Early Physical Health Problems as Developmental Liabilities for School Readiness: Associations with Early Learning Contexts and Family Socioeconomic Status

Thesis advisor: Rebekah Levine Coley === Emerging research suggests that children's physical health may account for some of the variability in developmental competencies at school entry, which are the cognitive, learning, and behavioral skills necessary for long-term academic achievement. Most...

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Main Author: Kull, Melissa
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Boston College 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:104143
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spelling ndltd-BOSTON-oai-dlib.bc.edu-bc-ir_1041432019-05-10T07:37:47Z Early Physical Health Problems as Developmental Liabilities for School Readiness: Associations with Early Learning Contexts and Family Socioeconomic Status Kull, Melissa Thesis advisor: Rebekah Levine Coley Text thesis 2015 Boston College English electronic application/pdf Emerging research suggests that children's physical health may account for some of the variability in developmental competencies at school entry, which are the cognitive, learning, and behavioral skills necessary for long-term academic achievement. Most studies on children's health find that neonatal risks, like low birth weight and premature birth, impair children's early functioning, but little is known about other domains of children's health, like global health or acute and chronic conditions, which may be associated with functioning at school entry. Moreover, it is unclear what role physical health may play in children's access to and engagement in home and early childhood education center-based learning contexts, which may function as pathways linking early health disparities with later development. This dissertation tested direct associations between a range of childhood health problems and school readiness skills at kindergarten entry, as well as indirect and interacted associations with early learning contexts. Given the well-established socioeconomic gradient in both health and development, analyses also explored whether associations linking health and development were conditional on family socioeconomic status. Data were drawn from the nationally representative Early Childhood Longitudinal Study (Birth Cohort; N = 5,900), which follows a cohort of children born in 2001 from infancy through kindergarten entry. Linear regressions and path analyses revealed that four of five health conditions were associated with lower school readiness skills, most consistently in the domains of cognitive and learning skills. Neonatal risks, poor health, and hospitalization functioned directly to predict lower cognitive and learning skills, where as asthma diagnosis predicted heightened learning skills. Only poor health functioned indirectly through more restricted home learning activities. Children's time in ECE functioned in a compensatory role to attenuate associations between hospitalization and lower school readiness skills. Across all models, there was no evidence that measured associations varied across the family socioeconomic spectrum. Findings highlight the importance of interdisciplinary research on child well-being and draw attention to potential avenues for prevention and intervention. School readiness Copyright is held by the author, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise noted. Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2015. Submitted to: Boston College. Lynch School of Education. Discipline: Counseling, Developmental and Educational Psychology. http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:104143 Childhood health Child development
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic School readiness
Childhood health
Child development
spellingShingle School readiness
Childhood health
Child development
Kull, Melissa
Early Physical Health Problems as Developmental Liabilities for School Readiness: Associations with Early Learning Contexts and Family Socioeconomic Status
description Thesis advisor: Rebekah Levine Coley === Emerging research suggests that children's physical health may account for some of the variability in developmental competencies at school entry, which are the cognitive, learning, and behavioral skills necessary for long-term academic achievement. Most studies on children's health find that neonatal risks, like low birth weight and premature birth, impair children's early functioning, but little is known about other domains of children's health, like global health or acute and chronic conditions, which may be associated with functioning at school entry. Moreover, it is unclear what role physical health may play in children's access to and engagement in home and early childhood education center-based learning contexts, which may function as pathways linking early health disparities with later development. This dissertation tested direct associations between a range of childhood health problems and school readiness skills at kindergarten entry, as well as indirect and interacted associations with early learning contexts. Given the well-established socioeconomic gradient in both health and development, analyses also explored whether associations linking health and development were conditional on family socioeconomic status. Data were drawn from the nationally representative Early Childhood Longitudinal Study (Birth Cohort; N = 5,900), which follows a cohort of children born in 2001 from infancy through kindergarten entry. Linear regressions and path analyses revealed that four of five health conditions were associated with lower school readiness skills, most consistently in the domains of cognitive and learning skills. Neonatal risks, poor health, and hospitalization functioned directly to predict lower cognitive and learning skills, where as asthma diagnosis predicted heightened learning skills. Only poor health functioned indirectly through more restricted home learning activities. Children's time in ECE functioned in a compensatory role to attenuate associations between hospitalization and lower school readiness skills. Across all models, there was no evidence that measured associations varied across the family socioeconomic spectrum. Findings highlight the importance of interdisciplinary research on child well-being and draw attention to potential avenues for prevention and intervention. === Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2015. === Submitted to: Boston College. Lynch School of Education. === Discipline: Counseling, Developmental and Educational Psychology.
author Kull, Melissa
author_facet Kull, Melissa
author_sort Kull, Melissa
title Early Physical Health Problems as Developmental Liabilities for School Readiness: Associations with Early Learning Contexts and Family Socioeconomic Status
title_short Early Physical Health Problems as Developmental Liabilities for School Readiness: Associations with Early Learning Contexts and Family Socioeconomic Status
title_full Early Physical Health Problems as Developmental Liabilities for School Readiness: Associations with Early Learning Contexts and Family Socioeconomic Status
title_fullStr Early Physical Health Problems as Developmental Liabilities for School Readiness: Associations with Early Learning Contexts and Family Socioeconomic Status
title_full_unstemmed Early Physical Health Problems as Developmental Liabilities for School Readiness: Associations with Early Learning Contexts and Family Socioeconomic Status
title_sort early physical health problems as developmental liabilities for school readiness: associations with early learning contexts and family socioeconomic status
publisher Boston College
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:104143
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