The association of socioeconomic status with academic readiness and school achievement is well established. However, the specific contributions of cognitive and social aspects of self-regulation, and potential reciprocal relations between them in the prediction of school readiness and early school achievement have not previously been examined. This study examined mediational processes involving children's executive function (EF) skills at 58 months and Grade 1 (G1) and social competence in Kindergarten (K) and G1, as potential pathways by which early-life poverty-related risks influence Grade 2 (G2) math and reading achievement. Data came from the Family Life Project, which is a prospective longitudinal study of 1,292 children and families ...
This study examines the mechanisms through which a risk factor such as poverty exerts its well-esta...
Given the rapid development of the prefrontal cortex that takes between the ages of three and five, ...
In a predominantly low-income, population-based longitudinal sample of 1,259 children followed from ...
Based on evidence that socioeconomic-related achievement gaps emerge prior to school entry, many res...
Research shows that executive function and social–behavioral adjustment during the preschool years a...
Research shows that executive function and social-behavioral adjustment during the preschool years a...
The present investigation examines the competence of high-risk children as they face the challenges ...
Executive functions are important higher-order cognitive skills for goal-directed thought and action...
The current study explored whether socioemotional competence contributed to children’s academic succ...
This study contributes to understandings of early childhood self-regulation and executive function, ...
Because poor children are at greater risk of academic underachievement compared to more affluent chi...
Executive functions (EFs), specifically a child\u27s ability to shift between two stimuli and a chil...
Executive function (EF), a collective of cognitive processes which include working memory, flexibili...
Studies have demonstrated significant associations between executive function (EF) and reading abili...
From a young age, executive functioning begins to develop in children. Executive functions are a gro...
This study examines the mechanisms through which a risk factor such as poverty exerts its well-esta...
Given the rapid development of the prefrontal cortex that takes between the ages of three and five, ...
In a predominantly low-income, population-based longitudinal sample of 1,259 children followed from ...
Based on evidence that socioeconomic-related achievement gaps emerge prior to school entry, many res...
Research shows that executive function and social–behavioral adjustment during the preschool years a...
Research shows that executive function and social-behavioral adjustment during the preschool years a...
The present investigation examines the competence of high-risk children as they face the challenges ...
Executive functions are important higher-order cognitive skills for goal-directed thought and action...
The current study explored whether socioemotional competence contributed to children’s academic succ...
This study contributes to understandings of early childhood self-regulation and executive function, ...
Because poor children are at greater risk of academic underachievement compared to more affluent chi...
Executive functions (EFs), specifically a child\u27s ability to shift between two stimuli and a chil...
Executive function (EF), a collective of cognitive processes which include working memory, flexibili...
Studies have demonstrated significant associations between executive function (EF) and reading abili...
From a young age, executive functioning begins to develop in children. Executive functions are a gro...
This study examines the mechanisms through which a risk factor such as poverty exerts its well-esta...
Given the rapid development of the prefrontal cortex that takes between the ages of three and five, ...
In a predominantly low-income, population-based longitudinal sample of 1,259 children followed from ...