1st Edition

Moving Forward in the Study of Temperament and Early Education Outcomes Mediating and Moderating Factors

Edited By Cynthia L. Smith, David J. Bridgett Copyright 2020
    196 Pages
    by Routledge

    196 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book furthers understanding of how child temperament is linked to educational outcomes through mediating and moderating factors.



    As the importance of socio-emotional development for educational outcomes is increasingly recognized, understanding the influence that children’s temperament—which includes their emotional reactivity and regulation of emotions, cognitions, and behaviors—can have on educational factors, such as school readiness and academic achievement, is crucial. First, the chapters in this book examine pathways connecting temperament with educational outcomes; for example, one study reports that toddler negative affect predicted executive functioning, which then predicted achievement at age six. The second way that chapters in this book examine links between temperament and education is by identifying factors that make associations between temperament and educational outcomes more salient; for example, findings from one study show that shyness and negative emotion were more strongly associated with lower academic achievement only when children received fewer than nine hours of sleep each night, highlighting the importance of sleep.



    By examining pathways through which temperament exerts effects on educational outcomes (i.e., mediators), or factors that modify associations between temperament and educational outcomes (i.e., moderators), the potential for interventions aimed at improving early educational outcomes can be fully realized.



    This book was originally published as a special issue of Early Education and Development.

    1. Moving Forward in the Study of Temperament and Early Education Outcomes: Mediating and Moderating Factors

    Cynthia L. Smith and David J. Bridgett

    2. Sleep Duration Moderates the Association Between Children’s Temperament and Academic Achievement

    Rebecca H. Berger, Anjolii Diaz, Carlos Valiente, Nancy Eisenberg, Tracy L. Spinrad, Marilyn S. Thompson, Maciel M. Hernández, Sarah K. VanSchyndel, and Jody Southworth

    3. Executive Function Mediates the Association Between Toddler Negative Affectivity and Early Academic Achievement

    Ran Liu, Tashauna L Blankenship, Alleyne P. R. Broomell, Tatiana Garcia-Meza, Susan D. Calkins, and Martha Ann Bell

    4. Indirect Effects of Temperament on Social Competence via Emotion Understanding

    Heather Verron and Hedwig Teglasi

    5. Linking Shyness With Social and School Adjustment in Early Childhood: The Moderating Role of Inhibitory Control

    Stefania Sette, Will E. Hipson, Federica Zava, Emma Baumgartner, and Robert J. Coplan

    6. Instructional Support and Academic Skills: Impacts of INSIGHTS in Classrooms With Shy Children

    Meghan McCormick, Hope White, Parham Horn, Rachel Lacks, Erin O’Connor, Elise Cappella, and Sandee McClowry

    7. Maternal Responsiveness Protects Exuberant Toddlers From Experiencing Behavior Problems in Kindergarten

    Meghan E. McDoniel and Kristin A. Buss

    8. Early Language Development in Context: Interactions Between Infant Temperament and Parenting Characteristics

    Lauren M. Laake and David J. Bridgett

    9. Temperamental Anger and Positive Reactivity and the Development of Social Skills: Implications for Academic Competence During Preadolescence

    Jessica M. Dollar, Nicole B. Perry, Susan D. Calkins, Susan P. Keane, and Lilly Shanahan

    10. Academic Resilience Despite Early Academic Adversity: A Three-Wave Longitudinal Study on Regulation-Related Resiliency, Interpersonal Relationships, and Achievement in First to Third Grade

    Jeffrey Liew, Qian Cao, Jan N. Hughes, and Marike H. F. Deutz

    11. Kindergarten School Engagement: Linking Early Temperament and Academic Achievement at the Transition to School

    Crystal I. Bryce, Priscilla Goble, Jodi Swanson, Richard A. Fabes, Laura D. Hanish, and Carol Lynn Martin

    Biography



    Cynthia L. Smith is an Associate Professor and Director of Graduate Studies in Human Development and Family Science at Virginia Tech, USA, where she leads the Children’s Emotions Lab.



    David J. Bridgett is an Associate Professor of Clinical Psychology at Northern Illinois University, USA, where he directs the Emotion Regulation and Temperament Laboratory.