcitability (Lamont, 2012), which can lead to increased anxiety and insomnia as compared to non-gifted peers (Harrison & Van Haneghan, 2011). Previous research suggests that some gifted groups have unique protective factors, such as high intelligence, that act as buffers against negative mental health outcomes, reducing the severity of symptoms compared to their non-gifted peers (Bartell & Reynolds, 1986;Duplenne et al., 2024;Mueller, 2009). Regardless, mental health issues such as anxiety, depression, and suicidal ideation do occur among gifted youth because of different internal and external factors including academic pressure, asynchronous development, low self-worth, family dysfunctionality, and poor social adjustment Winsor & Mueller, 2020). ...

Reference:

Seen and Heard: Combining In-Depth Interviewing With Social Messaging to Study the Lived Experiences of Gifted Youth in High Power Distance Cultures
Depression and self-esteem in academically gifted and nongifted children: A comparison study
  • Citing Article
  • March 1986

Journal of School Psychology

... There is precedent for the exclusive use of self-reported depressive symptoms, given the difficulty for outside observers to accurately assess internal states of others and the considerable disagreement between children's self-report and other informants' report (De Los Reyes & Kazdin, 2005;Reynold, Anderson, & Bartell, 1985). For this reason, we used a well-established and both internally and externally validated measure of self-reported depressive symptoms in the current study. ...

Measuring depression in children: A multimethod assessment investigation. Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 13, 513-526

Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology