Developmental Psychology Flashcards
CHALLENGES IN ASSESSING SOCIO-EMOTIONAL PROBLEMS IN CHILDREN
RAPID DEVELOPMENTAL TRANSITIONS
LACK OF DATA INTEGRATION
DIFFICULTY DETERMINING IMPAIRMENT
RAPID DEVELOPMENTAL TRANSITIONS
CARTER ET AL. (2004)
- many behs clinically relevant in older kids may be normal in young kids
- ie. temper tantrums in toddlers may reflect emerging sense of self BUT may cause parents’ concern in older kids
LACK OF DATA INTEGRATION FROM DIF SOURCES/METHODS
CARTER ET AL. (2004)
- who provides info about kid?
- what method of assessment have they employed?
- what timeframe have they used?
DIFFICULTY DETERMINING LEVEL OF IMPAIRMENT/FUNCTIONING
CARTER ET AL. (2004)
- does kid’s beh have any impact on family?
- aspects of child functioning include:
1) adaptation to situational demands
2) development of new skills
3) relationship (ie. interactions w/peers)
4) physical health
RESEARCH APPROACHES ASSESSING SOCIO-EMOTIONAL ISSUES IN KIDS
MULTIPLE METHODS
MULTIPLE RESOURCES
MULTIPLE METHODS
- questionnaires
- interviews
- behavioural assessments
MULTIPLE RESOURCES
- kids
- parents
- teachers
- peers
- observers
FACTORS AFFECTING KIDS’ ACCURATE RESPONDING
TABER (2010)
- age
- interviewing techniques
- response formats
- phrasing/complexity of questions
- factual info VS abstract concepts
PARENT-CHILD INTERACTION OBSERVATIONS
GARDNER (2000)
- researcher must decide about:
1) observer presence (issues w/reactivity)
2) task type (structured VS unstructured)
3) observations location (lab/pps home)
OBSERVATIONAL METHODS: STRENGTHS
GARDNER (2000)
- researcher defines/chooses target behs
- can look at microscopic processes/mechanisms
- have data on rates/frequencies
OBSERVATIONAL METHODS: LIMITATIONS
GARDNER (2000)
- observations are expensive
- time consuming
- require extensive training
SCREENING QUESTIONNAIRES
- how often beh occurs/how representative it is
- cut-offs used to assign risk status
- can be biased by parents’ mood/attributions of kids’ beh
- caution when used in dif cultures
- examples include:
1) Child Behaviour Checklist
2) Infant-Toddler Social/Emotional Assessment
CHILD BEHAVIOUR CHECKLIST
- 18-60 months
- parent/caregiver
- 15-20min
- 3-point scale
- cut-off available
INFANT-TODDLER SOCIAL & EMOTIONAL ASSESSMENT
- 12-36 months
- parent/caregiver
- 30min to complete
- 3-point scale
- cut-offs for age/sex
STRUCTURED CLINICAL INTERVIEWS
- behavioural presentation = info on onset/duration/frequency/course of beh
- sensitivity of beh to context
- info on distress/impairment