Graduation date: 2007
Recent research has examined complex relationships between parent and child
characteristics and the development of children’s social-emotional competencies. The over-arching objective of the current study was to compare differential patterns of predictability between the individual social-emotional competencies of cooperation, responsibility, and independence, and a social-emotional competency composite, to parental warmth and child temperament.
Thus, this study examined direct and interactive effects of parental warmth,
and children’s effortful control as they predict children’s general social-emotional
competency as well three specific social-emotional competencies --
cooperation, responsibility, and independence -- in a diverse sample of four year-old children. Results found that parent and child characteristics most strongly predicted the social-emotional competency composite variable, supporting this construct in future research.