02334nas a2200205 4500000000100000008004100001260003100042653002500073653002700098653001300125653001500138100002800153700003300181700002800214245010600242300001200348490000700360520174700367022001402114 2019 d cjulbElsevier Espana S.L.U10aAcademic achievement10aDaily childhood stress10aLearning10aPredictors1 aMarta Martínez-Vicente1 aJosé Manuel Suárez-Riveiro1 aCarlos Valiente-Barroso00aDaily childhood stress and factors related to academic learning as predictors of academic achievement a111-1170 v253 aBackground and objectives: Within the broad spectrum of variables that influence learning and consequently academic achievement, affective-motivational factors related to daily stress are particularly important. The aim of this study was to analyze associations between daily childhood stress, learning strategies and academic motivation, by analyzing how they differ across 3 achievement groups (low, medium and high), and the predictive-ability of these groupings. Method: Non-experimental methodology in a cross-sectional, descriptive, correlational, inferential and multivariate study. A total of 535 primary school students from Cantabria, Spain, aged 9 to 12 (M = 10.72; SD = 0.67), participated in the study. They completed the Inventario de Estrés Cotidiano Infantil [Children s Daily Stress Inventory] and the Diagnóstico Integral del Estudio [Comprehensive Diagnosis of Study], and their school grades were recorded for the subjects of Language Arts, English as a Foreign Language, and Mathematics. Results: The results showed positive, significant relationships between all the variables pertaining to learning and academic achievement; each of these variables, in turn, had negative, significant relationships with global daily stress (as well as with health, school and family stress). The multivariate discriminant analysis explained the predictive role of complementary strategies, school stress, attitude toward study and self-concept, in different levels of general academic achievement. Conclusions: There is a need for interventions in self-regulated learning strategies that would serve as a preventive measure, and in development of coping strategies for stressful situations inside and outside the educational context. a1134-7937