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Associations of Preschool Type and Teacher–Child Relational Quality With Young Children's Social-Emotional Competence
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Citations
66
References
2014
Year
Teacher–child ConflictSocial PsychologyTeacher-student RelationEducationPreschool DevelopmentEarly Childhood EducationPsychologyPreschool TeachingSocial SciencesSocioemotional DevelopmentSocial-emotional DevelopmentEarly Childhood ExperienceChild AssessmentTeacher–child Relational QualityChild PsychologyBehavioral SciencesSocial SkillsSchool PsychologyEarly Childhood DevelopmentPreschool TypeSocio-emotional HealthSocial DevelopmentSocial-emotional WellbeingTeacher–child ClosenessChild DevelopmentEarly EducationSuburban Head StartYoung ChildrenEmotional DevelopmentPreschool EducationChild Socialization
Research Findings: This study examined associations of preschool type (i.e., urban and suburban Head Start and university-affiliated center) and teacher–child variables with positive and negative child outcomes among 145 preschoolers (74 boys). Differences emerged across preschools, with urban Head Start children scoring lowest on the emotional competence measures and university-affiliated preschoolers experiencing less peer victimization than urban and suburban Head Start preschoolers. Differences across preschool types were also found for the teacher–child variables, such that teacher–child closeness was lower and teacher–child conflict and dependence were highest in the urban Head Start preschool. Regression analyses revealed significant and meaningful interactions between preschool type and teacher–child relational quality in the prediction of children's social-emotional outcomes. Teacher–child conflict was negatively associated with emotion regulation and teacher–child dependence was associated with the highest levels of emotion regulation, but only for university-affiliated preschoolers. Suburban Head Start preschoolers experienced less prosocial attention than urban Head Start preschoolers, but only when teacher–child closeness was high. Teacher–child closeness was also a negative predictor of urban Head Start preschoolers’ prosocial attention. Practice or Policy: Results point to the importance of understanding the role of teacher–child relational quality in the social-emotional development of children exposed to different preschool and environmental contexts.
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