Sensitive caregiving in the first three years of life predicts an individual's social competence and academic achievement, not only during childhood and adolescence, but also into adulthood. |
Do the effects of early caregiving experiences remain or fade as
individuals develop? A new study has found that sensitive caregiving in
the first three years of life predicts an individual's social competence
and academic achievement, not only during childhood and adolescence,
but also into adulthood.
The study, by researchers at the University of Minnesota, the
University of Delaware, and the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign, appears in the journal Child Development. It
was carried out in an effort to replicate and expand on findings from
the NICHD Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development, which showed
that early maternal sensitivity has lasting associations with children's
social and cognitive development at least through adolescence.
"The study indicates that the quality of children's early caregiving
experiences has an enduring and ongoing role in promoting successful
social and academic development into the years of maturity," notes Lee
Raby, postdoctoral researcher at the University of Delaware, who led the
study.
Sensitive caregiving is defined as the extent to which a parent
responds to a child's signals appropriately and promptly, is positively
involved during interactions with the child, and provides a secure base
for the child's exploration of the environment.
The researchers used information from 243 individuals who were born
into poverty, came from a range of racial/ethnic backgrounds, and had
been followed from birth into adulthood (age 32) as part of the
Minnesota Longitudinal Study of Risk and Adaptation. Observations of
interactions between mothers and their children were collected four
times during the children's first three years of life. At multiple ages
during childhood and adolescence, teachers reported on children's
functioning in their peer groups and children completed standardized
tests of academic achievement. During their 20s and early 30s,
participants completed interviews in which they discussed their
experiences with romantic relationships and reported their educational
attainment.
Individuals who experienced more sensitive caregiving early in life
consistently functioned better socially and academically during the
first three decades of life, the study found. The associations were
larger for individuals' academic outcomes than for their functioning in
peer and romantic relationships. Moreover, early caregiving experiences
continued to predict individuals' academic, but not social, functioning
after accounting for early socioeconomic factors as well as children's
gender and ethnicity. Although families' economic resources were
important predictors of children's development, these variables didn't
fully account for the persistent and long-term influence of early
caregiving experiences on individuals' academic success.
"Altogether, the study suggests that children's experiences with
parents during the first few years of life have a unique role in
promoting social and academic functioning--not merely during the first
two decades of life, but also during adulthood," according to Raby.
"This suggests that investments in early parent-child relationships may
result in long-term returns that accumulate across individuals' lives.
Because individuals' success in relationships and academics represents
the foundation for a healthy society, programs and initiatives that
equip parents to interact with their children in a sensitive manner
during the first few years of their children's life can have long-term
benefits for individuals, families, and society at large."
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