Affiliation:
1. Universidade Federal de São Carlos, Brazil
Abstract
Abstract Difficulties in self-monitoring are potentially related to behavior problems and deficits in social skills. Clarifying these relationships-still little investigated in early childhood-can bring theoretical and practical contributions to child development. This study sought to characterize self-monitoring indicators (self-description, description, and choice of consequences) in preschool children, with different repertoires of social skills and problem behaviors. A total of 53 preschool children (5-6 years-old), of both sexes and from public schools were assessed by their parents and teachers on social skills and problem behaviors and completed tasks from an Illustrative Self-Monitoring resource. The results indicated: (a) better scores for children with social skills in all self-monitoring indicators; (b) positive correlations of indicators with social skills and negative correlations with internalizing problem behaviors. The possible influence of cognitive and verbal development on outcomes, the usefulness of the Illustrative Self-Monitoring resource to identify existing contingencies, and the importance of promoting self-monitoring in early childhood are discussed.
Subject
General Psychology,Education
Reference22 articles.
1. Matrizes Progressivas Coloridas de Raven: Escala Especial: Manual;Angelini A. L.,1999
2. Preschool children’s social information processing mediates the link between the quality of the parent-child relationship and the child’s learning difficulties;Arbel R.;International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health,2021
3. Problemas de comportamento e funcionamento adaptativo no Teacher’s Report Form (TRF): Comparações por gênero e escolaridade;Bolsoni-Silva A. T.;Gerais: Revista Interinstitucional de Psicologia,2016
4. Risk and protective factors of emotional and/or behavioral disorders in children and adolescents: A mega-analytic synthesis;Crews S. D.;Behavioral Disorders,2007
5. A review and reformulation of social information-processing mechanisms in children’s social adjustment;Crick N. R.;Psychological Bulletin,1994