AI Article Synopsis

  • Most preschoolers in industrialized countries experience stress in child care environments due to underdeveloped social skills, prompting the need for targeted interventions.
  • A study utilized a cluster randomized control trial to test the effectiveness of a social skill training program, implemented over 8 months, in 19 public child care services in Montreal for preschoolers from underprivileged neighborhoods.
  • The program aimed to enhance social behaviors and lower stress levels, measuring outcomes like disruptive and prosocial behaviors and cortisol levels, while also examining educators' practices as potential influencing factors.

Article Abstract

Background: Most preschoolers growing up in western industrialized countries receive child care services (CCS) during the day, while their parents are at work. Meta-analytic data suggest that CCS represent a stressful experience for preschoolers. This may be because preschoolers have not yet developed the social skills necessary to cope with the new and rapidly fluctuating social contexts of CCS. We tested the effectiveness of a child care-based social skill training program aiming to improve children's social behaviors and reduce the stress they experience.

Method And Design: We used a cluster randomized control trial (cRCT) to compare children's social behaviors and stress levels in pre- and post-intervention according to whether they received a social skill training intervention or not. Nineteen (n = 19) public CCS (n = 362, 3-years-old preschoolers) of underprivileged neighborhoods (Montreal, Canada) were randomized to one of two conditions: 1) social skills training (n = 10 CCS); or 2) waiting list control group (n = 9 CCS). Educators in the intervention group conducted bi-weekly social skills training sessions over a period of 8 months. The intervention covered four topics: making social contacts, problem solving, emotional self-regulation, as well as emotional expression and recognition. Main outcome measures included preschoolers' disruptive (e.g. aggression, opposition, conflicts) and prosocial behaviors (e.g. sharing toys, helping another child), and stress levels assessed by salivary cortisol sampling at pre and post intervention assessments. Educators' practices will be tested as potential mediators of the expected changes in behaviors and neuroendocrine stress.

Discussion: To our knowledge, this is the first cRCT to test the effectiveness of a child care based social skill training program on the reduction of disruptive behaviors and levels of stress. Significant challenges include the degree of adherence to the intervention protocol as well educators and preschoolers' turnover.

Trial Registration: Current clinical trial number is ISRCTN84339956 (Ongoing study, Retrospectively registered on March 2017) No amendment to initial protocol.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5545840PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40359-017-0197-9DOI Listing

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