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Effects of positive and negative adult-child interactions on children's social preference
Authors:William H Redd  Edward K Morris  Jerry A Martin
Affiliation:University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA;University of Minnesota, USA
Abstract:The effects of positive and negative interactions on children's performance and preferences for the adults associated with each type of interaction were studied. Five children served as subjects during daily sessions in which each of three adults followed prescribed patterns of social interaction. One adult (positive) dispensed positive comments contingent upon either color-sorting or completion of arithmetic problems; a second adult (negative) mildly reprimanded the child for off-task behavior; and the third adult (extinction or nonreactive) said nothing to the child when he was present. Following each session the three adults reentered and the child chose one of them for an additional period of interaction. Three response measures (frequency, latency, and percent of time on-task) and children's adult preferences were obtained daily. The negative adult affected the most task behavior and had strongest stimulus control; the positive adult, though exerting little control over children's behavior, was the most preferred. Children's adult preferences were not specific to the task setting, but were observed across a variety of contexts.
Keywords:Reprint requests should be sent to W. H. Redd   Psychology Department   Children's Research Center   51 E. Gerty Drive   Champaign   IL 61820.
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