Background: Previous research suggests that interactions between preschool teachers and children in early care and educational contexts can contribute to the child's positive attachment development and socioemotional adjustment.
Objective: Investigate how the transition process to preschool is organized and whether various ways of organizing it may differently influence family-teacher relationship-building and child adjustment.
Methods: Conducted a mixed methods study of quantitative and qualitative survey data from Swedish preschool professionals ( = 535).
Results: Preschool introduction varied across preschools in several structural aspects such as introduction length and intensity, timing for first child-parent separation, and number of children and teachers involved in the introduction process. Results moreover suggested that different introduction models were associated with different ways of engaging the parent, where the "parent-active" model was characterized by a high level of parental participation during the introductory activities. This was perceived by preschool professionals as positively influencing the family-teacher relational formation.
Conclusion: Findings suggest that inviting parents to participate actively in preschool transition may help better engage them in the introduction process, which in turn may positively influence family-teacher relationship-building. Future research should focus in more detail on how child-teacher and parent-teacher interactions, respectively, influence family-teacher relationship-building and child adjustment during, and after, the introduction period.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9886536 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10566-023-09735-y | DOI Listing |
Child Youth Care Forum
January 2023
Department of Psychology, Lund University, Box 213, S-221-00 Lund, Sweden.
Background: Previous research suggests that interactions between preschool teachers and children in early care and educational contexts can contribute to the child's positive attachment development and socioemotional adjustment.
Objective: Investigate how the transition process to preschool is organized and whether various ways of organizing it may differently influence family-teacher relationship-building and child adjustment.
Methods: Conducted a mixed methods study of quantitative and qualitative survey data from Swedish preschool professionals ( = 535).
Servir
September 2009
Curso de Especialização em Saúde Escolar.
It's dificult to elaborate a program of intervention/inclusion that can act as a standart for children with special learning disabilities, since their necessities are of their own; their resources, in mostof the situations, show disparity; and the problem presents different connotations for each family group. On the other hand, schools are organized differently, they have their physical conditions that more or less facilitate the mobility. They rarely manifest the ideal conditions; staff may or not be educated to work with and for these children; their acceptance and receptivity depend not only on training but also on the correct management of individual and collective expectations (closely influenced by the organizational culture of each establishment, the working experience of their professionals), among other factors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!