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Peer reviewedFabes, Richard A.; Leonard, Stacie A.; Kupanoff, Kristina; Martin, Carol Lynn – Child Development, 2001
Examined relation between parents' reactions to preschoolers' negative emotions and social competence. Found that the relation between harsh parental coping strategies and children's emotional responding was moderated by parental distress. Relation between the interaction of parental coping and distress to children's social competence was mediated…
Descriptors: Coping, Emotional Development, Emotional Response, Mothers
Peer reviewedEamon, Mary Keegan – Social Work, 2001
Bronfenbrenner's process-person-context-time model is used to examine theories that explain adverse effects of economic deprivation on children's socioemotional development. Processes of not only the family, but also those of the peer group and school, and in other levels of the ecological environment may also explain the relation between economic…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Children, Emotional Development, Family Relationship
Freeman, Joan – Gifted Education International, 2001
Responsibility is described as a mixture of intellect and emotion which schools can positively develop and as particularly pertinent to the gifted as potential opinion formers. The growth of children's responsibility is considered within the school social context, individual emotional development, and the effects of the teacher and teaching style.…
Descriptors: Accountability, Educational Strategies, Elementary Secondary Education, Emotional Development
Valiente, Carlos; Eisenberg, Nancy; Fabes, Richard A.; Shepard, Stephanie A.; Cumberland, Amanda; Losoya, Sandra H. – Developmental Psychology, 2004
In this study, the linear and interactive relations of children's effortful control and parents' emotional expressivity to children's empathy-related responses were examined. Participants were 214 children, 4.5 to 8 years old. Children's effortful control was negatively related to their personal distress and was positively related to their…
Descriptors: Emotional Development, Empathy, Parent Child Relationship, Measures (Individuals)
Votruba-Drzal, Elizabeth; Levine Coley, Rebekah; Lindsaychase-Lansdale, P. – Child Development, 2004
A large literature has documented the influence of child care on young children's development, but few studies have examined low-income children in community care arrangements. Using data from Welfare, Children, and Families: A Three-City Study (N=204), this study examined the influence of child care quality and the extent of care on low-income…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Low Income Groups, Cognitive Development, Child Care
Cole, Pamela M.; Martin, Sarah E.; Dennis, Tracy A. – Child Development, 2004
Emotion regulation has emerged as a popular topic, but there is doubt about its viability as a scientific construct. This article identifies conceptual and methodological challenges in this area of study and describes exemplar studies that provide a substantive basis for inferring emotion regulation. On the basis of those studies, 4 methods are…
Descriptors: Criticism, Child Development, Emotional Response, Self Control
Lewis, Marc D.; Stieben, Jim – Child Development, 2004
Emotion regulation cannot be temporally distinguished from emotion in the brain, but activation patterns in prefrontal cortex appear to mediate cognitive control during emotion episodes. Frontal event-related potentials (ERPs) can tap cognitive control hypothetically mediated by the anterior cingulate cortex, and developmentalists have used these…
Descriptors: Brain, Emotional Development, Self Control, Child Development
Dunsmore, Julie C.; Karn, Michelle A. – Early Education and Development, 2004
We examined the influence of children's peer relationships and maternal emotional socialization on children's development of emotion knowledge. Children's emotion knowledge was assessed at the beginning (time 1) and end (time 2) of their first semester of kindergarten. Children's peer interactions were measured through observations and teacher…
Descriptors: Socialization, Mothers, Emotional Development, Peer Relationship
Rigby, Ben T.; Huebner, E. Scott – Psychology in the Schools, 2005
This study examined relationships among personality traits, causal attributions, and global life satisfaction in a sample of 212 high school students. A chief aim of this research was to explore whether causal attributions mediate the relationship between personality characteristics and global life satisfaction as hypothesized by DeNeve and Cooper…
Descriptors: Personality Traits, Personality, Adolescents, Health Promotion
Zaslow, Martha; Halle, Tamara; Martin, Laurie; Cabrera, Natasha; Calkins, Julia; Pitzer, Lindsay; Margie, Nancy Geyelin – Evaluation Review, 2006
This article assesses whether there are methodological problems with child outcome measures that may contribute to the small associations between child care quality and child outcomes found in the literature. Outcome measures used in 65 studies of child care quality published between 1979 and December 2005 were examined, taking the previous review…
Descriptors: Child Care, Measures (Individuals), Social Development, Emotional Development
Poole, Carla; Miller, Susan A.; Church, Ellen Booth – Early Childhood Today, 2004
In this article, the authors explain how self-concept develops among young children. Several strategies on how to help children attain their full emotional development are also suggested. One such effective strategy is for parents and caregivers to be sensitive to the individual needs of children and to be responsive to them during daily…
Descriptors: Young Children, Self Concept, Emotional Development, Child Rearing
Peer reviewedWoitaszewski, Scott A.; Aalsma, Matthew C. – Roeper Review, 2004
Emotional intelligence has been popularly portrayed as critical to human success and sometimes even more important than IQ (e.g., D. Goleman, 1995), yet sparse evidence exists supporting such a claim. The purpose of this study was to measure emotional intelligence, as conceptualized by J. D. Mayer and P. Salovey (1997), in order to better…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Grade Point Average, Gifted, Emotional Development
Music, Graham – Journal of Child Psychotherapy, 2004
This paper looks at how the capacity for separateness arises, and some of the ways in which gender is thought about in relation to this. A link is made with technical considerations about the stance we as therapists take with our patients. In particular, therapists often choose or are prodded into a role that is more empathic or more…
Descriptors: Patients, Emotional Development, Child Development, Gender Differences
Ecclestone, Kathryn – Adults Learning, 2004
The growing popularity of notions such as "self esteem" and "emotional intelligence" reflect people's shifts in thinking. From the pages of self-help manuals and women's magazines, self-esteem, emotional well-being and emotional intelligence have gone mainstream. This is leading to new professional activities in emotional management, life…
Descriptors: Emotional Intelligence, Self Esteem, Educational Experience, Empathy
Herba, Catherine; Phillips, Mary – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2004
Background: Intact emotion processing is critical for normal emotional development. Recent advances in neuroimaging have facilitated the examination of brain development, and have allowed for the exploration of the relationships between the development of emotion processing abilities, and that of associated neural systems. Methods: A literature…
Descriptors: Nonverbal Communication, Emotional Response, Adolescents, Brain

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