SOCIAL AND EMOTIONAL PREVENTION AND INTERVENTION PROGRAMMING FOR PRESCHOOLERS SOCIAL AND EMOTIONAL PREVENTION AND INTERVENTION PROGRAMMING FOR PRESCHOOLERS Susanne A. Denham George Mason University Fairfax. Virginia and Rosemary Burton Minnieland Private Day School. Inc. Woodbridge. Virginia Springer Science+Business Media, LLC Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Denham, Susanne A. Social and emotional prevention and intervention programming for preschoolers/ Susanne A. Denham and Rosemary Burton. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-1-4613-4903-7 ISBN 978-1-4615-0055-1 (eBook) DOI 10.1007/978-1-4615-0055-1 1. Preschool children-Psychology. 2. Child development. 3. Social skills in children. 4. Emotional problems of children. 5. Social skills-Study and teaching (Early childhood) 6. Early childhood education. 1. Burton, Rosemary, 1952 June 11- II. Title. HQ774.5.D46 2003 305.231-dc22 2003060199 ISBN 978-1-4613-4903-7 ©2003 Springer Science+Business Media New York Originally published by Kluwer Academic / Plenum Publishers New York in 2003 Softcover, reprint ofthe hardcover, Ist edition 2003 http://www.wkap.nll 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 A c.l.P. record for this book is available from the Library of Congress AII rights reserved No part of this book may be reproduced. stored in a retrieval system. or transmitted in any form or by any means. electronic, mechanical, photocopying. microfilming, recording, or otherwise, without written permission from the Publisher. with the exception of any material supplied specifically for the purpose of being entered and executed on a computer system, for exclusive use by the purchaser of the work Permissions for books published in Europe: [email protected] Permissions for books published in the United States of America: [email protected] PREFACE Our goal in writing this volume is to create new interest in and commitment to social and emotional prevention and intervention with preschoolers. The children with whom we work have shown us why these issues are so important. First, we see Petey. He runs, darts, and jumps with a ball clenched tightly in his arms. He screams "yes" to our invitation to play, but is unable to restrain his desire to keep the ball and game as his own. He then pulls the ball away from another boy's advances, angrily shoving him and screaming a torrent of street-word insults. In free play, individual, small group, or whole-group activities, he appears driven to "get enough," at all costs. He is angry, often out of control, hitting at or even throwing objects at his caregiver. Some children like Petey grow up to show even more antisocial acting out. Then we see Sean, who, by contrast, may remain unnoticed but is at just as great risk. He speaks hesitantly, often echoing others' communications, as if practicing. He is always the third, fourth, or last, to attempt a task, never asserting ideas or desires. He is quiet, sometimes looking quite sad, and we see him on the sidelines, seeking the comfort of his thumb. He seems overwhelmed and withdrawn. Some children like Sean continue to fade into the woodwork, feeling bad about themselves, anxious and depressed. Finally, we see Jeremy. Where Petey and Sean may share any number of problems at home, from drugs to domestic violence, to sporadic employment that loads stress upon their parents, Jeremy's life may not appear so difficult. Still, his behavior paints a different, troubled picture. Jeremy is a "hurried child." Although he plays and interacts with peers fairly well, teachers note that he has difficulty permitting other children to lead activities or reject his ideas. This bothers him very much. And, even though his preacademic skills are advanced for a four-year-old, he too is angry, and even expresses self-destructive wishes, saying things like, "I just don't what to have to do it anymore!" We are not as sure about the trajectory of Jeremy's development, but many psychologists feel that problems also await him. Such needs are, unfortunately, rarely addressed directly at the preschool level. Most curricula seem to have only social-emotional goals. Thus, even though our intentions are good, we pay lip service to these goals, not doing anything systemic about them. But we need to do something, because Petey, Sean, and Jeremy-and their female counterparts are in many of our classrooms, and they need our help to get off the trajectories that they are on. In this volume we propose means to address preschoolers' social-emotional needs. As applied developmental/school psychologists and an early childhood educator, we naturally look to normal social-emotional developmental change in preschoolers, to find ways to ameliorate these problems and maximize positive outcomes. In our work over the last two decades, we have been impressed with the social-emotional skills that preschoolers normally develop. Not everyone looks like Petey, Sean, or Jeremy! Many young boys and girls are learning to cope with their own emotions and with the problems presented in dealing with other people. More specifically, they are coming to understand v INTRODUCTION: THE IMPORTANCE OF EMOTIONAL AND SOCIAL COMPETENCE vi the expressions and situations for many feelings, both their own and others', learning how to deal with their own feelings, and reacting to others' feelings in a prosocial way to make them feel better (e.g., comforting a crying friend). They are figuring out many ways to solve social problems (e.g., what to do if someone takes your toy). Preschoolers who are able to do these things are generally like Petey or Sean, and with our help, are not in Jeremy's dilemma. Thus, several aspects of emotional competence are vital to preschoolers' success in their broadening social world, including emotional security (i.e., a secure attachment with one or more caregivers), understanding emotions of self and others, regulating one's own emotions, and solving emotion-laden interpersonal problems. Hand-in-hand with these specifically emotional milestones we see children accomplish, is emotion-centered behavior management within daycare and preschool classrooms. These components - attachment, understanding and regulating emotions, social problem solving, and emotionally positive behavior management - form the core of theoretical precepts and empirical findings that we wish to communicate to school psychologists and early childhood educators. We think these components are vital because the young child who successfully negotiates the developmental task of sustained positive engagement with peers is in a good position to continue thriving in a social world. In fact, successful, independent interaction with age mates is a crucial predictor of later mental health and well-being, beginning during preschool, continuing during the grade school years when peer reputations solidify, and thereafter (Denham & Holt, 1993; Parker & Asher, 1987; Robins & Rutter, 1990). Because such social competence is so important, and apparently so intertwined with aspects of emotional competence, these social and emotional prerequisites need to be given more widespread attention in programmatic efforts in early childhood education. It is our first goal to describe fully both emotional and social competence, how they are demonstrated and how they are fostered, during the preschool period. Because of the crucial nature of early childhood social and emotional learning, and the considerable risk associated with their absence, there has been a call for primary and secondary prevention programs targeted at preschoolers' emotional and social competence needs (Knitzer, 1993). In the last five years, even more pressing findings come to light about the crucial nature of early emotional and social competence. For example, Raver and Knitzer have pointed out the following important corollaries of emotional and social competence during the preschool years: 1. Young children who have not attained developmentally appropriate emotional and social competencies participate less in the classroom, and are less accepted by classmates and teachers. Teachers provide them with less instruction and positive feedback. They like school less and learn less. 2. This situation persists into the elementary years. Young children who behave aggressively or antisocially are more likely to perform poorly on early academic tasks, and to be held back. Later on, they are more likely to drop out and persist in their antisocial behavior. 3. Such emotional and social competence of young children predicts their academic performance in first grade, even more than their actual cognitive skills and family backgrounds (Raver & Knitzer, 2002). vii Social and Emotional Prevention and Inte"ention Programming for Preschoolers For those at special risk, and for children in general, the learning of emotional and social competence should not be left to chance. Nonetheless, the existing literature reveals few large-scale efforts to provide programs that focus on these goals for preschool children. Early childhood educators' concern with social-emotional development is often implicit rather than made explicit through specific interventions. Our second goal of this book is to begin to make explicit these needs, and how to meet them, within our book. We want both to communicate work that done by others, and ourselves, and to facilitate the implementation of emotion-based programs in daycare and preschool classrooms. Our wish to write this book focuses on "giving away" developmental knowledge in this area to the public, to improve children's lives. Our book can be seen as the interplay between what we do, what we have done, and what we need to do, regarding the emotional competence of young children. In our first chapter we describe fully both emotional and social competence. In our second chapter we show the needs for programming based on our conception of emotional and social competence. We then alternate chapters presenting the major components of emotional competence (both theoretical ways of thinking about them and actual empirical information about them) with chapters presenting components of multimodal programming addressing preschoolers' emotional competence, and caregivers' reactions to putting these components into action. In sum, we hope to flesh out both theoretical and empirical bases for our assertions, and to also clearly communicate practical steps early childhood educators can take to make use of these ideas in their lives with children. More specifically, Chapter One constitutes a necessary description of emotional and social competence during this age range. In Chapter Two, we. focus on defining the preschoolers at risk for deficits in emotional competence. Who are the children who worry early childhood educators? What should our goals be for these children? In subsequent chapters, we describe the preschooler's need for attachment to a caring adult, behavioral management, understanding and regulation of emotion, social problem solving. Children without a secure attachment, who are exposed to negative modes of behavioral management, with compromised emotional competence and lacking social problem-solving skills, are at great risk for later difficulties. We emphasize the need for "the total package." We follow each chapter on the content of young children's social-emotional learning (SEL) with another chapter specifying how we, and others, work to train early childhood teachers and caregivers to apply these principles. In chapter 12 we detail promising parent programs following the same guidelines, and in chapter 13 we describe assessment techniques that can assist us in learning more about specific children's SEL capabilities. Finally, in chapter 14 we summarize the most promising classroom-based programs that follow the principles we have put forward throughout the volume. In sum, prevention and intervention programs are sorely needed to curtail cascading trajectories of behavior problems. Without such attention, we leave to chance young children's SEL. In doing so, we risk wasting the window of opportunity presented by children's slow brain maturation, a timespan in which we could do much to help children cultivate resilience via emotional competence (Greenberg & Snell, 1997; Peth-Pierce, 2000). It is our wish to help caring adults to maximize these abilities for our children. Susanne Denham, Rosemary Burton, and Sophie Havighurst CONTENTS 1. INTRODUCTION: THE IMPORTANCE OF EMOTIONAL AND SOCIAL COMPETENCE................... .... .................... ..................... 1 1.1. INTRODUCTION................................................................... 1 1.2. EXPERIENCE AND EXPRESSION OF EMOTIONS.................... .... 2 1.2.1. Emotional Experience. .................................................. ... 2 1.2.2. Expression of Emotions .. ............................................. ... 5 1.2.2.1 Expressive Process ....................................................... 5 1.2.2.2. Expressive Outcomes .................................................... 6 1.3. UNDERSTANDING EMOTIONS .................................................... 6 1.4. EMOTION REGULATION ............................................................ 7 1.5. EMOTIONAL COMPETENCE: DEVELOPMENTAL AND INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES ........................................................................... 8 1.6. SOCIALIZATION OF EMOTIONAL AND SOCIAL COMPETENCE ......... 9 1.6.1. Modeling of Emotional Expressiveness .................................... 10 1.6.2. Contingent Reactions to Children's Emotions ............................ 10 1.6.3. Teaching About Emotions ................................................... 11 1.6.4. Summarizing the Socialization of Emotional Competence .............. 13 1.7. SOCIAL COMPETENCE AND SOCIAL-EMOTIONAL LEARNING (SEL).13 1.7.1. Linkage of Emotional and Social Competence ........................... 16 1.8. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION ................................................... 17 2. TARGETING PROGRAMS FOR PRESCHOOL EMOTIONAL AND SOCIAL COMPETENCE ............................................................................. 19 2.1. INTRODUCTION ....................................................................... 19 2.2. SEL GOALS ............................................................................. 20 2.3. HOW DO WE REACH THESE SEL GOALS? ..................................... 21 2.4. BEHAVIOR PROBLEMS AND SOCIAL INCOMPETENCE ................... 22 2.4.1. Specific Behavior Problems Associated With Lack of SEL. ............ 25 2.4.1.1. Challenging Behaviors Traced to Differing Patterns a/Risk and Resilience ............................................................. 26 2.4. J. 2. Children Already Showing Diagnosable Problems ................. 27 2.5. SEL PROGRAMMING FOR YOUNG CHILDREN ............................... 29 2.5.1. Prevention/Intervention: What Is Needed? What Has Been Done? Where Do We Go From Here? ............................................... 29 2.6. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION .................................................. 31 ix 3. PRESCHOOLERS' A TTA CHMENT AND EMOTIONAL COMPETENCE• •• 33 3.1. INTRODUCTION TO ATTACHMENT AS FOUNDATIONAL FOR EMOTIONAL COMPETENCE ........................................................ 33 3.2. EARLY ATTACHMENT CLASSIFICATIONS AND THEIR SEQUELAE ... 34 3.3. ATTACHMENT AND EMOTIONAL COMPETENCE ........................... 36 3.4. ATTACHMENTS BEYOND THE CHILD-PARENT RELATIONSHIP ....... 39 3.4.1. Preschool Teachers/ Daycare Providers and Attachment ............... .40 3.4.2. Compensatory Effects of Secure Child-Teacher Attachment ........... 41 3.5. PRINCIPLES FOR PRACTITIONERS .............................................. 42 3.6. SUMMARY: ATTACHMENT AS FOUNDATION FOR SEL .............. 44 3.7. CONCLUSIONS: WHAT CAN WE DO? .......................................... .45 4. APPLICATIONS CENTERED ON ATTACHMENT: LESSONS FROM THE FIELD ......................................................................... 47 4.1. INTRODUCTION TO SEL PROGRAMMING .................................... 47 4.1.1. Introduction to Attachment Applications ................................. .48 4.2. ATTACHMENT THEORY IN THE PRESCHOOL CLASSROOM ............ 48 4.3. TEACHING TEACHERS ABOUT BUILDING ATTACHMENT RELATIONSHIPS ...................................................................... 49 4.3.1. Initial Approaches ............................................................. 50 4.3.2. Roadblocks on the Way to Attachment .................................... 50 4.3.3. Moving Beyond the Roadblocks ........................................... 51 4.3.4. Attachment-Specific Information Imparted .............................. 52 4.3.4.1. Elements of .. Floor Time" ............................................. 52 4.3.4.2. Teaching About Floor Time ............................................. 54 4.3.4.3. Curricular Elements Related to Attachment ......................... 57 4.3.4.4. Problem Areas in Creating an Attachment-Positive Classroom .. 58 4.4. TEACHING PARENTS ABOUT ATTACHMENT AND FLOOR TIME ...... 59 4.4.1. Parents and Floor Time ...................................................... 59 4.4.2. Intervening with Parents and Children at Risk - The Circles Of Security Program ........ " ............................................... 60 4.4.2.1. Steps in the COS Program ............................................. 63 4.4.2.2. Evaluation of the COS Program ....................................... 65 4.4.3. The Seattle Approach ........................................................ 65 4.5. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS ............................................... 66 5. GUIDING PRESCHOOLERS' BEHAVIOR: SHORT-TERM MEANINGS, LONG-TERM OUTCOMES .............................................................. 67 5.1. INTRODUCTION: FOUNDATIONS AND METHODS OF GUIDANCE IN EARLY CHILDHOOD ............................................ 67 5.1.1. Indirect Guidance ............................................................ 68 5.2. GUIDANCE: WHERE DO WE START? ......................................... 70 5.2.1. The Meaning of Behavior ................................................... 72 5.2.2 Observing Children's Behavior ............................................. 74 5.2.3. Putting the Package Together ............................................... 77 5.3. SPECIFICS FOR GUIDING BEHAVIOR ......................................... 78 5.3.1. More Operant Approaches ................................................... 79 5.3.2. Costs of "Power Assertive" Techniques ................................... 79 5.3.3. What Should We Do Instead? "Control" and "Discipline" Versus "Guidance" ..................................................................... 80 x 5.3.3.1. Persistent Persuasion ................................................... 80 5.3.3.2. Inductive Guidance Strategies. ..................... .................. 82 5.4. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS ................................................. 83 6. TEACHING TEACHERS ABOUT GUIDANCE: LESSONS FROM THE FIELD ......................................................................... 85 6.1. INTRODUCTION: THE NEEDS OF TEACHERS AND CHILDREN ......... 85 6.2. TRAINING TEACHERS TO USE INDIRECT GUIDANCE .................... 88 6.3. USING DIRECT GUIDANCE ......................................................... 91 6.4. REFLECTION ON GUIDANCE AND TIME FOR PRACTICE ..................9 4 6.5. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS ................................................. 95 7. EMOTION UNDERSTANDING AND EMOTION REGULATION ............. 97 7.1. EMOTION UNDERSTANDING .....................................................9 7 7.1.1. Labeling Emotional Expressions ............................................9 9 7.1.2. Identifying Emotion-Eliciting Situations ................................. 100 7.1.3. Comprehending Causes of Emotions ..................................... 100 7.1.4. Understanding the Consequences of Emotion ........................... 101 7.1.5. Sophisticated Understanding of the Emotional Experience of Others 10 1 7.1.5.1. Equivocal Emotional Situations ...................................... 101 7.1.5.2. Atypical Emotional Reactions: Weighing Expressive And Situational Information ..................................................... 102 7.1.5.3. Personalized Information ........................................ 102 7.1.6. Dissemblance ................................................................. 103 7.1.6.1. Display Rule Knowledge .............................................. 103 7.1.6.2. Knowledge of Emotion Regulation Strategies ...................... 104 7.1.6.3. Knowledge of Simultaneity of Emotions and Ambivalence ....... 104 7.1.6.4. Knowledge of Complex Emotions ..................................... 105 7.2. EMOTION KNOWLEDGE AND SOCIAL INTERACTION ................. 106 7.2.1. Emotion Knowledge and SEL: A Key to Successful Interaction ..... 106 7.2.2. Lack of Emotion Knowledge and Unsuccessful Social Interaction ... 107 7.2.3. Preschoolers' Emotion Knowledge and More Specific SEL Deficits: The Case of Bullying ............................................ 109 7.3. EMOTION REGULATION ........................................................ 110 7.3.1. Emotion Regulation: Developments During Preschool ................ 112 7.4. EMOTION REGULATION ANDSEL ........................................... 112 7.4.1. Relations with Other Aspects of Emotional Competence .............. 113 7.5. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION .................................................. 114 8. APPLICATIONS CENTERED ON EMOTIONAL COMPETENCE: LESSONS FROM THE FIELD ......................................................... 115 8.1. INTRODUCTION ...................................................................... 115 8.2. EMOTION UNDERSTANDING .................................................... 115 8.2.1. Social-Emotional Intervention for At-Risk 4-year-Olds ............... 116 8.2.2. Preschool PATHS (Promoting Alternative Thinking Strategies) ...... 116 8.2.3. Second Step Preschool/Kindergarten............... ................. .... 118 8.2.4. Head StartJECAP Curriculum (Izard & Bear, 2001) .................... 120 8.2.5. The Incredible years ........................................................ 121 8.2.6. Other Promising Programs .................................................. 121 8.2.7. Summary ...................................................................... 121 8.3. EMOTIONAL EXPRESSIVENESS AND EMOTION REGULATION ....... 122 xi 8.3.1. Programming in Emotional Expressiveness and Emotion Regulation: Social Emotional Intervention for At-Risk-4-Year-Olds ............... 122 8.3.2. Programming in Emotional Expressiveness and Emotion Regulation: Second Step PreschooVKindergarten ...................................... 124 8.3.3. Programming in Emotional Expressiveness and Emotion Regulation: Head StartlECAP Curriculum .............................................. 126 8.3.4. Programming in Emotional Expressiveness and Emotion Regulation: The Incredible years ......................................................... 126 8.3.5. Programming in Emotional Expressiveness and Emotion Regulation: DECL .......................................................................... 126 8.3.6. Summary and Conclusions: Programming Possibilities ................. 127 8.4. NOTES FROM THE FIELD: HOW WE HAVE WORKED WITH TEACHERS TO IMPLEMENT PRACTICES CENTERED ON EMOTIONAL COMPETENCE ......................................................................... 127 8.4.1. Moving Into the World of Feelings: Teachers' First Steps ............. 128 8.4.2. Continuing on to Emotion Knowledge: Uniting Feeling and Thinking in Karim's Story .............................................................. 129 8.4.3. After Karim: What Teachers Can Do to Promote Emotion Knowledge ..................................................................... 131 8.4.4. After Karim: What Teachers Can Do to Promote Adaptive Emotional Expressiveness and Experience ............................... 132 8.4.5. After Karim: What Teachers Can Do to Promote Emotion ............ 133 Regulation 8.4.6. Summary and Conclusion: Training Teachers About Emotional Competence Programming .................................... 134 9. SOCIAL PROBLEM SOLVING ........................................................ 135 9.1. INTRODUCTION: THINKING ABOUT GETTING ALONG WITH EACH OTHER ......................................................................... 135 9.1.1. Social Problem Solving Expands: Social Information Processing and Emotional Competence .................................. 137 9.1.1.1. Social Problem Solving and Emotion Knowledge ................. 138 9.1.1.2. Social Problem Solving and Emotional Expressiveness/ Emotion Regulation ......................................................... 140 9.2. FOCUS ON SOCIAL PROBLEM SOLVING IN PRESCHOOLERS .......... 140 9.2.1. Social Problem Solving and Social Functioning in Preschoolers: Before Social Information Processing Theory ........................... 141 9.2.2. Social Problem Solving and Social Functioning in Preschoolers: After the Advent of Social Information Processing Theory .......... 142 9.3. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS ................................................ 143 10. SOCIAL PROBLEM-SOLVING APPLICA TIONS: LESSONS FROM THE FIELD ................................................................................. 145 10.1. INTRODUCTION: TEACHING SOCIAL PROBLEM SOLVING AND POSITIVE SOCIAL BEHAVIORS TO PRESCHOOLERS ..................... 145 10.1.1. Dialoguing as a Key to Social Problem Solving ........................ 146 10.2. SOCIAL PROBLEM-SOLVING PROGRAMMING .......................... 148 10.2.1. Social-Emotional Intervention for At-Risk 4-Year-Olds ............... 150 10.2.2. Preschool PATHS (Promoting Alternative Thinking Strategies) ..................................................................... 150 xii