tailieunhanh - Concurrent and longitudinal correlation between children’s emotional reactivity, regulation and adjustment

This paper describes a study using two different samples to examine concurrent and longitudinal relations between children’s emotional reactivity, regulation and adjustment. Fortyeight children from preschool through second grade were recruited to provide data on concurrent relations between regulation, reactivity and adjustment. | VNU Journal of Science: Education Research, Vol. 31, No. 4 (2015) 45-53 Concurrent and Longitudinal Correlation Between Children’s Emotional Reactivity, Regulation and Adjustment Trần Thành Nam* VNU Institute for Education Quality Assurance, 6th Floor, C1T Building, 144 Xuân Thủy Str, Cầu Giấy, Hanoi, Vietnam Received 02 February 2015 Revised 26 February 2015; Accepted 22 December 2015 Abstract: This paper describes a study using two different samples to examine concurrent and longitudinal relations between children’s emotional reactivity, regulation and adjustment. Fortyeight children from preschool through second grade were recruited to provide data on concurrent relations between regulation, reactivity and adjustment (sample 1). And forty kindergarten children were recruited and assessed at 2 time points to provides longitudinal relations (sample 2). Emotional reactivity and regulation were assessed during home visits using the same series of disappointment tasks, questionnaires and coding system. In sample 1, teachers completed a problem behavior checklist at the same time with the home visit. In sample 2, teachers completed the checklist two years after home observation. Results indicate that the dysregulation of sadness is associated with internalizing behavior concurrently, and that the dysregulation of anger is associated with externalizing problems two years later. Children’s anger reactivity is associated with both concurrent and later externalizing problems. Keywords: Anger, sadness, regulation, reactivity, adjustment. 1. Introduction * psychological problems, including poor social competence [6], depression [13, 25], anxiety [23], and aggressive behavior problems [9, 14]. While most studies focus on children’s regulation of generalized distress, few studies differentially examine negative emotions and their relations to adjustment. In response, the current study examines the regulation of anger and sadness specifically in relation to adjustment .