Construction of a scale to assess the types of praise given by primary caregivers to infants 0-3 years br

被引:0
作者
Mancini, Natalia A. [1 ]
Schetsche, Christian [2 ]
Morales, Leandro J. [2 ]
Simaes, Ailin C. [1 ]
Galvano, Lucas G. Gago [1 ]
机构
[1] Consejo Nacl Invest Cient & Tecn, Buenos Aires, DF, Argentina
[2] Univ Buenos Aires UBA, Buenos Aires, DF, Argentina
关键词
praise; infancy; caregivers; exploratory factor analysis; validation; CHILDRENS MOTIVATION; PARENT PRAISE; INTELLIGENCE; ACHIEVEMENT; TODDLERS;
D O I
10.16888/interd.2023.40.1.9
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Praise is defined as positive feedback given to people about their attributes, their perfor-mance, the objects or products made by them. The different types of praise that primary care-givers or parents use with infants when they carry out an activity will impact on their deve-lopment, beliefs or perception of themselves or types of learning, and motivation toward the tasks that the children perform. One type of praise is the praise directed towards an indivi-dual, which compliments their own attributes such as her intelligence. Another one is the product praise, which is directed towards the final objects or actions that the infant performs, such as a drawing or physical activities. Finally, a praise directed at the process aims to congratulate the infant during the task as a process, either for making an effort or for the strategies that they use to achieve something. This last kind of praise favors perseverance in the face of new tasks to a greater extent, while praise directed at the person could generate more frustration when the infant experiences failure. Therefore, the way caregivers interact with infants is relevant, since it modulates motivation and the development of different skills. For this reason, the main objective of this study was the creation and validation of a self-report technique to assess the praise that Argentinean caregivers give to infants from 0 to 3 years of age. The sample was made up of 128 primary caregivers (N = 128) who were recruited through the internet. They completed a Likert scale questionnaire of approximately 5 minutes of duration. The data was collected during preventive social isolation due to COVID-19. This could lead to changes in parental behavior, while it also provides ecological value for understanding the ways to praise in this context, where caregivers spend a lot of time with infants; however, it would be important to conduct future research outside of this context. An exploratory factor analysis was performed, which led to an adjustment in the technique by eliminating four items in order to improve the psychometric characteristics of the instrument. By this analysis, the formation of the three dimensions was justified by the types of praise: person, process, and product praise.The final instrument consisted of 13 phrases that represent possible compliments used by caregivers. Participants indicated how often they usually use those compliments on a scale from 1 (never) to 5 (very often). The items are divided by types of praise: six were assigned to the product dimension, three to the process dimension and four to the person dimension. The internal consistencies of the dimensions were process (alpha = .91), product (alpha = .74) and person (alpha = .73). This self-report technique for primary caregivers of infants would allow a short and simple evaluation of the praise used. In future research, this technique would allow an assessment of praise for the realization of studies that seek to expand the knowledge about how they affect child development. Likewise, it would contribute to the development of interventions with care-givers aimed to promote praise that benefits an adaptive development of infants. However, more studies are needed to investigate possible changes in the inventory, such as the inclusion of neutral praise or negative feed-back. Furthermore, a larger sample size would be necessary to carry out a more exhaustive validation, performing a confirmatory factor analysis, convergent variance and factor invariance.
引用
收藏
页码:147 / +
页数:13
相关论文
共 33 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 1992, AM PSYCHOL, V47, P1597, DOI 10.1037/0003-066X.47.12.1597
[2]   On Feeding Those Hungry for Praise: Person Praise Backfires in Children With Low Self-Esteem [J].
Brummelman, Eddie ;
Thomaes, Sander ;
Overbeek, Geertjan ;
de Castro, Bram Orobio ;
van den Hout, Marcel A. ;
Bushman, Brad J. .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-GENERAL, 2014, 143 (01) :9-14
[3]   Subtle linguistic cues affect children's motivation [J].
Cimpian, Andrei ;
Arce, Holly-Marie C. ;
Markman, Ellen M. ;
Dweck, Carol S. .
PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 2007, 18 (04) :314-316
[4]   The effects of person versus performance praise on children's motivation: Gender and age as moderating factors [J].
Corpus, Jennifer Henderlong ;
Lepper, Mark R. .
EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2007, 27 (04) :487-508
[5]  
Costello A. B., 2005, PRACTICAL ASSESSMENT, V10, P1, DOI [DOI 10.7275/JYJ1-4868, https://doi.org/10.7275/jyj1-4868]
[6]   Self-Determination Theory in Work Organizations: The State of a Science [J].
Deci, Edward L. ;
Olafsen, Anja H. ;
Ryan, Richard M. .
ANNUAL REVIEW OF ORGANIZATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY AND ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR, VOL 4, 2017, 4 :19-43
[7]   Effect of Verbal Praise on Achievement Goal Orientation, Motivation, and Performance Attribution [J].
Droe, Kevin L. .
JOURNAL OF MUSIC TEACHER EDUCATION, 2013, 23 (01) :63-78
[8]   From alpha to omega: A practical solution to the pervasive problem of internal consistency estimation [J].
Dunn, Thomas J. ;
Baguley, Thom ;
Brunsden, Vivienne .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2014, 105 (03) :399-412
[9]   The Journey to Children's Mindsets-and Beyond [J].
Dweck, Carol S. .
CHILD DEVELOPMENT PERSPECTIVES, 2017, 11 (02) :139-144
[10]   Evaluating the use of exploratory factor analysis in psychological research [J].
Fabrigar, LR ;
Wegener, DT ;
MacCallum, RC ;
Strahan, EJ .
PSYCHOLOGICAL METHODS, 1999, 4 (03) :272-299