19 research outputs found
Childcare arrangements in Canada
Abstract : This study examines the longitudinal contribution of four different childcare arrangements attended during the preschool years to social behaviors and academic achievement up to age 15 years. Children participating in a Canadian longitudinal survey with available information on childcare attendance between ages 3 to 5 years (N= 6,852) were measured on multiple social behaviors (hyperactivity/inattention, depression/anxiety, disruptive behaviors) and academic outcomes (mathematic skills, academic achievement) across both childhood and adolescence. We conducted a propensity score matching analysis to control the selection bias for childcare attendance and performed generalized estimating equation models for panel data among matched groups. Our results showed no clear social or academic long-term advantage for Canadian children of attending any childcare arrangement in comparison to children being exclusively cared for by their parents. In contrast, children attending daycare centres had higher levels of hyperactivity/inattention until the age of 15 years. Children also had lower mathematic skills if attending daycare centres or informal childcare at preschool age, but this effect dissipated from childhood to adolescence. Interestingly, children from low-income families had higher levels of depression/anxiety if being cared for at home by someone other than their parents or relatives. This finding supports the dual-risk hypothesis suggesting that children from already impoverished families and attending informal childcare in their own home are at greater risk for internalizing difficulties
Classroom placement and twins' behaviors
Abstract : Classroom placement of twins is an ongoing issue for educational policy. Many educational jurisdictions have standard policy most commonly founded in the belief that separation supports individual identity, personal development and academic opportunity. This study examined the effects of classroom placement in a sample of 560 twin pairs whose behaviors were assessed from ages 5 to 12 years. We found no detrimental effect of classroom sharing on twinsâ social development. In contrast, this study provides evidence that educating twins together is associated with modest positive twinsâ behaviors and social functioning at school. Implications for educational policies are further discussed
Développement et déterminants précoces de la connaissance des nombres et des habiletés mathématiques à l'enfance
Tableau d'honneur de la FacultĂ© des Ă©tudes supĂ©rieures et postdoctorales, 2016-2017La connaissance des nombres, un prĂ©curseur des habiletĂ©s mathĂ©matiques, est essentielle Ă la maitrise de concepts fondamentaux en dĂ©but de scolarisation. On sait toutefois peu de choses des mĂ©canismes qui sous-tendent la connaissance des nombres, des facteurs qui influencent son dĂ©veloppement et de sa contribution Ă long terme au dĂ©veloppement des mathĂ©matiques. Dans le cadre de cette thĂšse doctorale, des trajectoires de dĂ©veloppement de la connaissance des nombres ont Ă©tĂ© Ă©tablies entre lâĂąge de 4 et 7 ans auprĂšs de 1597 enfants. Quatre trajectoires ont Ă©tĂ© identifiĂ©es, dont lâune est constituĂ©e dâenfants (10%) qui se caractĂ©risent par une connaissance des nombres constamment infĂ©rieure aux autres. Ces enfants ont Ă©tĂ© comparĂ©s aux autres sur leurs compĂ©tences en mathĂ©matiques Ă 8 et 10 ans, et ont Ă©galement Ă©tĂ© Ă©valuĂ©s sur diffĂ©rents aspects de leur environnement familial et sur leurs habiletĂ©s cognitives Ă 41 mois. Les rĂ©sultats montrent que les enfants avec une faible connaissance des nombres Ă lâĂąge prĂ©scolaire demeurent avec un rendement en mathĂ©matiques infĂ©rieur Ă celui des autres enfants et ce, jusquâĂ la fin de lâĂ©cole primaire. Ces enfants se caractĂ©risent dâailleurs par un revenu familial moindre, une faible scolaritĂ© du pĂšre, et des habiletĂ©s visuospatiales, une capacitĂ© de rĂ©tention et un dĂ©veloppement cognitif gĂ©nĂ©ral infĂ©rieurs Ă ceux des autres enfants. De plus, des modĂ©lisations gĂ©nĂ©tiques effectuĂ©es Ă 5, 7, et 10-12 ans montrent que lâenvironnement commun aux jumeaux (p.ex., lâĂ©ducation familiale) explique principalement les variations individuelles de la connaissance des nombres Ă lâenfance alors quâen vieillissant, ces variations sâexpliquent davantage par les facteurs gĂ©nĂ©tiques et spĂ©cifiques Ă lâenvironnement de chaque individu. Ces rĂ©sultats sont similaires pour les garçons et les filles. Les rĂ©sultats montrent Ă©galement que la variance gĂ©nĂ©tique est associĂ©e Ă la stabilitĂ© de la connaissance des nombres et Ă son association prĂ©dictive au rendement en mathĂ©matiques. Ces facteurs gĂ©nĂ©tiques expliquent aussi des changements qui sont spĂ©cifiques au rendement en mathĂ©matiques, ce qui suggĂšre lâapport de nouveaux gĂšnes au rendement en mathĂ©matiques Ă la fin de lâĂ©cole primaire. Les facteurs de lâenvironnement, commun et unique Ă chacun des jumeaux, contribuent tous deux Ă la stabilitĂ© de lâassociation entre la connaissance des nombres et le rendement en mathĂ©matiques, sans apport additionnel significatif de ces facteurs aprĂšs la pĂ©riode prĂ©scolaire. Ensemble, les rĂ©sultats de cette thĂšse rĂ©vĂšlent que la pĂ©riode prĂ©scolaire sâavĂšre la plus propice pour intervenir auprĂšs dâenfants afin de prĂ©venir les difficultĂ©s en mathĂ©matiques.Number knowledge and skills (NKS), the conceptual and procedural understanding of whole numbers, predicts later scholastic achievement. However, little is known about the mechanisms underlying the NKS, its antecedents in early childhood, and its predictive validity to later math achievement. Childrenâs NKS was assessed four times at regular intervals between the ages 4 and 7 years in a large, representative population-based sample. Developmental trajectories of NKS were established for 1597 children. Four different groups of preschoolers were identified. About 10% of the children belonged to a trajectory of constantly and significantly lower performance compared with the other trajectories. These children were compared with others on their mathematics achievement at ages 8 and 10, and were also evaluated with respect to several features of their family environment at 5, 18 and 30 months, as well as their cognitive skills at age 41 months. The results showed significant differences between the trajectories of NKS with respect to later math achievement in elementary school, with the low trajectory-group remaining low throughout these years. The onset and developmental course of low NKS were associated with low household income and father educational background, low childrenâs early cognitive development, and more specifically, weak visual-spatial skills and memory span. Children with low cognitive abilities and poor living condition are at risk of low NKS profile from late preschool to school entry, and therefore, deserve special attention to alleviate later mathematic difficulties. Moreover, genetic multivariate analysis at ages 5, 7, and 10-12 years showed that shared environmental factors between twins of the same family (e.g. sharing the same home environment) mainly explained individual variations in preschool NKS, with increased heritability with time â genetic factors play the dominant role in later math achievement, suggesting different mechanisms in math-related tasks over the years. However, these mechanisms were similar for boys and girls. Genetic factors accounted for continuity from preschool NKS to late primary math achievement, but also explained specific variations in mathematics achievement, which suggest activation of new genes relevant to mathematics in late primary school years. The shared and non-shared environmental factors involved in preschool NKS were carried over to mathematics achievement, with no additional age-specific effect after the preschool period. Altogether, the results of this thesis highlight the preschool age as an optimum window for prevention and intervention of math difficulties. Given this, screening for early NKS and math difficulties should be afforded before school entry in order to provide additional support as soon as difficulties emerge in this area
Childcare enrollment and higher education
Abstract : This study examined the associations between childcare attendance among 550 children from 24 to 36 months of age and their enrollment in higher education in young adulthood. We conducted a propensity score matching analysis to control the selection bias for childcare attendance and estimated the average treatment effect for the treated on the odds of enrollment in higher education. Children who attended informal childcare (i.e., with a relative or nanny) were more likely to pursue higher education in young adulthood relative to children in formal childcare (i.e., center-based or licensed home-based childcare). However, heterogeneity in our sample revealed that attending formal childcare increased the probability of enrollment in higher education for children from low-income and non-employed families. This study suggests that attending informal childcare in Canada in 1994â1995 benefited all children over 20 years later, whereas attending formal childcare appears to be protective for children from more disadvantaged families
Using personality traits to predict correspondence between self-perception of academic competence and achievement: A latent profile analysis study
Abstract: This study was interested in the level of correspondence between high school stu- dentsâ self-perceptions of academic competence and achievement. The objectives were to (a) identify different profiles of students in terms of correspondence be- tween perceptions of general academic competence and achievement in language arts and mathematics, (b) describe the personal and family characteristics of the students in these profiles, and (c) associate personality traits defined by the Big-Five with these profiles. A latent class analysis and a multinominal logistic regression were conducted on the data collected from 309 ninth and tenth graders. Among the most salient results, five profiles of students were identified, three of which with competence perceptions corresponding with achievement (i.e., high achievers with high self-perceived competence (SPC), average achievers with average SPC, and low achievers with lower SPC) and two with competence perceptions showing no or little correspondence with achievement (i.e., low achievers with higher SPC and average achievers with lower SPC). Also, students scoring high on openness to experience and conscientiousness were more likely to belong to the profile of high achievers with high SPC. These findings contribute to the literature on the possible reasons why students hold accurate or biased self-perceptions of competence
Temperament and externalizing problems
Abstract : This study examines how maternal adverse parenting (hostility, neglect, low warmth) and psychological distress explain the associations between child temperament factors and externalizing problems. It also examines if these associations differ according to the childâs biological sex. The sample consists of 339 school-age children receiving in-school services for conduct problems. Data were collected through questionnaires completed by mothers at 3 time points, at one-year intervals. Results from path analyses revealed that maternal psychological distress partly explained the associations between each child temperamental factors (negative affectivity, surgency/extraversion, effortful control) and levels of externalizing problems. Specifically, the indirect effect of psychological distress on child negative affectivity and externalizing problems was only significant for boys, not girls. Maternal hostility, on the other hand, mediated the association between child surgency/extraversion and externalizing problems in both boys and girls. Interestingly, neglectful parenting and maternal warmth did not explain the association between child temperamental factors and externalizing problems. The findings suggest small but significant temperament child-driven effects on maternal psychological distress and hostility, in turn, translating into higher levels of externalizing problems. These findings support the relevance of temperament-based interventions for children with conduct problems and of increased mental health support for their mothers. By aiding mothers in developing a larger repertoire of parenting strategies, mothers may be better equipped to respond appropriately to their child with various temperamental characteristics, hence, reducing their psychological distress and hostile behaviors and limiting the development of externalizing problems
Early childhood trajectories of separation anxiety : bearing on mental health, academic achievement, and physical health from midâchildhood to preadolescence
1 Background
Separation anxiety disorder is the most prevalent childhood anxiety condition, but no study assessed children for separation anxiety at preschool age and followed them longitudinally and directly until midâchildhood/early adolescence.
2 Methods
Multiâinformant (children, teachers, family), multipoint (at age 8, 10, 12, 13) assessments of 1,290 children of the Quebec Longitudinal Study of Child Development, who had been categorized between age 1.5 and 6 into four specific separation anxiety trajectories (1, lowâpersistent; 2, lowâincreasing; 3, highâdecreasing, and the less common: 4, highâincreasing) by growth mixture modeling. Participants in the highâincreasing trajectory were compared to participants in the other three trajectories for: (a) child's internalizing and externalizing problem behavior; (b) physical health; (c) academic achievement; (d) maternal anxiety.
3 Results
Multivariate analyses of variance/covariance at separate time points showed the highâincreasing trajectory mostly associated with: (a) higher internalizing, but not externalizing, behavior; (b) worse academic achievement (most consistently by comparisons to the normative lowâpersistent trajectory; (c) higher rates of maternal panic/agoraphobic anxiety; (d) worse physical health (most consistently by comparisons to the lowâpersistent trajectory). The highâincreasing trajectory had twofold to threefold higher incidences of physical illnesses than the normative lowâpersistent group; this was specific for headaches at age 12 years, chronic asthma at age 10 and 13, and having received asthmaârelated medication during the past 12 months.
4 Conclusions
Highâincreasing separation anxiety in preschool maintains longitudinal relationships to independent health and academic outcomes, at least until preadolescence. This knowledge can inform the deployment of clinical resources at the earlier signs of the more impairing manifestations
Distinct trajectories of separation anxiety in the preschool years: persistence at school entry and early-life associated factors
Background: Little is known about how children differ in the onset and evolution of separation anxiety (SA) symptoms during the preschool years, and how SA develops into separation anxiety disorder. In a large, representative population-based sample, we investigated the developmental trajectories of SA symptoms from infancy to school entry, their early associated risk factors, and their associations with teachersâ ratings of SA in kindergarten.
Methods: Longitudinal assessment of SA trajectories and risk factors in a cohort of 1933 families between the ages of 1.5 and 6 years.
Results: Analyses revealed a best-fitting, 4-trajectory solution, including a prevailing, unaffected Low-Persistent group (60.2%), and 3 smaller groups of distinct developmental course: a High-Increasing (6.9%), a High-Decreasing (10.8%) and a Low-Increasing group (22.1%). The High-Increasing group remained high throughout the preschool years and was the only trajectory linked to teacher-assessed SA in kindergarten. Except for the High-Increasing, all trajectories showed substantial reduction of symptom profile by age 6. The High-Increasing and High-Decreasing groups shared several early risk factors, but the former was uniquely associated with higher maternal depression, maternal smoking during pregnancy, and parental unemployment.
Conclusions: Most children with high SA profile at age 1.5 years are expected to progressively recover by age 4-5. High SA at age 1.5 that persists over time deserves special attention, and may predict separation anxiety disorder. A host of child perinatal, parental, and family contextual risk factors were associated with the onset and developmental course of SA across the preschool years
Persistent genetic and family-wide environmental contributions to early number knowledge and later achievement in mathematics
This study investigated the stable and transient genetic and environmental contributions to
individual differences in number knowledge in the transition from preschool (age 5) to Grade 1
(age 7) and to the predictive association between early number knowledge and later math
achievement (age 10â12). We conducted genetic simplex modeling across these three time
points. Genetic variance was transmitted from preschool number knowledge to late-elementary
math achievement; in addition, significant genetic innovation (i.e., new influence) occurred at
ages 10 through 12 years. The shared and nonshared environmental contributions decreased
during the transition from preschool to school entry, but shared and nonshared environment
contributed to the continuity across time from preschool number knowledge to subsequent
number knowledge and math achievement. There was no new environmental contribution at time
points subsequent to preschool. Results are discussed in light of their practical implications for
children who have difficulties with mathematics, as well as for preventive intervention
Unraveling the effects of maternal breastfeeding duration and exclusive breast milk on childrenâs cognitive abilities in early childhood
BackgroundThis study investigated the putative associations between mothersâ use of exclusive breast milk and the duration of breastfeeding with child cognitive development.MethodsThis study is based on 2,210 Canadian families with children assessed longitudinally from age 4 to 7âyears on their memory-span and math skills. These cognitive abilities were measured with standardized tasks. Breastfeeding practices were collected via maternal reports. We applied propensity scores to control the social selection bias for breastfeeding.ResultsResults adjusted for propensity scores and sample weight revealed no significant differences between non-breastfed children with those being non-exclusively breastfed for 5âmonths or less, and with children being exclusively breastfed for 9.2âmonths on average, on their early math skills and memory-span. We found that children who were non-exclusively breastfed for 6.8âmonths on average had a slightly higher levels of memory-span at age 4 than children who were never breastfed, and this small but significant difference lasted up to age 7.ConclusionOur findings suggest no significant differences between children being exclusively breastfed and those fed with formula on their early math skills and memory-span. The encouragement of breastfeeding to promote child cognitive school readiness may, in some case (non-exclusive breastfeeding for more than 5âmonths), show a small but long-lasting advantage in early memory-span