Promoting Toddlers' Positive Social-Emotional Outcomes in Low-Income Families: A Play-Based Experimental Study
- Authors
- Kochanska, Grazyna; Kim, Sanghag; Boldt, Lea J.; Nordling, Jamie Koenig
- Issue Date
- Sep-2013
- Publisher
- Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Inc.
- Citation
- Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology, v.42, no.5, pp 700 - 712
- Pages
- 13
- Indexed
- SSCI
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology
- Volume
- 42
- Number
- 5
- Start Page
- 700
- End Page
- 712
- URI
- https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/162059
- DOI
- 10.1080/15374416.2013.782815
- ISSN
- 1537-4416
1537-4424
- Abstract
- This multimethod study of mothers and toddlers (a) examined the effectiveness of a play-based intervention (child-oriented play vs. play-as-usual) on children's cooperation with their mothers and socioemotional competence; (b) introduced a robust new measure of maternal engagement in the intervention, reflected in the dose of child-oriented play the mother delivered to the child; and (c) examined ecological factors that predicted maternal engagement, and the effect of engagement on the outcomes. Low-income mothers (N=186, 11% Latino, 27% minority) were randomized into child-oriented play group or play-as-usual group, participated in 8 play sessions, and played daily with their children for 10 weeks. Microscopic coding of mothers' behavior in play sessions assessed the dose of child-oriented play delivered to children; mothers' diaries assessed time in daily play. Children's cooperation with maternal control, observed in the laboratory, and mother-rated competence were measured before randomization (Pretest), after play sessions (Posttest 1), and 6 months later (Posttest 2). Children in both groups made significant gains in both outcomes. The gains in cooperation appeared longer lasting in child-oriented play group. Both groups made significantly greater gains than a historical community control group, an unrelated longitudinal study without any intervention. Structural equation analyses revealed that married mothers and those with fewer children delivered higher doses of child-oriented play, and those doses predicted children's higher cooperation and competence, with the effects of earlier scores covaried. The dose of time spent in daily play had no effect. Child-oriented play may be a promising, effective, and inexpensive means of promoting toddlers' positive development.
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