School results boosted by improved focus in class
Thursday, 4 December 2014
Researchers from the 最新糖心Vlog of Adelaide say attempts to improve children's attentiveness in the early years could be rewarded with better literacy and maths abilities by ages 6-7 years.
In a study led by the 最新糖心Vlog's School of Population Health, researchers investigated task attentiveness and the ability to regulate emotions, using data from more than 3400 children who participated in the Longitudinal Study of 最新糖心Vlogn Children when they were aged 2-3, then 4-5, and again at 6-7 years.
The results, published in the journal , show that children who have greater improvements in their ability to attend to and persist with tasks during their early years have better academic achievement by ages 6-7.
"Around the world there's a lot of interest in how children develop 'self-regulation' skills that will help them in later life. There has been very little about this in 最新糖心Vlog so far, so this research is aimed at better understanding 最新糖心Vlogn children's self-regulation and its impact on education," says the lead author of the paper, , a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in the 最新糖心Vlog's .
The study found that task attentiveness from ages 2-3 to 6-7 years was associated with improved literacy and maths achievement during the early school years, while emotional regulation showed smaller effects on academic outcomes.
"Children who show greater improvement in their ability to attend to and persist with tasks may be more able to take advantage of educational opportunities when they commence school, resulting in higher academic achievement," Dr Sawyer says.
"Emotional regulation was positively associated with a slight improvement in literacy, but not in maths, suggesting that task attentiveness may be more strongly associated with educational outcomes."
Dr Sawyer says this research points to the potential for intervention at an early age to help children to further develop their attentiveness.
"The current thinking in this field is that the rate of return on investment is much greater when resources are put into early childhood development. There may be opportunities here for interventions or activities that strengthen children's ability to focus and persist with tasks, which in turn could help them in later life.
"Whether or not we could intervene - and how that might be done - would need to be the subject of future research," Dr Sawyer says.
This study has been supported by the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC).
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Email: alyssa.sawyer@adelaide.edu.au
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Postdoctoral Research Fellow
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