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Effortful control, social competence, and adjustment problems in children at risk for psychopathology

Dennis, Tracy A; Brotman, Laurie Miller; Huang, Keng-Yen; Gouley, Kathleen Kiely
This study explored the factor structure and developmental trajectory of effortful control (EC), its relations with child adjustment, and the moderating role of age and gender in 75 4- to 6-year-old children at risk for psychopathology. Confirmatory factor analyses revealed two subcomponents of effortful control: Suppress/Initiate (the ability to inhibit a dominant response while initiating a new response) and Motor Control (inhibiting fine and gross motor activity). EC performance improved with age, and both subcomponents were associated with greater social competence at all ages. Associations with internalizing problems were moderated by child age such that greater EC was linked to fewer problems at age 4 but did not relate to problems at ages 5 or 6
PMID: 17658987
ISSN: 1537-4416
CID: 91681

Showing and telling about emotions: Interrelations between facets of emotional competence and associations with classroom adjustment in Head Start preschoolers

Miller, Alison L; Fine, Sarah E; Gouley, Kathleen Kiely; Seifer, Ronald; Dickstein, Susan; Shields, Ann
In this study of low income preschoolers (N = 60), we examined relations between three facets of emotional competence: emotion knowledge, level of negative emotion expression, and emotion regulation; and their associations with indicators of classroom adjustment. Emotion knowledge was positively related to positive emotion regulation but was not related to negative emotion expression or negative dysregulation. Negative emotion expression related to emotion regulation variables in expected directions. Negative emotion expression was associated with aggression and social skills after covarying verbal ability, age, and emotion knowledge. Negative dysregulation was related in expected directions to aggression, anxiety, and social skills after covarying verbal ability, age, emotion knowledge, and negative emotion expression. Positive emotion regulation was related negatively to anxiety and positively to social skills after covarying all other variables in the model. Results are discussed with regard to using the emotional competence domain to understand how emotion processing relates to early childhood adjustment. (journal abstract)
PSYCH:2006-22236-007
ISSN: 0269-9931
CID: 69478

Conduct problems in young children : risk factors and prevention

Brotman, Laurie Miller; Gouley, Katheleen Kiely
ORIGINAL:0009433
ISSN: n/a
CID: 1450182

Assessing peer entry and play in preschoolers at risk for maladjustment

Brotman, Laurie Miller; Gouley, Kathleen Kiely; Chesir-Teran, Daniel
This study evaluated the psychometric properties of an observational rating system for assessing preschoolers' peer entry and play skills: Observed Peer Play in Unfamiliar Settings (OPPUS). Participants were 84 preschoolers at risk for psychopathology. Reliability and concurrent validity are reported. The 30-min paradigm yielded reliable indexes of engaging and disruptive behavior. Adequate interrater reliability and stability were obtained with minimally trained observers. OPPUS scores were related in expected ways to independent observations of disruptive and engaging behavior during parent-child interactions. OPPUS scores were associated with parent-rated self-control and internalizing behaviors. OPPUS scores were associated with parent ratings of play skills for children with school experience and assertiveness for children without school experience. The OPPUS is a useful, brief method for assessing peer entry and play behaviors in preschoolers
PMID: 16232064
ISSN: 1537-4416
CID: 61185

Prevention for preschoolers at high risk for conduct problems: immediate outcomes on parenting practices and child social competence

Brotman, Laurie Miller; Gouley, Kathleen Kiely; Chesir-Teran, Daniel; Dennis, Tracy; Klein, Rachel G; Shrout, Patrick
This study investigated the immediate impact of an 8-month center- and home-based prevention program for preschoolers at high risk for conduct problems. We report immediate program effects on observed and self-rated parenting practices and observed child behavior with peers. Ninety-nine preschool-age siblings of adjudicated youths and their families were randomly assigned to an enhanced version of the Incredible Years Series (Webster-Stratton, 1989; n = 50) or to a no-intervention control condition (n = 49). In an intent-to-treat design, the intervention yielded significant effects on negative parenting, parental stimulation for learning, and child social competence with peers. Improvements in negative parenting, stimulation for learning, and child social competence support the potential of the intervention to prevent later conduct problems in high-risk children
PMID: 16232069
ISSN: 1537-4416
CID: 61184

Older siblings benefit from a family-based preventive intervention for preschoolers at risk for conduct problems

Brotman, Laurie Miller; Dawson-McClure, Spring; Gouley, Kathleen Kiely; McGuire, Kristina; Burraston, Bert; Bank, Lew
This study evaluated sibling effects of a family-based intervention aimed at preventing conduct problems in preschool-age siblings of adjudicated youths. Ninety-two families of preschoolers who had older siblings adjudicated for delinquent acts were randomly assigned to intervention and control conditions. Of these, 47 families had nontargeted school-age (5-11 years) or adolescent siblings (12-17 years) living at home. These families were considered in this report. The authors hypothesized group differences on antisocial behavior and positive peer relations for older siblings of targeted preschoolers. The authors examined outcomes of parent- and teacher-reported behavior immediately postintervention and 8 months postintervention. Findings revealed significant intervention effects 8 months following intervention for adolescent siblings on parent-reported antisocial behavior and positive peer relations. Teacher reports confirmed group differences for antisocial behavior immediately postintervention. Findings document benefits for adolescent siblings
PMID: 16402873
ISSN: 0893-3200
CID: 95471

Emotion knowledge skills in low-income elementary school children: Associations with social status and peer experiences

Miller, AL; Gouley, KK; Seifer, R; Zakriski, A; Eguia, M; Vergnani, M
This short-term longitudinal study examined relations between emotion knowledge and social functioning in a sample of low-income ki: ndergarten and 1st graders. Individual differences in spontaneous emotion naming and emotion recognition skills were used to predict children's social functioning at school, including peer-nominated sociometric status, an: d child self-reports of negative experiences with peers in school (peer victimization and rejection). Children who had greater emotional vocabulary and recognized emotions more accurately had better outcomes in all areas, and many of the associations between fall emotion knowledge skills and spring social functioning outcomes held after covarying grade and children's previous status with regard to these outcomes. Results are discussed with regard to implications for prevention and intervention programs (e.g., the PATHS curriculum) that focus on teaching emotion knowledge skills in order to foster high-risk children's social competence
ISI:000232850400005
ISSN: 0961-205x
CID: 58813

Preschool-Aged Siblings of Adjudicated Youths: Multiple Risk Factors for Conduct Problems

Brotman, Laurie Miller; Gouley, Kathleen Kiely; O'Neal, Colleen; Klein, Rachel G
(from the journal abstract) Younger siblings of adolescents with histories of antisocial behavior are at high risk for developing conduct problems. Information about risk exposure in youths at familial risk for conduct problems is critical to the design of informed preventive interventions. The prevalence of well-validated risk factors for conduct problems was examined in a sample of 92 preschool-aged siblings of adjudicated youths. As expected, preschoolers at familial risk for conduct problems were exposed to a range of sociocultural, biological, and parenting risks. Risk exposure was associated with concurrent conduct problems and social competence in the preschool period. Only a minority of preschoolers was reported by parents to have clinically significant conduct problems, and this subgroup had more risks than children with conduct problems in the normal range. Findings are discussed in the context of preventive interventions for high-risk children and families.
PSYCH:2004-19821-003
ISSN: 1040-9289
CID: 46869

Emotions and behaviors in the head start classroom: Associations among observed dysregulation, social competence, and preschool adjustment

Miller, Alison L; Gouley, Kathleen Kiely; Seifer, Ronald; Dickstein, Susan; Shields, Ann
(from the journal abstract) Effective regulatory skills are essential in busy preschool classroom environments where children must maintain some control over their emotions and behavior to interact effectively with peers and teachers. Regulatory abilities can play a crucial role in a child's successful adjustment to preschool. We investigated whether individual differences in dysregulation (emotional and behavioral) as observed in the naturalistic classroom context were associated with peer social competence and teacher ratings of classroom adjustment in a sample of low-income preschoolers. Naturalistic observational methods were used to assess dysregulated emotions and behaviors in Head Start classrooms. Findings demonstrate that although displays of observed dysregulation were relatively brief, about one-quarter of children showed high levels of dysregulation, and individual differences in dysregulated behavior predicted teacher-rated classroom adjustment and peer conflict. Research results are discussed with regard to implications for classroom practice and prevention.
PSYCH:2004-13158-002
ISSN: 1040-9289
CID: 46423

Brief Functional Screening for Transition Difficulties Prior to Enrollment Predicts Socio-Emotional Competence and School Adjustment in Head Start Preschoolers

Miller, Alison L; Gouley, Kathleen Kiely; Shields, Ann; Dickstein, Susan; Seifer, Ronald; Magee, Karin Dodge; Fox, Christina
(from the journal abstract) Successful preschool transition is important for future educational success. We used brief functional screenings to identify low-income children at risk for difficulty transitioning into preschool. Functional screenings were conducted for 163 children prior to enrollment, in a naturalistic peer setting, and focused on multiple domains important for successful classroom transition, including social and emotional skills as well as cognitive and language abilities. Children were assigned a transition risk rating based on strengths and/or concerns in language, cognition, externalizing/internalizing, social skills, and affective tone. Social and emotional classroom behaviors were primary outcomes of interest due to the importance of early socio-emotional competence for later adjustment. Outcomes were assessed using multiple methods and multiple informants, including live classroom observations. The brief functional screening predicted outcomes almost one year later. Findings are discussed regarding implications for incorporating a whole-child, functional approach to existing screening practices, and applying developmental research methods to prevention science.
PSYCH:2004-10206-009
ISSN: 0300-4430
CID: 46450