Literature DB >> 30095561

Which Early Childhood Experiences and Skills Predict Kindergarten Working Memory?

Aubrey H Wang1, Caroline Fitzpatrick2,3,4.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: We examined how empirically and theoretically important predictors help explain the development of kindergarten working memory, an understudied predictor of school readiness and adjustment to schooling in early childhood. Our specific aim was to examine the extent to which antecedents, opportunity, and propensity variables directly and indirectly predict working memory development.
METHODS: We conducted structural equation modeling on a nationally representative and longitudinal sample of 14,000 kindergarten students. Predictors of end-of-kindergarten working memory include parent reports of antecedent variables such as socioeconomic status, mother's marital status, breastfeeding, child's age, and perception of child learning skills; teacher reports of opportunity variables including the frequency children read aloud and counted in their kindergarten class and classroom climate; and direct assessments of child propensity variables including earlier working memory, cognitive fluidity, teacher reports of child self-regulation, and math and reading knowledge.
RESULTS: Together, childhood antecedents, opportunity, and propensity latent factors contributed to 41% of the variance of kindergarten working memory. Child propensity had a significant direct effect on child working memory, whereas antecedent and opportunity factors had significant indirect effects on working memory through child propensity.
CONCLUSION: In this study, we identify several modifiable variables that directly and indirectly predict child working memory skills using a large population-based sample. Better understanding of how child-, family-, and school-level variables contribute to the development of working memory in young children can be seen as an important step in the creation of preventive interventions designed to improve these important skills.

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Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 30095561     DOI: 10.1097/DBP.0000000000000610

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Dev Behav Pediatr        ISSN: 0196-206X            Impact factor:   2.225


  2 in total

1.  Fit for School Study protocol: early child growth, health behaviours, nutrition, cardiometabolic risk and developmental determinants of a child's school readiness, a prospective cohort.

Authors:  Catherine S Birken; Jessica A Omand; Kim M Nurse; Cornelia M Borkhoff; Christine Koroshegyi; Gerald Lebovic; Jonathon L Maguire; Muhammad Mamdani; Patricia C Parkin; Janis Randall Simpson; Mark S Tremblay; Eric Duku; Caroline Reid-Westoby; Magdalena Janus
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2019-11-19       Impact factor: 2.692

2.  Socioeconomic disadvantage and ethnicity are associated with large differences in children's working memory ability: analysis of a prospective birth cohort study following 13,500 children.

Authors:  Kate E Mooney; Kate E Pickett; Katy Shire; Richard J Allen; Amanda H Waterman
Journal:  BMC Psychol       Date:  2022-03-15
  2 in total

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