Relationship between home literacy environment and emotional regulation in children: the mediating effect of the parent-child relationship
ZHANG Jia-Lin1,2, YAO Meng-Meng1, WANG Jing-Yu1,3, WANG Xiu-Hong1,3, WANG Cai1,3, ZHANG Yue1,3, LI Yan-Wei4, CHI Xia1
1.Department of Child Healthcare, Women's Hospital of Nanjing Medical University/Nanjing Maternity and Child Health Care Hospital, Nanjing 210004, China 4.School of Early-Childhood Education, Nanjing Xiaozhuang University, Nanjing 211171, China
Abstract:Objective To study the impact of the home literacy environment on children's emotional regulation skills and the mediating role of the parent-child relationship between them. Methods A stratified cluster sampling approach was employed to select 1 626 preschool children from five kindergartens in Nanjing. Questionnaires were used to collect detailed information on the home literacy environment, children's emotional regulation skills, and the parent-child relationship. A mediation model was established using the Process program in SPSS macro, and the significance of the mediation effect was tested using the Bootstrap method. Results The findings revealed a positive correlation between the home literacy environment and children's emotional regulation skills (r=0.217, P<0.001), as well as parent-child intimacy (r=0.065, P<0.01). Conversely, a negative correlation was found between the home literacy environment and parent-child conflict (r=-0.129, P<0.001). Additionally, parent-child conflict demonstrated a negative correlation with children's emotional regulation skills (r=-0.443, P<0.001), while parent-child intimacy exhibited a positive correlation (r=0.247, P<0.001). The home literacy environment exerted a significant direct effect on children's emotional regulation skills (β=0.162, P<0.001), and the mediating effect of the parent-child relationship accounted for 25.54% of the total effect. Conclusions The home literacy environment significantly influences children's emotional regulation skills, with the parent-child relationship partially mediating this relationship.
ZHANG Jia-Lin,YAO Meng-Meng,WANG Jing-Yu et al. Relationship between home literacy environment and emotional regulation in children: the mediating effect of the parent-child relationship[J]. CJCP, 2023, 25(11): 1180-1185.
Cooke JE, Kochendorfer LB, Stuart-Parrigon KL, et al. Parent-child attachment and children's experience and regulation of emotion: a meta-analytic review[J]. Emotion, 2019, 19(6): 1103-1126. PMID: 30234329. DOI: 10.1037/emo0000504.
Hajal NJ, Paley B. Parental emotion and emotion regulation: a critical target of study for research and intervention to promote child emotion socialization[J]. Dev Psychol, 2020, 56(3): 403-417. PMID: 32077713. DOI: 10.1037/dev0000864.
Tan L, Smith CL. Intergenerational transmission of maternal emotion regulation to child emotion regulation: moderated mediation of maternal positive and negative emotions[J]. Emotion, 2019, 19(7): 1284-1291. PMID: 30234331. DOI: 10.1037/emo0000523.
Hutton JS, Dudley J, Horowitz‐Kraus T, et al. Associations between home literacy environment, brain white matter integrity and cognitive abilities in preschool-age children[J]. Acta Paediatr, 2020, 109(7): 1376-1386. PMID: 31854046. PMCID: PMC7318131. DOI: 10.1111/apa.15124.
9 Foster MA, Lambert R, Abbott-Shim M, et al. A model of home learning environment and social risk factors in relation to children's emergent literacy and social outcomes[J]. Early Child Res Q, 2005, 20(1): 13-36. DOI: 10.1016/j.ecresq.2005.01.006.
Kerns KA, Abraham MM, Schlegelmilch A, et al. Mother-child attachment in later middle childhood: assessment approaches and associations with mood and emotion regulation[J]. Attach Hum Dev, 2007, 9(1): 33-53. PMID: 17364481. DOI: 10.1080/14616730601151441.
Shields A, Cicchetti D. Emotion regulation among school-age children: the development and validation of a new criterion Q-sort scale[J]. Dev Psychol, 1997, 33(6): 906-916. PMID: 9383613. DOI: 10.1037//0012-1649.33.6.906.
25 Pianta RC, Harbers KL. Observing mother and child behavior in a problem-solving situation at school entry: relations with academic achievement[J]. J Sch Psychol, 1996, 34(3): 307-322. DOI: 10.1016/0022-4405(96)00017-9.
Zhang X, Chen H. Reciprocal influences between parents' perceptions of mother-child and father-child relationships: a short-term longitudinal study in Chinese preschoolers[J]. J Genet Psychol, 2010, 171(1): 22-34. PMID: 20333893. DOI: 10.1080/00221320903300387.
Murray L, Jennings S, Mortimer A, et al. The impact of early-years provision in children's centres (EPICC) on child cognitive and socio-emotional development: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial[J]. Trials, 2018, 19(1): 450. PMID: 30134990. PMCID: PMC6103971. DOI: 10.1186/s13063-018-2700-x.
Melhuish E, Belsky J, Leyland AH, et al. Effects of fully-established sure start local programmes on 3-year-old children and their families living in England: a quasi-experimental observational study[J]. Lancet, 2008, 372(9650): 1641-1647. PMID: 18994661. DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(08)61687-6.
Horton AL, Russell BS, Tambling RR, et al. Predictors of children's emotion regulation outcomes during COVID-19: role of conflict within the family[J]. Fam Relat, 2022, 71(4): 1339-1353. PMID: 35942050. PMCID: PMC9350158. DOI: 10.1111/fare.12717.
Yu L, Renzaho AMN, SHI L, et al. The effects of family financial stress and primary caregivers' levels of acculturation on children's emotional and behavioral problems among humanitarian refugees in Australia [J]. Int J Environ Res Public Health, 2020, 17(8): 2716. PMID: 32326523. PMCID: PMC7215682. DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17082716.