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Anushay Mazhar; Craig S. Bailey – Grantee Submission, 2024
The errors young children make when recognising others' emotions may be systematic over-identification biases and may partially explain the challenges some have socially. These biases and associations may be differential by emotion. In a sample of 871 ethnically and racially diverse preschool-aged children (i.e. 33-68 months; 49% Hispanic/Latine,…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Preschool Teachers, Family Characteristics, Participant Characteristics
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Hongbiao Yin; Yangyang Guo – European Journal of Education, 2024
With a sample of 470 kindergarten teachers in Hong Kong, this study first examined these teachers' emotion regulation strategies assessed by a newly adapted scale, the Kindergarten Teacher Emotion Regulation Scale. Then, the study adopted a person-centred approach and conducted the latent profile analysis, identifying different profiles of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Kindergarten, Preschool Teachers, Emotional Development
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Elena Savina; Caroline Fulton; Christina Beaton – Educational Psychology Review, 2025
The classroom represents a complex socio-cultural environment where emotions emerge as a result of instruction, learning, and interpersonal transactions. Teachers' ability to recognize, regulate, and respond to emotions in the classroom has powerful consequences for students' behavior, learning, and the teacher's own well-being. In order to be…
Descriptors: Teachers, Teacher Behavior, Affective Behavior, Emotional Intelligence
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Annika Rademacher; Jelena Zumbach; Ute Koglin – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2025
Parenting styles act as a risk or a protective factor for the development of aggressive behavior problems in children. Moreover, children with deficits in emotion regulation often show increased aggressive behaviors. Previous studies confirm that parenting style also contributes to the development of emotion dysregulation. The present longitudinal…
Descriptors: Parenting Styles, Child Development, Child Behavior, Emotional Response
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Zarra-Nezhad, Maryam; Viljaranta, Jaana; Sajaniemi, Nina; Aunola, Kaisa; Lerkkanen, Marja-Kristiina – Early Child Development and Care, 2022
This study focused on associations between children's socioemotional development (prosocial behaviour, internalizing and externalizing problems) and parenting styles (affection, behavioural control, and psychological control), and the moderating role of children's social withdrawal (as a temperamental characteristic) in these associations.…
Descriptors: Child Development, Parenting Styles, Social Development, Emotional Development
Antonia O. Nwogbo – ProQuest LLC, 2023
Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) can impact an individual physically, emotionally, and socially while also influencing cognitive development and academic outcomes. Mathematics learning requires cognitive clarity and the ability to solve problems and make decisions. Guided by the contemporary theory of trauma, the theory of allostasis, and…
Descriptors: Trauma, Early Experience, African American Students, Community College Students
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Katherine A. Grisanzio; Patrick Mair; Leah H. Somerville – Developmental Science, 2025
While day-to-day negative affect normatively rises across adolescence, emotional experiences also stratify, or diverge, across individuals. Moreover, negative affect is not a unitary construct but comprises distinct feeling states (e.g., sadness, anger, anxiety), each characterized by distinct age-related trends. Yet, most developmental research…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Adolescents, Children, Psychological Patterns
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Melissa Stoffers; Cara L. Kelly; Anamarie Whitaker; Tia Navalene Barnes – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly: Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2023
Consistent evidence points to the importance of the early childhood home environment for children's concurrent and subsequent development. Yet little is known about the long-term association between parental warmth in early childhood and children's social-emotional well-being in late childhood for children with and without disabilities. To explore…
Descriptors: Family Environment, Affective Behavior, Parent Child Relationship, Emotional Development
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Cui, Lixian; Criss, Michael M.; Ratliff, Erin; Wu, Zezhen; Houltberg, Benjamin J.; Silk, Jennifer S.; Morris, Amanda Sheffield – Developmental Psychology, 2020
Although research has demonstrated that both parents and peers influence adolescent development, it is not clear whether these relationships also serve as contexts for emotion socialization. In the current longitudinal study, we investigated whether maternal and peer emotion socialization were related to adolescent girls' daily emotions, emotion…
Descriptors: Social Development, Emotional Development, Mothers, Adolescents
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Moulton, Sara; von der Embse, Nathaniel; Kilgus, Stephen; Drymond, Mikayla – School Psychology, 2019
This study used item response theory (IRT) to derive sets of maximally efficient items (SMI) for a brief behavior rating scale (BBRS) from a common universal screening tool (i.e., the Social, Academic, and Emotional Behavior Risk Screener--Student Rating Scale [mySAEBRS]). We also evaluated the change sensitivity of these items for potential use…
Descriptors: Progress Monitoring, Behavior Rating Scales, Elementary School Students, Secondary School Students
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Luke, Jessica J.; Brenkert, Sarah; Rivera, Nicole – Journal of Early Childhood Research, 2022
Interest in social emotional learning (SEL) is higher than ever, as parents, educators, and policymakers recognize that children need more than cognitive skills for later life success. However, most SEL research has been conducted in formal education settings. This article describes results from an empirical study of 4-5 years old SEL in two…
Descriptors: Social Emotional Learning, Preschool Children, Museums, Playgrounds
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Poline Simon; Nathalie Nader-Grosbois – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2025
Objectives: Two studies were conducted to better understand how children with intellectual disabilities (ID) empathize with the feelings of others during social interactions. The first study tested hypotheses of developmental delay or difference regarding empathy in 79 children with ID by comparing them with typically developing (TD) children,…
Descriptors: Intellectual Disability, Empathy, Interaction, Interpersonal Relationship
Thaddeus Henderson – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The purpose of this study was to examine the predictability of emotional intelligence factors on the relationship quality among African American male college students. Specifically, this study was concerned with the predictable relationship between the emotional intelligence factors of emotion regulation, self-regulation, emotion management, and…
Descriptors: College Students, African American Students, Males, Emotional Intelligence
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Bruno Barac – Early Child Development and Care, 2025
Theory of mind (ToM) is the ability to attribute mental states and feelings to others, and to understand that those mental states and feelings affect their behaviour. It is one of three core developmental tasks for children in preschool years, along with emotion self-regulation and relationships with parents and family members. Given there are…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Preschool Children, Theory of Mind, Child Development
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Fantasy T. Lozada – Child Development Perspectives, 2024
Research on African American youth's emotional development provides an incomplete understanding of the cultural influences that shape emotion-related skills such as emotion expression, regulation, and understanding. In this article, I propose the multiple cultural frameworks of triple quandary theory to characterize the nature of mainstream…
Descriptors: Child Development, Emotional Development, Minority Groups, African American Culture
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