In this study, self-regulation was examined in relation to maternal limit setting during toddlerhood. Observational coding of limit-setting interactions was carried out at 12, 24, and 36 months using the Prohibition Coding Scheme (Houck & LeCuyer, 1995;. At five years, self-regulation was assessed by observation of self-imposed delay-of-gratification (Shoda, Mischel, & Peake, 1990), and behavior problems were measured by maternal report on a behavior checklist (CBCL; Achenbach, 1991). Maternal limit-setting patterns at every age differentiated subsequent duration of delay, but not behavior problems. A power-based maternal pattern in limit setting adversely affected later selfimposed delay. Although an indirect limit-setting pattern optimized the child's delay duration, a teachingbased pattern yielded more consistently positive outcomes at 36 months and normative delay durations at age five years.RESUMEN: En este estudio se examinó la autorregulación en relación con la forma como las madres ponen límites durante los primeros años del infante. La codificación de la observación de las interacciones en cuanto a poner límites se llevó a cabo a los 12, 24 y 36 meses, usando el Esquema de Codificación de la Prohibición (Houck y LeCuyer, 1995; LeCuyer-Maus y Houck, 2000). A los 5 años, la autorregulación fue evaluada por medio de la observación de la autoimpuesta demora de la gratificación (Shoda, Mischel y Peake, 1990), y los problemas de conducta fueron medidos por medio del informe materno tomando como base una lista de situaciones de conducta (CBCL; Achenbach, 1991). Los patrones de cómo las madres imponen límites a cada una de las edades diferenciaron las duraciones subsecuentes de la demora, pero no los problemas de conducta. Un patrón materno de poner límites, basado en el control del poder, afectó adversamente la posterior autoimpuesta demora. Aunque un patrón indirecto de poner límites mejoró la duración de la demora impuesta por el niño, un patrón basado en la enseñanza produjo más consistentemente resultados positivos a los 36 meses y las duraciones normativas de las demoras a la edad de 5 años.RÉ SUMÉ : Dans cette étude, la régulation de soi a été examinée par rapport à la manière dont la mère impose des limites durant la petite enfance. Le codage observationnel d'interactions durant lesquelles des limites étaient imposées ont été faits à l'âge de 12, 24 et 36 mois, en utilisant le plan de codage de
Maternal report on four characteristics was obtained for 126 infants at 8, 12, 24, and 36 months of age. Temperament was assessed using the Revised Infant and Toddler Temperament Scales; the Infant/Child Monitoring Questionnaires were used to screen developmental competence. The Self-Concept Questionnaire and the Adaptive Social Behavior Inventory were outcome measures at 12, 24, and 36 months. Temperament and developmental competence were found to be relatively stable but unrelated over time. The second year, 12-24 months, was a salient period of development in which the greatest increases in self-concept and social competence were observed. Correlation analyses revealed temperament difficulty was negatively related to social competence yet unrelated to self-concept; developmental competence was more strongly related to the developing self-concept than social competence. The strongest relationships between social competence and self-concept were obtained by earlier social competence in relation to subsequent self-concept.
Early findings from the Prohibition Coding Scheme (PCS; Houck & LeCuyer, 1995; LeCuyer‐Maus & Houck, 2002; Medvin & Spieker, 1985) revealed that maternal limit‐setting styles with toddlers were differentially related to later child social competence, self‐concept, and delay of gratification. For this study, the PCS was revised to provide more information about the specific strategies mothers used during limit‐setting in relation to those outcomes. Results from the PCS‐Revised (PCS‐R; LeCuyer & Houck, 2004) included that the more time mothers spent actively distracting their toddlers away from a prohibited object during limit‐setting, as early as 12 months, the longer their children could delay gratification at age 5 years. Mothers who spent more time sensitively following and being engaged in their toddler's own interests (other than the prohibited object), again as early as 12 months, had more socially competent children with more developed self‐concepts at age 3 years. Maternal use of reasoning statements later in toddlerhood also related to higher levels of social competence. Maternal limits and prohibitions were not related to these outcomes, and appeared to contribute to the development of self‐regulation mainly by creating the opportunity for the use of other, less directive strategies. The findings indicate that these strategies may be important to include in intervention programs for the promotion of toddler and child development of self‐regulation.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.