Academic Resilience and School Success: A Review of Empirical Evidence in Secondary Education
Yashpriya Bajpai *
CSSI, Babasaheb Bhimrao Ambedkar University, Lucknow, India.
Prasamita Mohanty
CSSI, Babasaheb Bhimrao Ambedkar University, Lucknow, India.
*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
Academic resilience has become a central construct in secondary education research because it speaks directly to a persistent educational dilemma: why some adolescents sustain achievement and positive school functioning despite adversity while others with comparable risk exposure do not. This review synthesizess empirical evidence on whether academic resilience predicts school success in secondary education and clarifies how definitional and measurement choices shape conclusions. Drawing on recent meta-analytic and systematic review evidence alongside large-scale international assessment research and school-based studies, the review shows that academic resilience is consistently associated with indicators of school success, but the strength and interpretability of this relationship vary markedly across operationalizations. In correlational syntheses, resilience-related protective factors exhibit statistically reliable but typically small links with achievement outcomes, suggesting predictive relevance but also indicating that resilience is not a standalone remedy for structural disadvantage. Evidence from large-scale assessments highlights the role of school climate, instructional quality, and cultural-contextual protective factors in differentiating resilient from non-resilient adolescents. At the same time, research warns that “resilience” is often defined partly by academic performance itself, complicating causal claims about prediction. The review proposes an integrative account that treats academic resilience as a dynamic capacity expressed through self-regulation, perceived competence, and supportive relationships, and it outlines implications for identification, measurement, and intervention in secondary schooling. A defensible conclusion is that academic resilience can be predictive of school success when assessed as a capacity independent of achievement and when examined in designs that account for prior performance and contextual conditions. For secondary schooling, the practical promise of the construct lies in combining student-focused supports with school-level conditions that make resilient adaptation possible.
Keywords: Academic resilience, secondary education, school success, academic achievement, educational disadvantage, protective factors, academic buoyancy