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The impact of parents, child care providers, teachers, and peers on early externalizing trajectories
Authors:Silver Rebecca B  Measelle Jeffrey R  Armstrong Jeffrey M  Essex Marilyn J
Affiliation:a Department of Psychology, University of Oregon, United States;b Department of Psychiatry, University of Wisconsin, United States
Abstract:This study utilized growth mixture modeling to examine the impact of parents, child care providers, teachers, and peers on the prediction of distinct developmental patterns of classroom externalizing behavior in elementary school. Among 241 children, three groups were identified. 84.6% of children exhibited consistently low externalizing behavior. The externalizing behavior of the Chronic High group (5.8%) remained elevated throughout elementary school; it increased over time in the Low Increasing group (9.5%). Negative relationships with teachers and peers in the kindergarten classroom increased the odds of having chronically high externalizing behavior. Teacher–child conflict increased the likelihood of a developmental pattern of escalating externalizing behavior. Boys were overrepresented in the behaviorally risky groups, and no sex differences in trajectory types were found.
Keywords:Externalizing trajectories   Classroom behavior   Mixture modeling   Teacher–  child relationship   Peer relationships   Parent–  child relationship
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