Literature DB >> 24223473

Income and the Development of Effortful Control as Predictors of Teacher Reports of Preschool Adjustment.

Stephanie F Thompson1, Liliana J Lengua, Maureen Zalewski, Lyndsey Moran.   

Abstract

This study examined the relations of income and children's effortful control to teacher reports of preschoolers' social competence and adjustment problems. This study tested whether changes in effortful control accounted for the effects of income on children's adjustment. A community sample (N=306) of preschool-age children (36-40 mos.) and their mothers, representing the full range of income (29% at or near poverty, 28% at or below the local median income), was used. Path analyses were used to test the prospective effects of income on rank-order changes in two aspects of effortful control, executive control and delay ability, which in turn, predicted teacher-reported adjustment problems and social competence. Lower income predicted smaller rank-order change in executive control, but did not predict changes in delay ability. Smaller rank-order change in delay ability predicted greater adjustment problems above the effect of income. Larger rank-order change in executive control predicted greater social competence and fewer adjustment problems above the effect of income. These findings provided some support for the hypothesis that disruptions in the development of effortful control related to low income might account for the effects of low income on young children's adjustment. Effortful control is potentially a fruitful target for intervention, particularly among children living in low income and poverty.

Entities:  

Keywords:  adjustment problems; delay ability; effortful control; executive control; income; social competence

Year:  2013        PMID: 24223473      PMCID: PMC3819041          DOI: 10.1016/j.ecresq.2013.07.006

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Early Child Res Q        ISSN: 0885-2006


  53 in total

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Journal:  Dev Psychobiol       Date:  1996-05       Impact factor: 3.038

6.  Assessment of hot and cool executive function in young children: age-related changes and individual differences.

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7.  Family Functioning and Externalizing Behaviour among Low-income Children: Self-regulation as a Mediator.

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8.  The relations of regulation and emotionality to children's externalizing and internalizing problem behavior.

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9.  The contribution of emotionality and self-regulation to the understanding of children's response to multiple risk.

Authors:  Liliana J Lengua
Journal:  Child Dev       Date:  2002 Jan-Feb

10.  Symptoms of anxiety, depression, and aggression in non-clinical children: relationships with self-report and performance-based measures of attention and effortful control.

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Authors:  Isaac T Petersen; Caroline P Hoyniak; Maureen E McQuillan; John E Bates; Angela D Staples
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2.  Body Mass Index Mediates the Effects of Low Income on Preschool Children's Executive Control, with Implications for Behavior and Academics.

Authors:  Pooja Tandon; Stephanie Thompson; Lyndsey Moran; Liliana Lengua
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3.  The Mediating Effect of Self-Regulation in the Association Between Poverty and Child Weight: A Systematic Review.

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