Conference Papers
Disabled children's development of social, emotional competences, and academic performance in regular classrooms: A comparative study between children and parents in Hong Kong
- Disabled children's development of social, emotional competences, and academic performance in regular classrooms: A comparative study between children and parents in Hong Kong
- 2015 Quality Childhood Conference International (QCCI) Enhancing Quality Childhood Education: Synergizing Global Efforts (2015: The Hong Kong Institute of Education, China)
-
- Hong Kong
-
- 1997.7 onwards
-
- Unknown or Unspecified
- Although children’s adaptive social and emotional development and academic performance/achievement are important indicators of school effectiveness, considerably less studies have been taken with a special focus on these social, emotional and academic gains among children with disabilities, particularly those integrated in regular classroom. From both perspectives of children with disabilities and parents of these children, this study tested and compared the patterns of the predictive effects of perceived social and emotional competences on academic performance between their perceptions. In total 307 children with disabilities and parents of these children (parents N = 180; children N =127) participated in this study. These children are integrated in mainstreaming primary schools (p1 to p3) in Hong Kong. An interesting finding was emotional competence was the stronger predictor of children’s academic performance compare to social competence. The predictive patterns were consistent based on the results from parents’ and children’s self-reported data (i.e., path coefficients from social and emotional competences to academic performance: β =.37 and β =.28 based on children’s data; β =.37 and β =.25 based on parents’ data, all path coefficients are significant at the .01 level). Similarly, in the results from both parents and children, we found that around 30% variance of academic performance could be explained by social and emotional competences as two predictors. These findings indicated not only a pivotal role of social and emotional competences, but also a more salient role of emotional competence in academic performance of children with disabilities. Both theoretical implications to emotion research in early childhood education and empirical implications to call for school support and practices to foster emotional competence of children with disabilities are discussed.
- Paper presented at the 2015 Quality Childhood Conference International (QCCI) Enhancing Quality Childhood Education: Synergizing Global Efforts, The Hong Kong Institute of Education, China.
-
- English
- Conference Papers
- https://bibliography.lib.eduhk.hk/en/bibs/539c3d66
- 2015-09-22
Recent Conference Papers
Avoiding the “rat race”: Hong Kong students’ sense of belonging to a Chinese university in the Greater Bay AreaConference Papers
Rethinking academic careers with an education focus: A self-narrative from Hong KongConference Papers
Equity, diversity and inclusion in Hong Kong education: Associated challenges and opportunities, and the roles of policy and leadershipConference Papers
Exploring the moderating role of learner belief on the interplay between motivation and willingness to communicate in AI-enhanced formative assessment English classrooms: a study among Hong Kong university studentsConference Papers
Autonomy and relatedness: Motivating Hong Kong kindergarten teachers in an online professional development courseConference Papers
Young children’s math competence in Hong Kong: The influence of working memory, self-regulation, and family socioeconomic statusConference Papers
Exploring the domain-specific relations between Chinese language abilities and Mathematical skills in Hong Kong kindergarten childrenConference Papers
Preservice teachers’ experiential learning: Production of digital stories to nurture children’s positive valuesConference Papers