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Teachers, not parents, are able to predict time processing skills in preschoolers
- Publication Year :
- 2019
-
Abstract
- Time processing difficulties are associated with developmental disorders. Questionnaires for assessing children's sense of time are available from primary school, but we lack valid proxy-report tools for younger children, who are not able to complete self-reports. This study aimed to assess the criterion validity of a questionnaire investigating preschoolers’ sense of time from the points of view of their parents and teachers. One hundred seventy preschoolers were included in the sample. Their parents and teachers completed the Sense of Time Questionnaire, and the children were administered time reproduction and time discrimination tasks, both concurrently and 7months later. The assessment of preschoolers’ sense of time reported by teachers, but not by parents, predicted the children's time processing skills both concurrently and longitudinally. The teacher version of the Sense of Time Questionnaire constitutes a valid instrument for assessing and predicting preschoolers’ time processing skills and can be used for clinical and research purposes. Statement of contribution: What is already known on this subject? Time processing difficulties are associated with developmental disorders such as ADHD and dyscalculia. Early assessment of time processing skills is important for clinical (e.g., screening) and research purposes. We do not have valid questionnaires for assessing sense of time in young children. What the present study adds? The sense of time ability reported by teachers predicts preschoolers’ time processing skills. The sense of time ability reported by parents does not predicts preschoolers’ time processing skills. The Sense of Time Questionnaire is a valid instrument for investigating time processing skills of 4–6 aged children.
- Subjects :
- Parents
Male
Visual perception
education
Sample (statistics)
behavioral disciplines and activities
050105 experimental psychology
time processing skills
Follow-Up Studie
Developmental psychology
parent questionnaire
Child Development
Developmental Neuroscience
Developmental and Educational Psychology
Criterion validity
medicine
Humans
0501 psychology and cognitive sciences
teacher questionnaire
Child
Time processing
Time discrimination
time processing skill
screening
05 social sciences
sense of time
preschooler
Time perception
medicine.disease
Child development
Parent
Child, Preschool
Time Perception
Dyscalculia
Auditory Perception
Visual Perception
Female
School Teachers
Psychology
Follow-Up Studies
Human
050104 developmental & child psychology
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....ae0f7b58c1d7aa06500232ec89e45dae