DeCamp Christopher, Hoffman Megan E, Allan Darcey M, Morris Brittany M, Lonigan Christopher J
Department of Psychology and the Florida Center for Reading Research, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL, USA.
Department of Psychology, Ohio University, Athens, OH, USA.
Res Child Adolesc Psychopathol. 2025 Apr;53(4):459-472. doi: 10.1007/s10802-024-01286-7. Epub 2025 Jan 18.
Despite frequent reliance on teacher and parent ratings of children's behavior for multi-informant assessment, agreement between teachers' and parents' ratings is low. This study examined the predictive utility of teacher and parent ratings for children's self-regulatory outcomes (i.e., executive function, continuous performance task) in four studies. Study 1 included 163 children ranging from 31 to 84 months of age (M = 55.58 months, SD = 8.43). Study 2 included 1,088 children ranging from 48 to 63 months of age (M = 55.15, SD = 3.65). Study 3 included 246 bilingual Spanish-speaking children ranging from 40 to 72 months of age (M = 56.66, SD = 6.06). Study 4 included 280 children ranging from 38 to 75 months of age (M = 55.92, SD = 4.16). Across studies, parents and teachers rated children's externalizing behaviors on the Conners' Rating Scale, the Strength and Weaknesses of ADHD-Symptoms and Normal Behavior Scale, or both; children completed a variety of performance-based self-regulation tasks. The strength of associations of parent and teacher ratings with self-regulatory outcomes was compared, and regression analyses determined the unique and overlapping variance accounted for by different raters. Teachers' ratings had larger associations with self-regulation than did parents' ratings across outcomes and studies-except for two instances in Study 4 where the associations for teachers' and parents' ratings were equal. These findings indicate that teachers supply more useful information than parents, possibly because teachers have better-informed expectations of children's behavior, and they raise questions about the utility of multi-informant assessment, at least with preschool children.
尽管在多 informant 评估中经常依赖教师和家长对儿童行为的评分,但教师和家长评分之间的一致性较低。本研究在四项研究中检验了教师和家长评分对儿童自我调节结果(即执行功能、持续性操作任务)的预测效用。研究 1 包括 163 名年龄在 31 至 84 个月之间的儿童(M = 55.58 个月,SD = 8.43)。研究 2 包括 1088 名年龄在 48 至 63 个月之间的儿童(M = 55.15,SD = 3.65)。研究 3 包括 246 名说西班牙语的双语儿童,年龄在 40 至 72 个月之间(M = 56.66,SD = 6.06)。研究 4 包括 280 名年龄在 38 至 75 个月之间的儿童(M = 55.92,SD = 4.16)。在各项研究中,家长和教师使用 Conners 评定量表、ADHD 症状与正常行为量表的优势与劣势或两者对儿童的外化行为进行评分;儿童完成了各种基于表现的自我调节任务。比较了家长和教师评分与自我调节结果之间关联的强度,并通过回归分析确定了不同评分者所解释的独特和重叠方差。在各项结果和研究中——除了研究 4 中的两个情况,即教师和家长评分的关联相等——教师评分与自我调节的关联比家长评分更大。这些发现表明,教师提供的信息比家长更有用,可能是因为教师对儿童行为的期望更有依据,并且这些发现引发了关于多 informant 评估效用的问题,至少对于学龄前儿童是如此。