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Socialization of Emotion Regulation in Preschool Classrooms: Do Peers Matter?
  • Tatiana Diebold,
  • Ann-kathrin Jaggy,
  • Sonja Perren
Tatiana Diebold
Thurgau University of Teacher Education

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Ann-kathrin Jaggy
Thurgau University of Teacher Education
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Sonja Perren
Thurgau University of Teacher Education
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Abstract

The development of emotional competence is an important milestone during early childhood. Beyond early experience within the family, the (preschool) classroom is a relevant socialization context, and both teachers and peers may contribute to children’s emotion-related outcomes. Tracking changes in the emotion regulation competence of N = 173 preschool children (age in months: M = 43.3, SD = 6.6, 45% girls) over 6 months, the current study investigated whether and how peers contribute to differences in the development of emotion regulation in preschool classrooms. The research questions were addressed by examining three different kinds of peer groups: Classroom-level peer group, friendship group, and high-status peers. Teachers rated children’s emotion regulation competence and empathic co-regulation behavior at three assessment points. Multilevel growth modeling provided evidence that friendship-group empathic co-regulation (empathy, helping, and comforting behavior) predicted changes in preschoolers’ emotion regulation over time, confirming that friendship groups influence young children’s emotional development.
Submitted to Infant and Child Development: prenatal, childhood, adolescence, emerging adulthood
15 May 20241st Revision Received
16 May 2024Assigned to Editor
16 May 2024Submission Checks Completed
13 Jul 2024Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
19 Jul 2024Editorial Decision: Revise Minor
29 Oct 20242nd Revision Received
29 Oct 2024Submission Checks Completed
29 Oct 2024Assigned to Editor
30 Oct 2024Reviewer(s) Assigned