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Instruction begins in the home: Relations between parental instruction and children's self-regulation in the classroom.
Authors:Stright  Anne Dopkins; Neitzel  Carin; Sears  Kathy Garza; Hoke-Sinex  Linda
Abstract:The study examined the effectiveness of 3 aspects of parental instruction for predicting children's self-regulation in school. Fathers, mothers, and their children (52 families) were visited in their homes the summer before the child entered 3rd grade. Metacognitive content (task and strategy information), manner of instruction (small steps at an appropriate pace), and emotional support were coded from parents' instructions to their children for a problem-solving task. Children's self-regulatory behaviors in the classroom were assessed the following school year. Two patterns of relations were observed. Manner of instruction predicted children's attention to instructions and help-seeking in the classroom. Metacognitive content of instructions did not predict these aspects of self-regulation. In contrast, metacognitive content of instructions presented in an understandable manner with emotional support predicted children's monitoring and metacognitive talk. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)
Keywords:parental instruction  self regulation  metacognitive content  emotional support  problem solving  classroom behavior
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