Final Report Summary - AT-RISK PRESCHOOLERS (The Future of Preschoolers At Risk: The Mediational Role of Executive Functions on Effects of Maltreatment and Neglect on Pre-Academic Skills, and the Moderation of Family SES and Classroom Quality)
Our sample includes 68 children (Mage = 62.48 month, SD = 8.38) attending 31 classrooms in public or subsidized preschools (50% in each) in selected neighborhoods of four of the largest cities in Portugal. We recruited a sample of 24 CPCJ children in these preschools; they constitute our “at-risk” of preschoolers. We also recruited from the same classrooms a random sample of 44 children not under CPCJ supervision; they constitute the “comparison group” of preschoolers. We fit path models to the data to examine direct and mediated effects.
Preliminary results (Figure 1) indicate significantly lower skills in emergent mathematics, literacy (vocabulary), and executive function (inhibitory control, but not working memory or attention shifting) in the at-risk versus the comparison group. We also found evidence of mediation of the effects of maltreatment on early skills by inhibitory control, controlling for clustering of children in classrooms. Expected final results include an examination of the moderating effects of classroom quality in the relationship between these risk factors and pre-academic skills.
This study will have considerable practical and policy implications across the sectors of child protection, education, and social security.
Figure 1. Simplified path model of the direct (dashed) and mediated (bold) effects of maltreatment on executive function and pre-academic skills, controlling for clustering of children in classrooms (N=68; N classrooms=31).