journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35340352/early-childhood-educators-provision-of-remote-learning-during-covid-19
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Elizabeth A Steed, Nancy Leech, Ngoc Phan, Eric Benzel
This study utilized a nationally distributed survey to explore early childhood teachers' experience of providing remote learning to young children and their families during the early months of the U.S. response to the COVID-19 pandemic. A convergent parallel mixed methods design was used to analyze 805 participants' responses to closed and open-ended survey questions. Results indicated that teachers provided various remote learning activities and spent more time planning instruction and communicating with families than providing instruction directly to children...
March 21, 2022: Early Childhood Research Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35340351/impacts-of-covid-19-on-the-early-care-and-education-sector-in-california-variations-across-program-types
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yoonjeon Kim, Elena Montoya, Sean Doocy, Lea J E Austin, Marcy Whitebook
The COVID-19 crisis has overwhelmed and weakened the United States early care and education (ECE) sector, jeopardizing a system that was already precariously situated atop a weak foundation. While multiple national- and state-level studies have highlighted the overwhelming impacts of the pandemic on the ECE sector, little has been reported about how much variation in impacts exists, and in what forms, within the ECE sector. Based on a statewide survey of 953 licensed care providers in California conducted in June 2020, this paper examines the impact of COVID-19 experienced by ECE providers, focusing on the variations between centers and family child care homes (FCCs) and among center-based programs...
March 21, 2022: Early Childhood Research Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35317528/early-childhood-educators-psychological-distress-and-wellbeing-during-the-covid-19-pandemic
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emily Berger, Gloria Quinones, Melissa Barnes, Andrea Reupert
There is growing awareness of the impacts of COVID-19 on children, families, and more recently, early childhood educators. This study aimed to add to this research and explore Australian early childhood educators' psychological distress and wellbeing in relation to COVID-19. Accordingly, 205 educators (117 early childhood educators, 86 leaders and 2 others) completed the Impact of Event Scale-Revised, measuring levels of posttraumatic distress, and an open-ended question on wellbeing, both in relation to COVID-19...
March 18, 2022: Early Childhood Research Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35185278/an-ecological-perspective-on-early-educator-well-being-at-the-start-of-the-covid-19-pandemic
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emily C Hanno, Madelyn Gardner, Stephanie M Jones, Nonie K Lesaux
Early educator well-being is increasingly understood as a critical ingredient of high-quality early education and care. The COVID-19 pandemic has threatened educator well-being by exacerbating existing stressors and introducing novel stressors to all aspects of early educators' lives, and early educators have had differential access to resources to cope with these new circumstances. Using survey data collected between April and June 2020 with a sample of 666 early educators in community-based center, family child care, Head Start, and public school prekindergarten programs across Massachusetts, we document the pandemic's initial influence on educators' sense of well-being...
February 14, 2022: Early Childhood Research Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35153375/both-sides-of-the-screen-predictors-of-parents-and-teachers-depression-and-food-insecurity-during-covid-19-related-distance-learning
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anneanne Martin, Anne Partika, Anna D Johnson, Sherri Castle, Diane Horm
The COVID-19 pandemic has placed unprecedented strains on both parents and teachers, both of whose mental and financial hardships have serious implications for young children's wellbeing. We drew on an existing cohort study of families with low incomes in Tulsa, OK when children were in their Spring of 1st grade in 2020. We surveyed parents and teachers - children's caregivers on both sides of the screen during distance learning - before and after the COVID-19 pandemic hit and schools were closed. We first compared the proportion of parents and teachers who were depressed and food-insecure before and after the pandemic struck...
February 9, 2022: Early Childhood Research Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35125643/family-socioeconomic-status-and-chinese-preschoolers-anxious-symptoms-during-the-covid-19-pandemic-the-roles-of-parental-investment-parenting-style-home-quarantine-length-and-regional-pandemic-risk
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Limin Zhang, Hongjian Cao, Chaopai Lin, Pingzhi Ye
Using data from 16,161 families with target child of 3-6 years old in Hubei, China during COVID-19 pandemic, this study examined the association between family socioeconomic status (SES) and preschoolers' anxious symptoms (PAS). Parental investment and parenting style were tested as mediators for this association. Home quarantine length was tested as a moderator for this direct association and for the associations between family SES and parenting processes, whereas regional pandemic risk was tested as a moderator for the entire model...
January 31, 2022: Early Childhood Research Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35125642/political-prioritization-of-early-childhood-education-during-the-covid-19-pandemic-a-comparative-policy-analysis-of-low-and-middle-income-countries
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michelle J Neuman, Shawn Powers
Despite strong evidence of its importance to the welfare of children and societies, early childhood education has been comparatively neglected as a policy priority both before and during the COVID-19 pandemic. This paper seeks to understand what factors have contributed to the relative lack of priority for early childhood education in distance learning and school reopening plans by applying a political prioritization framework to the pandemic context in four low- and middle-income countries: Ethiopia, Jamaica, Liberia, and Pakistan (Punjab Province)...
January 31, 2022: Early Childhood Research Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35990732/executive-function-in-kindergarten-and-the-development-of-behavior-competence-moderating-role-of-positive-parenting-practices
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michelle M Cumming, Daniel V Poling, Irina Patwardhan, Isabella C Ozenbaugh
The present study used data from the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study-Kindergarten Cohort of 2011 ( N = 15,827; 51.1% male; 48.4% White, 13.5% Black/African-American, 24.3% Hispanic/Latino, 7.5% Asian, and 6.3% other ethnicity) to examine the unique contribution of specific executive function processes (working memory and cognitive flexibility) at kindergarten entry on externalizing and internalizing behavior problems in spring of kindergarten, after controlling for fall behavior problems and demographic covariates...
2022: Early Childhood Research Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35936943/relational-uncertainty-does-parental-perception-of-adopted-children-s-academic-success-change-over-time
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tamara Turski, Stephanie N Del Tufo
While initial findings suggested that children who are adopted (adoptees) perform less well academically, this result is not consistent across the literature. To explain these, often conflicting, results, researchers acquired a lagging view, in which adoptees need to "catch up" to their non-adopted peers. According to the lagging view, those adopted at a younger age have less catching up to do than those adopted when they are older. However, the lagging view does not account for the period in which adoptees and their new families adjust to one another...
2022: Early Childhood Research Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35874171/parent-time-investments-in-their-children-s-learning-during-a-policy-mandated-shutdown-parent-child-and-household-influences
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Britt Singletary, Laura Justice, Sugene C Baker, Tzu-Jung Lin, Kelly M Purtell, Kammi K Schmeer
State-level policies in Ohio during the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic in the U.S. involved physical school closures and work-from-home requirements when possible. Presumably, these policies and resulting impacts on homes with children would alter parent time investments in their children with respect to home-learning activities. In this study, we assessed parent time investments specific to home-learning activities with their children, and key predictors of these investments. Using data from a comprehensive survey completed by 559 caregivers of children (aged birth to 9 years) during a state-mandated stay-at-home order and widespread school closure, we assessed whether parent time investments in children's learning were associated with: (1) parents' mental health and social connectedness, (2) children's level of emotional distress, and (3) household characteristics including chaos, social needs, and structure...
2022: Early Childhood Research Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35664891/classrooms-with-high-rates-of-absenteeism-and-individual-success-exploring-students-achievement-executive-function-and-socio-behavioral-outcomes
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michael Gottfried, Arya Ansari
Research and policy dialogue surrounding absenteeism has predominately focused on the school when it comes to reducing student absences, with little focus on the classroom. Further, there has also been minimal attention paid to effects of absenteeism beyond achievement outcomes. To address both, we focused on the classroom and asked whether classrooms with typically higher rates of absenteeism were linked to students' individual achievement, executive function, and social skills. We used a nationally representative dataset of children who started in kindergarten in 2010-2011 (N = 18,170) - when absenteeism is at its highest point not seen again until adolescence...
2022: Early Childhood Research Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35496376/self-regulation-development-among-young-spanish-english-dual-language-learners
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Margaret O'Brien Caughy, Dawn Y Brinkley, Daniel Pacheco, Raul Rojas, Alicia Miao, Mariah M Contreras, Margaret Tresch Owen, M Ann Easterbrooks, Megan McClelland
Despite strong evidence self-regulation skills are critical for school readiness, there remains a dearth of longitudinal studies that describe developmental trajectories of self-regulation, particularly among low-resource and underrepresented populations such as Spanish-English dual-language learners (DLLs). The present study examined individual differences in trajectories of self-regulation among 459 Spanish-English DLLs who were Hispanic from four different samples and three geographic locations in the U...
2022: Early Childhood Research Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35431429/caregivers-perceived-changes-in-engaged-time-with-preschool-aged-children-during-covid-19-familial-correlates-and-relations-to-children-s-learning-behavior-and-emotional-distress
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Xiao Zhang
The COVID-19 pandemic and its resulting containment measures have forced many children and their caregivers around the world to spend unprecedented amounts of time at home. Based on a sample of 764 households with preschool-aged children in Wuhan, China, where the pandemic began, this study examined how primary caregivers perceived changes in the amount of time spent engaging with their children (i.e., engaged time) from the start of the pandemic and whether these changes were associated with children's learning behavior and emotional distress...
2022: Early Childhood Research Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35370354/parent-child-shared-book-reading-mediates-the-impact-of-socioeconomic-status-on-heritage-language-learners-emergent-literacy
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ye Shen, Stephanie N Del Tufo
The promotion of parent-child shared book reading for the development of children's literacy is a vital component of early literacy evidence-based recommendations. A robust body of research demonstrates that, regardless of socioeconomic status, parent-child shared book reading promotes monolingual children's literacy. However, despite the growing population of heritage language learners in the United States, those who grow up in homes where a familial language is spoken but receive English instruction at school, parent-child shared book reading research among heritage language learners remains scarce...
2022: Early Childhood Research Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35273424/reciprocal-patterns-of-peer-speech-in-preschoolers-with-and-without-hearing-loss
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lynn K Perry, Samantha G Mitsven, Stephanie Custode, Laura Vitale, Brett Laursen, Chaoming Song, Daniel S Messinger
Children with hearing loss often attend inclusive preschool classrooms aimed at improving their spoken language skills. Although preschool classrooms are fertile environments for vocal interaction with peers, little is known about the dyadic processes that influence children's speech to one another and foster their language abilities and how these processes may vary in children with hearing loss. We used new objective measurement approaches to identify and quantify children's vocalizations during social contact, as determined by children's proximity and mutual orientation...
2022: Early Childhood Research Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35068671/school-uniforms-and-student-behavior-is-there-a-link
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Arya Ansari, Michael Shepard, Michael A Gottfried
Whether or not schoolchildren exhibit better behavior in the context of wearing uniforms has been a long-standing area of debate in education. Nonetheless, there has been little empirical inquiry into the benefits or drawbacks of school uniform policies. To contribute new insights to the dialogue, the present investigation used nationally representative data from the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study Kindergarten Class of 2011 ( n = 6,320) to examine students' social-behavioral and engagement outcomes across the elementary school years as a function of school uniform policies...
2022: Early Childhood Research Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35058673/teaching-spanish-speaking-caregivers-to-implement-emt-en-espa%C3%A3-ol-a-small-randomized-trial
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tatiana Nogueira Peredo, Jeannette Mancilla-Martinez, Kelley Durkin, Ann Kaiser
Purpose: The primary purpose of this study was to examine the effects of using the Teach-Model-Coach-Review approach to teach Spanish-speaking caregivers from low-income households to implement EMT en Español with their young children with language delays. A secondary purpose was to explore the effects of the caregiver-implemented intervention on children's vocabulary. A final and more exploratory goal was to gain insight into caregivers' perceptions of the intervention. Method: 21 caregiver-child dyads participated in the intent-to-treat randomized control trial...
2022: Early Childhood Research Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34658506/challenging-parenting-behaviors-in-ethnically-diverse-two-parent-families-in-the-united-states-association-with-infants-social-competence-and-behavior-problems
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Audrey-Ann Deneault, Natasha Cabrera, Rachel Ghosh, Ann-Sophie Tölle, Jenny Seethaler, Mirjana Majdandžić, Stephanie M Reich
We used data from a sample of ethnically diverse first-time parents ( N = 186) in the United States to examine differences between mothers' and fathers' challenging parenting behaviors (CPB) when infants were 9 months old as well as covariates of CPB. We also examined associations between CPB and infants' social competence and behavior problems when they were 12 months old. Results showed no differences between mothers and fathers in the level of CPB with their infants. Mothers with more depressive symptoms engaged in more CPB...
2022: Early Childhood Research Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34955598/silent-expectations-an-exploration-of-women-pre-kindergarten-teachers-mental-health-and-wellness-during-covid-19-and-beyond
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Vanessa Rodriguez, Natalia M Rojas, Ayesha Rabadi-Raol, Mariana V Souto-Manning, Laurie M Brotman
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
December 22, 2021: Early Childhood Research Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34955597/heterogeneity-in-maternal-and-child-mental-health-responses-to-the-covid-19-pandemic
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sumayya Saleem, Samantha Burns, Olesya Falenchuk, Petr Varmuza, Michal Perlman
We used latent profile analysis on a longitudinal dataset to examine changes in maternal and child mental health during COVID-19 and factors that may protect against declines in mental health. Participants were 183 low-income mothers ( M  = 36 years) with young children ( M  = 5.31 years) in the City of Toronto with data collected prior to and during the pandemic in 2020. Mothers reported on their own stress, anxiety and depression and their children's emotional, conduct, hyperactivity, peer and prosocial problems at both timepoints...
December 20, 2021: Early Childhood Research Quarterly
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