Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/36463
Title: Building young children’s emotional competence and self- regulation from birth : the begin to... ECSEL approach
Authors: Housman, Donna K.
Denham, Susanne A.
Cabral, Howard
Keywords: Empathy
Child development -- Research
Emotional maturity
Interpersonal relations
Maturation (Psychology)
Emotional intelligence
Issue Date: 2018-11
Publisher: University of Malta. Centre for Resilience and Socio-Emotional Health
Citation: Housman, D. K., Denham, S. A., & Cabral, H. (2018). Building young children’s emotional competence and self- regulation from birth : the begin to... ECSEL approach. International Journal of Emotional Education, 10(3), 5-25.
Abstract: Neuroscientific advances and child development studies show 0-6 years represents a sensitive period for the development of emotional competence—the ability to identify, understand, express and regulate emotion, all foundational to self-regulation. Research suggests optimum teaching of emotional competence and self-regulation skills from birth is through interventions emphasizing co-regulation. This study aimed to examine begin to...ECSEL, an emotional cognitive and social early learning approach that promotes emotional competence and self-regulation by teaching emotion knowledge and emotion regulation through causal talk and causal talk in the emotional experience. The study collected data over three years from 100 students, aged 2-6, receiving begin to...ECSEL. Study goals were to: (1) examine growth over one academic year among students receiving begin to...ECSEL on measures of attachment/relationship, initiative, self- regulation, emotion knowledge, emotion regulation, and related constructs involving empathy, prosocial skills, positive reactions to frustration, negative emotions and aggressive behaviours; (2) examine differences between these students and national normative samples on measures of attachment/relationship, initiative, and self- regulation; and (3) explore differences between these students and normative samples on all the aforementioned constructs. Results demonstrated students significantly improved over time in these constructs and outperformed normative samples on emotionally regulated/prosocial skills, empathy, self-regulation, attachment and initiative.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar//handle/123456789/36463
ISSN: 20737629
Appears in Collections:IJEE, Volume 10 Issue 2
IJEE, Volume 10 Issue 2

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