Blair Clancy, Ursache Alexandra, Greenberg Mark, Vernon-Feagans Lynne
Department of Applied Psychology, New York University.
Department of HDFS, Pennsylvania State University.
Dev Psychol. 2015 Apr;51(4):459-72. doi: 10.1037/a0038813. Epub 2015 Feb 16.
The relation of self-regulation measured prior to school entry to developing math and reading ability in prekindergarten through the second grade was examined in a prospective longitudinal sample of 1,292 children and families in predominantly rural and low-income communities in 2 regions of high poverty in the United States. Direct assessments of executive function, effortful control, and stress response physiology (indexed by resting levels of cortisol and alpha amylase obtained from saliva) were measured at child age 48 months and parents and teachers reported on children's effortful control using temperament rating scales at child age approximately 60 months. Math and reading ability, as measured by the Woodcock-Johnson III applied problems and letter-word subtests, respectively, were measured at prekindergarten through the second grade. Effects for self-regulation measures were seen primarily for initial level and to some extent growth in both mathematics and reading, even when controlling for family demographic characteristics that represent relevant selection factors into higher levels of both self-regulation and academic achievement. These effects persisted for mathematics but not for reading with the inclusion of child cognitive abilities, vocabulary, and speed of processing measured in prekindergarten, concurrent with the first time point for the academic measures. Results are interpreted as indicating a role for self-regulation in learning ability generally, likely through support for attention and reasoning abilities that are most specific to the assessment of mathematics in this analysis. Implications for instruction and for assessment and the best ways to support the development of early math and reading ability for children at risk for school failure are discussed.
在美国两个高贫困率地区的主要农村和低收入社区,对1292名儿童及其家庭进行了前瞻性纵向抽样研究,以考察入学前测得的自我调节能力与幼儿园至二年级数学和阅读能力发展之间的关系。在儿童48个月大时,对执行功能、努力控制和应激反应生理学进行了直接评估(通过唾液中皮质醇和α淀粉酶的静息水平进行指标化),在儿童大约60个月大时,家长和教师使用气质评定量表报告儿童的努力控制情况。通过伍德科克-约翰逊三世应用问题和字母-单词子测验分别测量幼儿园至二年级的数学和阅读能力。即使在控制了代表自我调节和学业成就较高水平相关选择因素的家庭人口特征后,自我调节测量的影响主要体现在数学和阅读的初始水平以及一定程度的增长上。在纳入幼儿园测得的儿童认知能力、词汇量和处理速度后,这些影响在数学方面持续存在,但在阅读方面则不存在,这与学业测量的第一个时间点同时进行。结果被解释为表明自我调节在一般学习能力中发挥作用,可能是通过支持注意力和推理能力,而在本分析中这些能力对数学评估最为具体。文中还讨论了对教学、评估的启示以及支持学业失败风险儿童早期数学和阅读能力发展的最佳方法。