Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-2020
Publisher
Springer
Source Publication
Journal of Child and Family Studies
Source ISSN
1062-1024
Abstract
Objectives: Prior research on caregiving behaviors associated with resilience in children exposed to adversity has focused primarily on broad constructs, such as parental warmth and supportiveness, as protective factors. In an effort to provide more precise analysis of caregiver behaviors related to adaptive functioning in high-risk preschoolers, the present study used a multi-method design to examine the unique and joint relations of specific emotion socialization behaviors and parental warmth with adaptive functioning in preschool-aged children.
Methods: Participants were 124 children aged 3–6 years from Head Start programs and their primary caregiver. Caregivers and teachers reported on preschoolers' functioning across multiple domains (emotion regulation, social competence, school readiness, and low levels of emotional/behavioral problems), and caregivers' emotion coaching, validating, and invalidating behaviors were measured with self-report and observation.
Results: The emotion socialization behaviors together accounted for significant variance on a global index of adaptive functioning after accounting for exposure to adversity, with emotion coaching serving as a unique predictor. Further, parental warmth moderated the association between particular behaviors (caregiver-reported emotion coaching and observed emotional invalidation) and adaptive functioning.
Conclusions: These results suggest that engaging in emotion socialization behaviors in the context of a warm and supportive relationship can promote positive developmental outcomes in high-risk preschoolers.
Recommended Citation
Yule, Kristen; Murphy, Christina; and Grych, John, "Adaptive Functioning in High-Risk Preschoolers: Caregiver Practices Beyond Parental Warmth" (2020). Psychology Faculty Research and Publications. 485.
https://epublications.marquette.edu/psych_fac/485
Comments
Accepted version. Journal of Child and Family Studies, Vol. 29, No. 1 (January 2020): 115-127. DOI. © 2020 Springer. Used with permission.