Publication | Closed Access
Home Environment and School Performance: A Ten-Year Follow-Up and Examination of Three Models of Environmental Action
346
Citations
18
References
1988
Year
Environmental PsychologyEducationThree ModelsHome EnvironmentSocial SciencesPartial CorrelationsDevelopmental PsychologyBuilt EnvironmentEnvironmental BehaviorCognitive DevelopmentEarly Childhood ExperienceSchool FunctioningHome EnvironmentsBehavioral SciencesSchool PsychologyEarly Childhood DevelopmentEnvironmental ActionChild DevelopmentEarly EducationPediatricsPro-environmental BehaviorPhysical Environment
The home environments of 42 10- and 11-year-old children were examined when they were infants and again during middle childhood. Significant correlations were observed between home environments measured at both 2 years and 10 years and the children's SRA achievement test scores and their classroom behavior. However, the home environment at 6 months was only related to a limited number of classroom behaviors. Partial correlations were used to test 3 models of environmental action: Model I (primacy of early experience), Model II (predominance of the contemporary environment), Model III (cumulative effects in stable environments). Strongest relations were noted for the contemporary environment, but all 3 models received some support. Correlations between HOME scores and children's competence in middle childhood revealed a complex portrait that was not explainable with reference to a single model of environmental action. The version of the HOME Inventory used with families of elementary school children is also introduced.
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